Blog
Nov. 7, 2018
Religious boundaries are not necessarily as sharp and antagonistic as the news media lead us to believe. This ethnographic film follows devotees of the Hindu goddess Kali to understand why devout Hindus may well visit Sikh temples and Sufi-Muslim tombs besides temples for divine assistance. By showing the everyday life inside and around a Kali temple in the city of Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India, the film presents itself as a silent critique against the obsession with religious conflict in contemporary debates. (Film length: 83 minutes)
Time
December 11, 2018 (Tue) 18:30~21:30
Venue
“Daiwahouse Ishibashi Nobuo Memorial Hall” (3F, Daiwa Ubiquitous Computing Research Building), Hongo Campus, University of Tokyo
Speaker
Dr. Dipesh Kharel (Documentary Director, Visual Ethnographer; PhD Graduate of ITASIA, GSII; Receiver of University of Tokyo “President’s Award”)
Film Language
Hindi (Subtitle: English)
Discussion Language
English
Organizer
Educational Project S, IHS Program, University of Tokyo
In cooperation with
Professor Hayashi Kaori Lab, III/GSII, University of Tokyo
Notes
https://goo.gl/forms/p7c3fjV4pAK2k2r13