Computer Awareness Survey
For
JNU Student Community
Organized by
 JNU Forum for Mutual Learning, Central Library 

Computer has become an essential part of our daily lives. Computer literacy varies from person to person according to one’s respective job. Many of us face difficulty in using computer. Very often we are not able to find the right person to guide us when we feel lost while using the computer. In order to address the difficulties faced by the users, we propose to organize a workshop which will focus on Computer Awareness, in the coming semesters. Moreover, we may conduct the workshop on a regular basis as per requirements and feedback from the participants.
            This survey aims to help us identify the needs of students by creating awareness about the use of computer and its applications. On the basis of feedback collected from this survey, we will design the course curriculum of the program and plan the sessions accordingly. We look forward to your valuable suggestions at the end of this survey in order to successfully organize the workshop.
         The workshop will be in two phases: First - for basic learner and; the second for the advanced learner. Date, time and venue of the workshop will be informed by e-mail and will be updated on the JNU website as well.

Kindly fill the survey form by clicking on the link below-
or

For any queries, you may contact us on- https://www.facebook.com/capjnu or
Gaurav- +91-8586968801/ Mahendar-+91-9990460960.

We are requested to regularly check your e-mail and the JNU website for more updates.

Prameha and Upadangsha: Vernacular Histories of Venereal Diseases in Late Colonial Bengal


Abstract

While the histories of colonial medicine have highlighted the hegemonic impact of western bio-medical notions on indigenous understanding of diseases, recent historians working with marginalized vernacular archives in the colonies have brought into focus the vernacular understanding of diseases that not only survived the onslaught of western clinical notions and therapeutic practices but got a fresh lease of life through the growth of a shared medical market of vernacular print and medicines. I would look at the vernacular histories of syphilis and gonorrhoea in the context of late colonial Bengal. Locally known as upadangsha and prameha, these indigenous categories of venereal diseases elicited much debate and discussion in the late 19th century Bengali public sphere, while indigenous understanding of these diseases, circulated through the local commercial circuits. Using commercial advertising material and vernacular medical print, I would try to recuperate the vernacular histories of venereal diseases in the context of late colonial Bengal. In doing so, I would question some of the assumptions held by colonial medical historians who overwhelmingly concentrate on state sponsored western medicine and in turn ignore the rich histories of vernacular medicine.

Speaker: Ratnabir Guha
Research Scholar, CHS, SSS, JNU

Venue:  Committee Room, Central Library, JNU
Date and Time: 16th August 2014 (Saturday), 4:00 pm

In Search of the Real: Writing the Past in Colonial India


Abstract


During the colonial period, writing the past became central to the self-hood of colonial subjects. The past came to be written in different genres and its ethics and protocols were widely debated in the public domain. My paper deals with one aspect of this debate – the meaning of historical reality. I shall explore this with reference to the work of the Hindi novelist Vrindavanlal Verma (1889-1969) and a few other Hindi littérateurs of the late colonial period. Their work on historical subjects – poetry, play, novels – betrays an underlying tension between the positivist certitude about empirical facts and the romantic desire for a past that might not be accessed by positivist methods. I shall investigate this tension by examining their choice of form for narratives of the past and their use of oral and written sources for reconstructing the past. Falling outside the domain of professional history-writing, their works are indicative of the wider cultural tensions central to many post-colonial societies. Belying any totalizing narrative of modernity or colonial difference, they draw our attention to multiple oppositional discourses and practices within the West and the non-West and the complex web of interconnections between them.



Speaker:

Akash Bhattacharya
Research Scholar, CHS, SSS, JNU
Venue:  Committee Room, Central Library, JNU
Date and Time: 9th August 2014 (Saturday), 4:00 pm