Civic ImaginationMain MenuThe Big Map: an Overview of the Civic ImaginationThe Big Map of Civic Imagination all over the worldNon FictionReal World Instances that inspire Civic ImaginationPopular Culture/FictionalCharacters, stories and fictional universes that resonate with communities and inspire actionMyth and FolkloreStories from cultures around the world that inspire Civic ImaginationReligiousStories based in faith and religionsMigrating the StoriesExplore the Big Map and then remix Imagination by migrating stories to new localesContributorsPeople who contributed stories to the projectGabriel Peters-Lazaro3bc3965831120bc593545fef6d0da73657e21ea0Emilia Yang0306ec8482b0946a4ad881acf758effb11741533
Sangita S
12016-07-18T05:22:05-07:00Gabriel Peters-Lazaro3bc3965831120bc593545fef6d0da73657e21ea091991Sangita is the Program Director of the MacArthur funded Henry Jenkins’ Media, Activism & Participatory Politics (MAPP) project based at the University of Southern California.google_maps2016-07-18T05:22:05-07:0027.718530, 85.320124Gabriel Peters-Lazaro3bc3965831120bc593545fef6d0da73657e21ea0Sangita is the Program Director of the MacArthur funded Henry Jenkins’ Media, Activism & Participatory Politics (MAPP) project based at the University of Southern California. A Czech-Nepalese child of the final years of the Cold War, Sangita grew up between Prague and Kathmandu. Her early childhood was shaped by hostile visa policies and travel restrictions. In what could be seen as a reaction to this restrictive experience, she has since taken the opportunity to call many cities home (among them Brussels, London, Kandy, Ahmedabad, Berlin). She relishes any opportunity to draw on her mixed race/cultural chameleon-like background and routinely keeps track of multiple times zones. She is still most comfortable when her carry-on is packed and believes home is simply a place where there is someone waiting for you; right now that is Los Angeles.
This page has tags:
12016-04-06T12:43:15-07:00Gabriel Peters-Lazaro3bc3965831120bc593545fef6d0da73657e21ea0The Big Map: an Overview of the Civic ImaginationGabriel Peters-Lazaro15The Big Map of Civic Imagination all over the worldgoogle_maps2016-07-20T01:12:14-07:00Gabriel Peters-Lazaro3bc3965831120bc593545fef6d0da73657e21ea0
12016-05-20T12:05:12-07:00Sangita Shresthova497a02d289c277275bc5ece441097deedf8135e7ContributorsGabriel Peters-Lazaro7People who contributed stories to the projectgoogle_maps2016-07-04T12:26:20-07:00Gabriel Peters-Lazaro3bc3965831120bc593545fef6d0da73657e21ea0
Contents of this tag:
12016-07-18T05:26:27-07:00Gabriel Peters-Lazaro3bc3965831120bc593545fef6d0da73657e21ea0Yeti: The Abominable Snowman Lives On6Yeti is a powerful myth, which originated in the Himalayas.google_maps2016-07-18T05:48:00-07:0028.166128, 84.006831Gabriel Peters-Lazaro3bc3965831120bc593545fef6d0da73657e21ea0
12016-07-18T05:57:08-07:00Sangita Shresthova497a02d289c277275bc5ece441097deedf8135e7Sandokan: A Post-Colonial Coldwar Hero2The plot of the novel revolves around the adventures of Sandokan - a Bornean man who lost his status, home and family to British colonialists. Embittered by his experience, Sandokan sets up camp at the island of Mompracem. From there he leads a gang of pirates under the flag of the Tiger. Together they destabilize the colonialists’ authority through robbery and violence. Steeped in the colonial period in which it was written, Salgari’s novel pitted indigenous populations against the colonial powers in ways that highlighted the evils of imperialism and celebrated resistance. As Maria Bianca Gerlich (1998, 34) observes, “Sandokan, Mompracem, and the flag of the tiger are allegories in the fight for freedom.”google_maps2016-07-18T05:58:43-07:0050.108239, 14.270589Sangita Shresthova497a02d289c277275bc5ece441097deedf8135e7