Thursday, May 12, 2011

Fw: H-ASIA: CORRECTED CSEAS Post-Doctoral Fellowships now available

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2011 10:36 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: CORRECTED CSEAS Post-Doctoral Fellowships now available


> H-ASIA
> May 12, 2011
>
> Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University Post-Doctoral
> Fellowships now available
> ***********************************************************************
> Ed. note: Yesterday's CSEAS Post-doctoral Fellowships application
> announcement contained some errors which are herewith corrected. FFC
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> From: Mario Ivan Lopez <marioivanlopez@cseas.kyoto-u.ac.jp>
>
>
> CORRECTED CALL FOR APPLICATIONS (POST-DOCTORAL FELLOWSHIPS)
>
> DEADLINE: 30 June 2011
>
> The Center for Southeast Asian Studies at Kyoto University, Japan,
> invites applications for four post-doctoral fellowships
> (Program-Specific Researcher for Special Research and Education:
> Tokutei Kenkyuin, full-time, non-tenured) under its program, "Towards
> Sustainable Humanosphere in Southeast Asia."
>
> Southeast Asia, through its regional institution of ASEAN (Association
> of Southeast Asian Nations), has emerged as a hub for East Asia
> community-building. The highly diverse societies in this region have
> undergone rapid social, economic, and political changes that can only
> be understood if the local-global knowledges and experiences of their
> peoples, and the ways in which these knowledges and experiences are
> shaped by, and in turn shape, the ecologies, histories, and social
> relations in their respective habitats, are fully taken into account.
> Working within the paradigm of "sustainable humanosphere"
> (http://www.humanosphere.cseas.kyoto-u.ac.jp/en/), this research
> program seeks to promote sustainable development in Southeast Asia by
> analyzing the complex interactions between ecological and social
> environments in different localities; by developing strategies and
> techniques for managing social, political, economic, cultural and
> environmental challenges; and by creating a platform for dialogue and
> collaboration among scholars from across disciplines (including the
> natural sciences) in the region.
>
> The objectives of the program are: to analyze structures of everyday
> life, with the aim of identifying social safety mechanisms that will
> enable people to cope with natural disasters, pandemics, ethnic and
> religious conflicts, poverty, inequality, aging, environmental
> degradation and other issues; to undertake ecological studies toward
> building sustainable environments and biomass-based societies; and to
> foster scholarship that can be a source of foundational knowledge for
> East Asia community-building. Through this program, we strive to
> promote intellectual and academic exchanges and collaboration among
> Southeast Asia scholars in East Asia.
>
> Post-doctoral fellowships will be offered in the following research
> clusters:
>
> Plural Coexistence (2 fellowships available):
>
> Southeast Asia is rich in its diversity of ethnic, religious and
> cultural composition. By and large the region has maintained the
> coexistence of such diversity while at the same time achieving
> economic progress, becoming the hub of the flow of people, goods,
> money and information. Yet the region is also confronted with serious
> issues such as the decrease of biodiversity and tropical forest,
> disasters, pandemics, aging population, ethnic and religious
> conflicts, economic differentiation and poverty. In the face of this,
> how is coexistence and sustainability possible despite or on account
> of diversity?
>
> For this purpose, we promote the study of plural coexistence which
> connects the global and the local dynamically, towards mending the
> political and economic imbalances of globalization. How can we make
> public resources out of the region's social foundations at the basis
> of people's everyday lives? How can we connect these in a
> complementary way with existing systems of governance towards solving
> problems and issues mentioned above?
>
> New Agenda for Sustainable Biomass Society (2 fellowships available):
>
> The tropics have the highest potentiality to reproduce biomass due to
> greater solar radiation and active heat and water cycle. The region
> has also been the most fertile ground for bio-resource commodification
> in human history. With the changing status of biomass as forest and
> agricultural products, bio-materials, and financial instruments, the
> tropical zone has undergone fast-paced metamorphoses through
