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Session Submission Type: Organized Session
This symposium gathers scholars working on diverse histories of “collections” – botanical, zoological, ethnographic, and beyond– tracing itineraries through which they moved across museums, laboratories, libraries, markets and other repositories. Together, we examine how “collection stories” serve as active sites where epistemic orders are made, unmade, and remade, while attending to the errors, omissions, and desires embedded within them. Through these inquiries, the symposium explores how collection practices both reflected and reconfigured the plural worlds of the Indo-Pacific. In doing so, it reconsiders the region’s contributions to the making of global science, highlighting the embodied labors and entangled networks that sustained it. By treating “collections” as critical mediators of historical understanding, this symposium reveals how the histories of science are themselves collections of contested stories, replete with misreadings, misunderstandings, mistranslations, and mis-orderings that underwrite knowledges in, about, and from Indo-Pacific worlds.
Mobilizing Refusal to Save What is Left—Njavara - Xan Chacko, Brown University
From Tupi Wine to Indian Ocean Spirits: Botanical Knowledge Across the Oceans - Kathleen Burke, University of Glasgow
Botany and Decolonial Methods in the Arts - Syarifah Nadhirah, SOAS, University of London
Grass collecting and knowledge building: Archiving “lesser” plants in Philippine university herbaria - Ruel V. Pagunsan, University of the Philippines-Diliman