Strong Asymmetrical Dependencies: Perspectives from Asia, Past and Present

Since the global turn, research about strong asymmetrical dependencies across time and space (among which, but not limited to slavery, bondage, labor and coercion) has greatly expanded both conceptually and geograph cally. Asia, however defined, is certainly not the blind spot it once was in labor and slavery studies anymore. Yet, despite the pluralization recently generated by global labor and global slavery studies, Asia still remains marginal in many respects.

Slavery in early-modern Asia, to mention only one example, is increasingly studied through the lens of European archives, and through European terms of what this slavery entailed, leaving aside the study of forms of exploitation and forced displacement that took place before, beside and beyond the European presence in Asia. What seems to be particularly missing in current discussions is an emic perspective from Asia; that is to say, a more granular and accurate view of the practices, norms and their evolutions, from existing vernacular sources (written, oral and material) and from the actor’s experiences, categories and worldviews. What also seems to be missing is a genuine accounting of Asian historiographies, as well as a proper assessment of the legacies and memories of these diverse phenomena in the contemporary societies of Asia.
 

Organized by the Bonn Center of Dependency and Slavery Studies (Germany), this conference is dedicated to filling these gaps by shining a pluridisciplinary and emic light 1) on the variegated histories of dependency, slavery, bondage, coerced labor and forced displacement across Asia, and 2) on their historiographies, their legacies, their memories, and their current forms. 

Call for papers
Deadline