> extensive, environment-dependent, resource utilization and intensive
> agro-industrial production, including large-scale plantations of oil
> palm, Acacia mangium, teak, coffee, tea, sugarcane, and cassava, to
> name a few.
>
> Defining high biomass society as a crucial niche for global survival
> and sustainability, this cluster invites proposals with innovative
> research topics and methodologies to examine the multi-dimensional
> driving forces of change in Southeast Asia. High biomass societies
> offer important locales to investigate the transformation of regional
> landscapes for food production, development of renewable sources of
> energy and biomaterials, and reduction of carbon emission. Formulas
> for better articulation among human community, local fauna and flora,
> geospheric/atmospheric circulations, and global political economy are
> duly needed. Scholars across disciplines working on Southeast are
> invited to help set new agenda for sustainable biomass societies.
>
> The fellowships will be for a maximum term of two years, with starting
> dates of November 1, 2011 (negotiable). Working hours are at the
> discretion of the fellow, with standard working hours from 8:30 to
> 17:15 (discretionary labor system). Compensation on an annual basis is
> competitive and commensurable with research experience, and is
> determined in accordance with the existing salary guidelines set by
> Kyoto University. Annual leave, research funds, and other issues
> relating to the contract will also be determined in accordance with
> university regulations.
>
> The fellowships are designed to offer up-and-coming scholars the time,
> space, and financial as well as institutional support necessary to
> produce outstanding scholarship that will promote the study of
> sustainable humanosphere in Southeast Asia.
>
> We seek applicants with excellent academic backgrounds and research
> training who are willing and able to cross disciplines, who are
> strongly motivated to publish significant scholarship that fulfills
> the aims and purposes of the Center's research program, and who can
> help expand and strengthen research networks in East Asia (Northeast
> and Southeast Asia).
>
> Applications are open to scholars of all nationalities. Applicant must
> have a Ph.D. or proof of a solid research and publication track record
> that is directly relevant to the themes and topics outlined by the
> research clusters above. Applicant must not be the recipient of a
> JSPS Post Doctoral Fellowship or similar programs at the time of
> employment.
>
> Applicant must submit the following documents:
>
> 1) Application form (please e-mail for one at
> postdoc@cseas.kyoto-u.ac.jp)
>
> 2) Curriculum Vitae (must include information on language skills,
> both oral and written; list of international academic conferences and
> seminars participated in; fieldwork experiences; and list of research
> grants or fellowships obtained)
>
> 3) Complete list of publications (please indicate which ones are
> refereed)
>
> 4) Two recommendation letters
>
> 5) Samples of major publications (two samples with abstracts;
> electronic copies or photocopies are acceptable)
>
> 6) Summary of scholarly activities and achievements (1200 words or
> less)
>
> 7) Statement of your research, writing, and publication goals for
> this fellowship, and your contribution to the research theme or
> topic(s) outlined by the research cluster that you wish to be a part
> of (1200 words)
>
> For persons interested in applying please contact via the email
> address below for an application form.
> - Hide quoted text -
>
> Documents can be submitted by email to postdoc@cseas.kyoto-u.ac.jp
> (please use "CSEAS fellowship" as subject heading) or by mailing
> printout copies to:
>
> Center for Southeast Asian Studies
> Kyoto University
> Post-Doctoral Fellowship Program
> 46 Shimoadachi-cho, Yoshida
> Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-8501
> Japan
>
> Please note that submitted documents will not be returned. Mailed
> hard copies should reach the Center by June 30, 2011, regardless of
> postmarked date.
>
> For further inquiries, please contact us at
> postdoc@cseas.kyoto-u.ac.jp (please use "CSEAS fellowships" as subject
> heading)
>
> Mario Lopez Assistant Professor
> Editor-in-chief Editorial Office
> Center for Southeast Asian Studies,
> Kyoto University
> 46 Shimoadachi-cho Yoshida, Sakyoku
> Kyoto 606-8501, Japan
> TEL 075-753-7344 FAX 075-753-7356
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
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Fw: H-ASIA: TOC 1/2011 Journal of Current Chinese Affairs

