The Bishkek Liberal Arts Seminar (BLAS) series invites academics outside of Kyrgyzstan to share their research with 鶹ý students, typically on topics and using methodologies not currently present at 鶹ý. The primary aim of this series is to provide an opportunity for students to engage with different subjects and approaches potentially beneficial for their studies and their curiosity.
Information on the first seminars is available below. (Clicking the talk below will access the abstract, speaker’s bio, and Zoom session details)
September 29th
18.00 Bishkek time
Approaching mental health on a global scale with particular reference to low- and mid-income countries raises issues concerning the disregard of the local context and values and the imposition of values characteristic of the Global North. Seeking a philosophical viewpoint to surmount these problems, I will argue for a framework in psychiatry that incorporates value pluralism, particularly in relation to the Global South context, while also emphasizing personal values such as the choice of treatment...
October 5th
18.00 Bishkek time
I will critically assess the statements that personalized medicine could bring forth a “cost-effective” healthcare planning globally in the future. I argue that a feminist approach needs to consider not only the extent in which preventive healthcare, central for the cost-effectiveness of personalized medicine, is able to incorporate both biological and social basis for diseases but also how the future plans are formed in relation to a transnational market logic....
October 13th
18.00 Bishkek time
It is a common view that ideas and viruses share key features such as stickiness,resilience, and contagiousness. A corollary of this view, popularized by such books asMalcolm Gladwell's The Tipping Point (2002), is that epidemic models can also beused to explain “social epidemics’’ – when ideas and products become popular in anuncontrolled manner. In recent years, epidemiology in general has received greatimpetus from the rise of network analysis as an independent and interdisciplinary fieldof inquiry. Ever since its inception, the tools of network analysis have been employedto study the spread of phenomena as diverse as epidemics, wildfires, and earthquakes.
Following these developments, this paper will give a concrete example of hownetwork analysis can improve our understanding of the way in which new ideas werecirculated throughout history...
October 20th
18.00 Bishkek time
Modern state borders and language barriers in East-Central Europe have resulted in isolated national narratives of the past. Contemporary post-Medieval categories of identity, ethnicity, and nationalism have also harmed understanding of the history of the region and prevented international comparison. Similarly, a focus on available sources - typically Latin texts produced by the ecclesiastical hierarchy in cities - has resulted in seeing the period from the eyes of the elites. This paper introduces a project, soon to begin, based at Charles University in Prague, which attempts to address these limitations. ...
October 29th
18.00 Bishkek time
Beowulf is the longest and most sophisticated work of Old English poetry. Produced in Englandaround 800 AD, it tells a relatively straightforward story about a hero who defeats threemonsters and becomes a king, set in sixth-century Scandinavia. But its interests are dizzyinglycomplex, swooping backward and forwards through different lives, exploring a range ofinterpersonal relationships, relentlessly reflecting on the nature of storytelling, and on thefunction of time...
When future speakers confirm their participation, this page will be updated.
If you have any questions, please contact the organizer Dr. James Plumtree (plumtree_j@auca.kg).