Рет қаралды 688
We have entered the so-called 'Asian Century', with China and India boasting the largest populations on Earth. Both countries exert increasingly powerful economic, political and social influence across the globe. But neither nation developed in a vacuum. Each has a rich and complex history with significant parallels reverberating through the past 100 years, which will echo long into the next.
The University’s new Global Humanities programme aims to explore history through diverse lenses, providing fresh and profound insight as we define our own era. As the fragile promise of globalisation fragments, will Asia’s profound legacies of empire, violence and ideology collide to create harmony or dissonance? The Vice-Chancellor, Professor Stephen J Toope, was joined by our distinguished panellists Professor Hans van de Ven and Dr Shruti Kapila for an illuminating discussion ranging from World War II and decolonisation to the present day and beyond. The shaping of Asia will shape our future.
SPEAKERS
Vice-Chancellor Professor Stephen J Toope (Trinity 1983)
Dr Shruti Kapila (Fellow, Corpus Christi College)
Professor Hans van de Ven FBA (Fellow, St Catharine's College)