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Friday, May 13, 2011 3:14 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: TOC 1/2011 Journal of Current Chinese Affairs


> H-ASIA
> May 12, 2011
>
> Table of contents: Journal of Current Chinese Affairs (1/2011)
> ************************************************************************
> From: Petra Brandt <brandt@giga-hamburg.de>
>
> Journal of Current Chinese Affairs
> OPEN ACCESS <http://CurrentChineseAffairs.org>
>
> Content alert: Issue 1/2011
> "Whither Taiwanization?"
> ______________________________________________________________________
>
>
> Yoshihisa Amae, Jens Damm:
> Introduction: "Whither Taiwanization?" State, Society and Cultural
> Production in the New Era
> <http://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jcca/article/view/402/400>
>
>
> Yoshihisa Amae:
> Pro-colonial or Postcolonial? Appropriation of Japanese Colonial Heritage
> in Present-day Taiwan
> <http://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jcca/article/view/403/401>
>
>
> Lutgard Lams and Xavier Li-wen Liao:
> Tracing "Taiwanization" Processes in Taiwanese Presidential Statements in
> Times of Cross-Strait Rapprochement
> <http://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jcca/article/view/404/402>
>
>
> Jens Damm:
> Taiwan's Ethnicities and their Representation on the Internet
> <http://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jcca/article/view/405/403>
>
> Tanguy Le Pesant:
> Generational Change and Ethnicity among 1980s-born Taiwanese
> <http://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jcca/article/view/406/404>
>
>
> Yin C. Chuang:
> Divorcing China: The Swing from the Patrilineal Genealogy of China to the
> Matrilineal Genealogy of Taiwan in Taiwan's National Imagination
> <http://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jcca/article/view/407/405>
>
> Jacqueline Elfick:
> Class Formation and Consumption among Middle-Class Professionals in
> Shenzhen
> <http://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jcca/article/view/408/406>
>
> ________________________________________________________________________
>
> Authors are invited to submit their manuscripts to the journal directly
> through the web interface on
> http://www.CurrentChineseAffairs.org/submission or by email to:
> submission@CurrentChineseAffairs.org
>
> -------------------------------------------------------------
> Petra Brandt / Editorial Management / Publications
> GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies
> Leibniz-Institut für Globale und Regionale Studien
>
> Neuer Jungfernstieg 21 / 20354 Hamburg
> Tel.: +49 40 42825-534
> E-Mail: brandt@giga-hamburg.de
> Internet: www.giga-hamburg.de
> Journal of Current Chinese Affairs: www.CurrentChineseAffairs.org
> Register to receive new online publications:
> www.giga-hamburg.de/mailinglist
> **********************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
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>
>

Fw: H-ASIA: Member pub: Himalayan Languages and Linguistics, ed. Mark Turin & Bettina Zeisler

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Friday, May 13, 2011 3:12 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: Member pub: Himalayan Languages and Linguistics, ed. Mark
Turin & Bettina Zeisler


> H-ASIA
> May 12, 2011
>
> Member's publication: Mark Turin and Bettina Zeisler, editors Mark Turin
> and Bettina Zeisler, _Himalayan Languages and Linguistics: Studies in
> Phonology, Semantics, Morphology and Syntax_
>
> ************************************************************************
> From: Mark Turin <markturin@gmail.com>
>
> Dear Colleagues on the H-ASIA list,
>
> As editors of a new volume, we are happy to announce
> the publication of:
>
> _Himalayan Languages and Linguistics: Studies in Phonology,
> Semantics, Morphology and Syntax_
> Editors: Mark Turin, Bettina Zeisler
>
> Series: Brill's Tibetan Studies Library
> ISSN: 1568-6183
> Category: Language & Linguistics - Languages of Asia
> and Central Asia
> BIC2: Sino-Tibetan languages
>
> ISBN13: 9789004194489
> Version: Hardback
> Publication Type: Book
> Pages, Illustrations: viii, 322 pp.
> Imprint: BRILL
> Language: English
>
> The volume gathers together nine original contributions on
> the Tibeto-Burman and Indo-Aryan languages of Himalayan
> region. Drawing on primary fieldwork in China, India, Nepal
> and Pakistan, as well as on comparative sources, the new
> analyses outlined in these contributions will interest a
> readership of linguists, philologists, anthropologists, historians,
> lexicographers and specialists in the languages and cultures
> of Inner and South Asia. Contributions cover topics such
> as linguistic palaeontology, orthographical standardisation,
> dialectology, phonology, morphology, semantics and syntax.
>
> TABLE OF CONTENTS
>
> Notes on Contributors vii
>
> Introduction 1
> Mark Turin and Bettina Zeisler
>
> PART ONE: The Himalayas in history
>
> Lost in the sands of time somewhere north of the Bay of Bengal 13
> George van Driem
>
> PART TWO: Phonology and script
>
> A key to four transcription systems of Lepcha 41
> Heleen Plaisier
>
> Dialectal Particularities of Sogpho Tibetan -
> An Introduction to the "Twenty-four villages' patois" 55
> Hiroyuki Suzuki
>
> PART THREE: Semantics (words and word classes)
>
> On the Old Tibetan Term Khrin in the Legal and
> Ritual Lexicons 77
> Brandon Dotson
>
> A functional analysis of adjectives in Newar 99
> Kazuyuki Kiryu*
>
> PART FOUR: Morphology and syntax
>
> The Role of Animacy in the Verbal Morphology of
> Dongwang Tibetan 133
> Ellen Bartee
>
> The Sampang verbal agreement system 183
> René Huysmans
>
> Ergativity in Kundal Shahi, Kashmiri and Hindko 219
> Khawaja A. Rehman
>
> Kenhat, the dialects of Upper Ladakh and Zanskar 235
> Bettina Zeisler
>
> Index 303
>
> More information can be found on the publisher's website:
> <http://www.brill.nl/himalayan-languages-and-linguistics>
>
> And please follow the link below for a list of contributors:
> <http://bit.ly/HLL_Contents>
>
> With all good wishes,
>
> Mark Turin and Bettina Zeisler
> \
> Mark Turin
> World Oral Literature Project
> Cambridge University
>
> Bettina Zeisler
> Indologie und Vergleichende Religionswissenschaft
> Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen
> ***********************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
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>
>
>

