近期出版 Recent Publication
Flora & Fauna: Domestic Nature and Private Collecting in Reform Era Beijing
moreInequality of Equalities: The Negotiation of the (In)Commensurable Ontologies of Han Buddhists and Atayal Hunters in Taiwan
2022-03-27 - 2022-04-13
Jeffrey Nicolaisen
HC Building III Room101, NYCU GuangFu Campus, providing online participation using ZOOM (Webinar)
Title: Inequality of Equalities: The Negotiation of the (In)Commensurable Ontologies of Han Buddhists and Atayal Hunters in Taiwan
Speaker: Jeffrey Nicolaisen, Postdoctoral Fellow, International Center for Cultural Studies, NYCU
Moderator: Tsai Yen-Ling, Associate Professor, Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, NYCU
Time: Wednesday, April 13, 2022, 1:30 pm-3:30 pm
Location: HC Building III Room101, NYCU GuangFu Campus, providing online participation using ZOOM (Webinar).
Zoom Link:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85479422468?pwd=KzFibTJYaXZuWnN5bW9vTGdrNG1zQT09
*本次講座以中文演講為主,參與現場講座之英文聽眾,請攜帶電腦與耳機以便與線上參與者互動或用雙語功能。
The primary language for this event is Chinese. In-person participants who need to listen to the presentation in English, please bring a laptop with a headset to access English through the Zoom platform.
Talk Description: This multi-species ethnography of the Buddhism-inspired animal protection organization Life Conservationist Association and the “Gaga” and Christianity-inspired Atayal communities of Jianshi Township (Hsinchu County, Taiwan) examines the relationships between Han and indigenous people and nonhuman animals in Taiwan. The research found that (1) the politics of religion have restricted the participation of traditions such as Buddhism in public discourse on ecological issues and (2) the Buddhist concept of “equality of life,” which applies to all sentient beings, is incommensurable with international human rights and environmental conservation law based on European political and environmental theory. Nicolaisen will present equality of life as a viable alternative to human equality and demonstrate how international legal standards rooted in human equality and liberal humanism serve to constrain rather than protect alternative theories of equality and ecology.
Biography: Jeffrey Nicolaisen is currently a Ministry of Science and Technology International Postdoctoral Fellow at the International Center for Cultural Studies at National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University in Taiwan. His research uses Taiwanese traditions and teachings to rethink networks of human and nonhuman agency and the ethics of multi-species interaction between Han and indigenous people, dogs, and monkeys in Taiwan. Nicolaisen was a Duke-DKU Global Fellow at Duke Kunshan University in 2020-2021, a Charlotte Newcombe Fellow at Duke University in 2018-2019, and Fulbright-Hays Fellow at Taipei Medical University in 2017-2018. Prior to pursuing an academic career, he worked as an environmental consultant with the global sustainability consulting group Environmental Resources Management.
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Room 106A, HA Building II, Hsinchu Guangfu Campus, NYCU
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