Browsing by Author "Bulankulame, I."
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Item Constructing narratives of everyday life and aspects of Kandyan social order through personal diaries(Centre for Asian Studies, University of Kelaniya, 2015) Bulankulame, I.As a researcher I got interested in the use of diaries as a method of capturing qualitative data and constricting life histories, with the encounter of a personal experience. Biographers, historians and literary scholars have long considered diary documents to be of major importance for telling history (Corti 1993). In Sociology, medical research, and psychology researchers have counted on diaries as useful source of data since the early 20th century, (Kaun 2010). This research presents ‘a time capsule’ encrypted in diaries over four decades that is from 1943-1982. The researcher explores the handwritten entries of a respected lay religious leader who is also a politician and an eminent businessman of this era. Therefore this research is primarily concerned with the construction of everyday life. Even then it also strives to reconstruct a time period in history spanning from pre-independence and post-independence Sri Lanka from a non-political view with the narrative reconstructed through these diaries. Since the gentleman concerned is my maternal grandfather, I felt the diaries gave me a personal entry into his life and made me closer to him and the events in my family history. However reading through these diaries convinced me that they through some new insights into certain nationally important events or even family incidents, some of which were easy to frame, but others were difficult comprehend. The research is a work in progress and the diaries will be further analyzed to counter validate a large collection of photographs in constructing not just the life of the individual but certain important events in history. Therefore the preservation of these diaries and personal journals are important especially for the understanding the particular period of history and the cultural heritages of Kandyan society.Item The Kandyan Uprising in 1818: a list of the Participated, Suspected and Acquiesced persons, By Bandara Manatunga, Retrospect No. 3,(1998) Manatunga, Anura; Bulankulame, I.; Rathnayaka, P.Item Socio-Cultural Representations of Kin Relationships: Elephant Love, Bonds and Beyond(Centre for Asian Studies, University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka, 2016) Bulankulame, I.My grandfather Mr. H.B. Udurawana had a great love for elephants and was the proud owner of the largest elephant in captivity. Throughout history it is evident that elephants were domesticated as pets, used by kings, warriors at war, engaged in religious activities and also assisted in transport activities (Jayawardana 1994). D’Oyly (1809) writes about the elephant establishment of the Sinhala king. Even today they hold an awe aspiring position and have a majestic presence in society. In this presentation I seek to synthesise how the socio-cultural link between upper class families and the acquisition of elephants became a status symbol and a representation of wealth and prosperity in the 20th and 21st centuries. On one hand, this is a personal narration of how families created this space for ownership and on the other hand, it seeks to contexualise how socio-economic structures created symbolic representations. Today, the changing perspectives of modernity challenge the elephant in this context of reverence. Therefore, through the examination of personal diaries, interviews and oral history, I reconstruct a narrative of history with this majestic animal and examine the relationship between families that owned elephants in Sri Lanka.