Fw: H-ASIA: Summer School on Globalization and Development in India, Torino, Italy, July 2011

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2011 10:35 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: Summer School on Globalization and Development in India,
Torino, Italy, July 2011


> H-ASIA
> May 12, 2011
>
> Summer School on Globalization and Development in India,
> Torino, Italy, July 2011
> ***********************************************************************
> From: Diego Maiorano <maioranodiego@gmail.com>
>
> Dear H-Asia members,
>
> below details about a Summer School on Globalization and Development in
> India which will take place from 4th to 8th July 2011 in Torino, Italy.
>
>
> In response to the growing interest in contemporary India's economy,
> society and politics, a one-week Summer School on Globalization and
> Development in India was launched in Torino (Italy) in 2010.
>
> This year a second edition of the Summer School will run from Monday July
> 4th to Friday July 8th 2011. The working language will be English and the
> programme is suitable for students and professionals with different
> disciplinary backgrounds.
>
> The School aims to provide in-depth knowledge and critical comprehension
> of key economic, social and political aspects of India's development
> dynamics in the era of globalization, through a multidisciplinary
> approach.
>
> Any student or professional willing to explore the complex facets of the
> development process in globalizing India will be welcome.
>
> The confirmed speakers are professor C. P. Chandrasekhar (JNU), professor
> Jayati Ghosh (JNU), Dr Jens Lerche (SOAS), Dr Subir Sinha (SOAS) and
> professor James Manor (ICS, London).
>
> Further details are available through the School's website:
>
> http://www.to-asia.it/to-india/ (details are being added weekly).
>
> Several scholarships are available, covering anything from tuition fees
> to accommodation and meals. Please do check whether you may be eligible
> for either a Zerotasse or a Freetorino scholarship. Prospective
> participants should apply through the School's website by 10th June 2011.
>
> Diego Maiorano
> To-India Coordinator
> india@to-asia.it
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

Fw: H-ASIA: CFP: Shifting Geopolitical Ecologies and New Spatial Imaginaries, Hong Kong June 6-8, 2012

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2011 10:35 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP: Shifting Geopolitical Ecologies and New Spatial
Imaginaries, Hong Kong June 6-8, 2012


