分類: 活動公告, 課程公告
來源: 原住民民族學院 - 黃淑美 - sumay@mail.ndhu.edu.tw - 電話5792
對象: 全校教職員_全校學生
標題: 【課程講座】東華族文系「原住民飲食文化」課程講座
日期: Mon, 7 Mar 2016 14:58:33 +0800
附檔: There is no such thing as a curry 2.pdf (356 KB)   

2016族文系「原住民飲食文化」、「日常生活研究」與「觀光與展演」系列課程三場講座,歡迎交流!

Talk1
Speaker: Dr. Stephen Jacobs (University of Wolverhampton, UK) 

Topic: There Is No Such Thing as a Curry!

Abstract:
In this talk I will give a brief overview of the influences and transformations of foodways in India.  Specifically I will indicate how diverse the cuisine of India is. I will look at some of the historical factors to demonstrate that Indian food has been transformed by outside influences, such as Persian cuisine the European colonial powers, and the processes of globalisation. I will also discuss how the Hindu traditions impact on various aspects of diet and eating.

Time: 3/16 @9:10-12 
Place: Millet Farm 東華小米園(集力所)

Please note that the talk will combine with a 'real' curry cooking demonstration. For food preparations please email: joyceyeh2@gmail.com in advance if you want to join us. 

Talk 2 
Speaker: Dr. Judith Wester (Lancaster University, Founder of the CEDAR) 
Topic: Death Lessons in Everyday Life: Teaching Young People about Death in Rural England
 
This talk reflects the results of case studies done in Shropshire, England over a one-year period in which an academic instructor of death studies in higher education re-developed her course material in order to teach young people aged 10-24 years about death, dying and loss from a socio-cultural perspective. The project focussed on students funded through the National Health Service Shropshire Clinical Commissioning Group and the Police and Crime Commissioner of West Mercia. Students were also recruited through local secondary schools.  The students referred had behavioural issues such as self-harming, alcohol and drug abuse and very low self-esteem and low productivity in school, with low attention spans. All had suffered a significant loss.
 
The starting point of this project was a 2011 comment made by Professor Jenny Hockey for the Association for the Study of Death and Society in which she suggested that, “Where health services are under pressure, the support we receive from one another during these challenging experiences is critical to individual and social well-being.” The researchers set out to test this presumption in connection with the local NHS and police in order to build peer-to-peer support. While it would take a longitudinal study to determine if this suggested hypothesis were true, the results from these case studies proved to be transformative for all who were involved in the project.
 
This talk includes some background and statistical information about the project as well as video clips of the young students talking about their experiences with the programmes that came to be titled: ‘Life Lessons’ and ‘Good Grief’.

Time: 3/16@6:10-9:00pm
Place: B 218, Indigenous College 

Talk 3
Speaker: Dr. Stephen Jacobs (University of Wolverhampton, UK) 

Topic: Pilgrimage and Religious Tourism in India

India has undergone a massive change since the liberalisation of the economy in 1991. One of the outcomes of the economic changes is that there has been an increase in the numbers of Indians with a reasonable disposable income, who now opt for a variety of lifestyle and leisure choices, that can be best described as ‘middle-class’. One of the noticeable transformations that can be identified is a shift from traditional modes of pilgrimage to religious tourism. In this talk I will use Rishikesh, in North India, as a case study to explore the variety of motivations and activities of different groups who travel to this small pilgrimage town.

Time: 3/17@ 9:10-12. 
Place: Room B313, Indigenous College 


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There is no such thing as a curry 2.pdf

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