
2025 Seminars
All seminars are held on Mondays.
In person/hybrid events will run 3pm-4.30pm
Zoom only events will run 3pm-4pm
Location(s): TBD
Zoom: https://anu.zoom.us/j/84128620477?pwd=fRLFaoWlZw7kKJzZZWlCIavoO2pHOX.1
Semester 2 2025
21 July 2025
Jakkrit Sangkhamanee, The Mystery of the Almost Disappearing Naga: On Urbanization and Cosmopolitics in Bangkok
Online via Zoom
28 July 2025
Nidhi A Mahajan, Moorings: Voyages of Capital across the Indian Ocean
Online via Zoom
11 August 2025
V. Chitra, Anna-Sophie Jurgens, Assa Dorron, Caroline Schuster Drawing Coastlines: Climate Anxieties and the Visual Reinvention of Mumbai's Shore
In person
18 August 2025
Georgia Curran, Warlpiri women’s ceremonies of loss: Collective mourning in the Central Australian desert
In person
15 September 2025
TBC
22 September 2025
Nikita Simpson, How should we theorize ecological distress? A view from the Western Himalayas
In person
29 September 2025
TBC
13 October 2025
Ingjerd Hoem, Decolonization as a State Project. New Zealand and Tokelau
In person
20 October 2025
Ton Otto,The temporal ambiguities of Win Neisen. Transformations of historicity in the Paliau Movement (Manus, Papua New Guinea)
In person
Contact
- Tim McLellan
Upcoming Events
Warlpiri women’s ceremonies of loss: Collective mourning in the Central Australian desert
Georgia Curran (University of Sydney)
For Warlpiri people living in the Central Australian Tanami desert region, ceremonial songs and ancestral stories associated with places are…
How should we theorize ecological distress? A view from the Western Himalayas
Nikita Simpson
A litany of universalizing diagnostic concepts have been coined to theorize the psychic effects of ecological destruction and climate change in the…
Decolonization as a State Project. New Zealand and Tokelau
Ingjerd Hoem (University of Oslo)
Tokelau, an atoll society comprising about 1400 people with a diasporic population of approximately 10.000 and is a “non-self-governing territory” of…
Past Events
The white man in the desert: Aboriginal whiteness and settler belonging
Emma Kowal, Deakin University
In the dry season of 1889 on the remote northwest coast of Australia, a station manager with a violent past went in search of a white man rumoured to…
How shopping centres and other modern public spaces transform human consciousness
Dr Leo Couacaud, University of Sydney
The study of shopping centres, or “malls”, is now an established subfield in anthropology and urban studies. Yet strangely, few (if any) of these…
The ‘three hearths’: Custom, religion and the state as colliding orders of time and space in Asmat, Indonesian Papua
Tom Powell Davies, Univeristy of Sydney/ University of Queensland
In Melanesia and Indonesia, socio-political life frequently centres around a tripartite relationship between custom, religion and state government.…