> H-ASIA
> May 12, 2011
>
> Call for papers: Shifting Geopolitical Ecologies and New Spatial
> Imaginaries, Inter-Asian Connections III, Hong Kong, June 6-8, 2012
> DEADLINE JUNE 24, 2011
> *******************************************************************
> From: Ravi Palat <palat@binghamton.edu>
>
> CONFERENCE ON
>
> INTER-ASIAN CONNECTIONS III: HONG KONG
>
> JUNE 6-8, 2012
>
> CALL FOR WORKSHOP PAPERS
>
> DEADLINE: Friday, June 24, 2011
>
>
>
> Workshop Title:
>
> Shifting Geopolitical Ecologies and New Spatial Imaginaries
>
>
> Workshop Directors:
>
> Çaglar Keyder
>
> Bogaziçi University
>
> keyder@boun.edu.tr
>
> Ravi Arvind Palat
> State University of New York at Binghamton palat@binghamton.edu
>
>
> Asia as an area of study was contoured by the geopolitical imperatives of
> the Cold War – despite a long history of interactions across this
> geographical expanse, before the end of the Second World War, there were
> few
> references to Asia as a coherent unit and there is no term for the
> continent
> in any indigenous language. This constitution of Asia, accompanied by the
> independence of former colonies, also led West Asia to be restructured as
> the 'Middle East' and separated from 'South Asia' to which it had long
> historical connections. 'Southeast Asia' was similarly divorced from both
> 'South' and 'East' Asia. These arrangements were framed by U.S.-sponsored
> alliances (SEATO and CENTO) in which Pakistan played a bridging role as a
> member of both, while India, Indonesia, and many other regional states
> joined together to launch the Non-Aligned Movement.
>
>
> The end of the Cold War has created new fractures as the demise and
> breakup
> of the Soviet Union rendered Non-Alignment anachronistic, and new cultural
> geographies have come into being in material and political practice, as
> well
> as in the imaginary of the elites and the populations involved. The
> changed
> geopolitical ecologies reconfigure alliances which parallel earlier
> historical patterns.
>
>
> This is evident in West and South Asia where deeper American involvement
> has
> been accompanied by Turkish and Indian bids for regional prominence,
> evoking
> memories of coeval dominions of Ottoman and Mughal empires. Sited at the
> confluence of several emerging networks, this region is crucial in
> understanding new realities of strategic alliances and interests. The
> expanded scale of production in China and India has intensified trade
> relations with the energy-rich states of West Asia. Denser trade in the
> neighboring seas accompanied by state failures in east Africa has also
> spurred a rise of piracy inviting new forms of cooperation between global
> and regional powers. If increased prosperity has made the 'emerging
> economies' more confident in their dealings with the West, their roles in
> their 'near abroad' has been akin to satrapies vying for greater autonomy.
> At the same time, the end of the Cold War has encouraged ethnic groups to
> tap into and revive their collective memories to challenge their
> fragmentation across national borders.
>
>
> This workshop examines these realignments in their historical context. It
> is
> based on the premise that spatial imaginaries are generated by a broad
> parallelogram of forces, but have to resonate successfully with collective
> historical memories and cultural practices. We invite original
> contributions
> from scholars of different disciplinary affiliations and regional
> interests
> to situate historical and contemporary spatial imaginaries of Asia within
> a
> broader global geopolitical and historical framework.
>
> Possible themes include:
>
> § historical roots of emerging alliances;
>
> § collective memories and new identities;
>
> § changing self-perceptions of states and their implications for global
> politics;
>
> § new patterns of cooperation and conflict; and
>
> § emerging security concerns in finance, energy, and other arenas.
>
>
>
> For additional details and application guidelines, please visit the
> Conference
> website:http://www.ssrc.org/programs/pages/interasia-program/conference-on-inter-asian-connections-iii-hong-kong-june-6-8-2012/
>
>
> Ravi Palat
> University at Binghamton
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

Fw: H-ASIA: International School for Advanced Studies in Cultural Studies "Critique/Crisis", Palermo, Summer school

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Friday, May 13, 2011 3:23 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: International School for Advanced Studies in Cultural
Studies "Critique/Crisis", Palermo, Summer school


> H-ASIA
> May 12, 2011
>
> International School for Advanced Studies in Cultural Studies
> "Critique/Crisis", Palermo
>
> ***********************************************************************
> Ed. note: The overall themes of this investigation--it seems to me--would
> benefit from the presence of Asian perspectives, but I am not sure if the
> organizers would have that in mind. Consult them please. I also include
> this because it is the first time I have been able to include the word
> 'hendydis' in an H-ASIA post. FFC
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> From: H-Net Announcements <announce@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU>
>
> Location: Italy
>
> Summer Program Date: 2011-05-20 (in 8 days)
> Date Submitted: 2011-05-09
> Announcement ID: 185105
>
> Critic and crisis is a hendiadys characteristic of modernity. It is a
> notion going back at least to the eighteenth century with a precise and
> articulated European location, marking the birth of a concept that is
> central to our interest: culture. It is a question of understanding that
> "culture" is the figure of thought (itself a metaphor), that is built
> through a self-reflection (critic) and through the continuous
> self-questioning (crisis). The fact that there are many and rich "cultural
> turns" in today's cultural studies is the clearest proof that Modernity is
> conceived from the concept of culture and culture is conceived as critique
> and crisis.
>
> The henceforth Summer School in Critique/Crisis is addressed to everyone
> who is interested in this themes: students, Ph.D, researchers, scientists.
>
> Valentina Mignano
> University of Palermo, Italy
> Facoltà di Scienze della Formazione
> Dipartimento di Studi Culturali
> viale delle scienze, edificio 15
> 90128 Palermo
> Email: valentinamignano@gmail.com
>
>
>
>
> H-Net reproduces announcements that have been submitted to us as a
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>

Fw: H-ASIA: Workshop Intellectual Networks in Early Modern Japan, Sophia Univ., Tokyo, June 11, 2011

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Friday, May 13, 2011 3:29 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: Workshop Intellectual Networks in Early Modern Japan,
Sophia Univ., Tokyo, June 11, 2011


> H-ASIA
> May 12, 2011
>
> Workshop on Intellectual Networks in Early Modern Japan Location: Japan
> Sophia University, Tokyo, June 11, 2011
> ***********************************************************************
> From: H-Net Announcements <announce@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU>
>
> Workshop on Intellectual Networks in Early Modern Japan Location: Japan
>
> Workshop Date: 2011-06-11 (in 30 days)
> Date Submitted: 2011-05-10
> Announcement ID: 185110
>
> Sophia University Institute of Comparative Culture presents the following
> workshop:
>
> Networks in Early Modern Japan
> Date: June 11, 2011
> Location: Sophia University, Bldg. 10, 3rd Floor, Room 301
> Time: 13:30 until 17:00
>
> Organizer: Network Study Research Group (Sophia University)
> Language: English
> Web: http://pweb.cc.sophia.ac.jp/bgo/network_studies/
>
> Speakers:
>
> 13:30–14:30
>
> Ochiai Kô (Shudo University, Hiroshima):
>
> A village headman's network and the ideology of "national interest" The
> ideology of "national interest" became established not as an abstract
> ideal of government, but rather as a practical mindset based on the idea
> of systematically enriching the state. Ikegami Tarôzaemon (1718–1798), the
> headman (nanushi) of a village in the vicinity of Edo, is one such
> practitioner. Tarôzaemon dedicated his whole life to spreading sugar
> cultivation and production in order to stop the outflow of bullion for
> sugar imports. Crucial to his success was Tarôzaemon's exploitation of his
> influential social network. His far-reaching connections included people
> he knew through his position as the village head of Daishikawaramura as
> well as people whom he had met through their common interest in haikai
> poetry. His network further extended to the shogunate's most powerful
> politician, Tanuma Okitsugu, whose support for the sugar project was
> crucial. The thread linking individuals within this network to
> Tarôzaemon's sugar-related efforts was a shared commitment to an ideology
> of "national interest."
>
>
> 14:45–15:45
>
> Bettina Gramlich-Oka (Sophia University):
>
> Following one's father's aspiration: "Know the Way"
>
> Rai Shunsui (1746-1816), the oldest son from a reasonably well-off family
> of dyers in Takehara in Aki province, left Takehara for the Kansai region
> in 1764 at the young age of nineteen. Nominally undertaken to cure a
> chronic disease, the trip in fact bespoke Shunsui's determination to
> distinguish himself. With him he carried a list of over one hundred names
> of prominent men in Sakai, Osaka, and Kyoto. Before his return four months
> later he had made contact with seventy-four scholars, intellectuals, and
> other influential men. Focusing on two records kept by Shunsui, Tôyûzakki
> (Record of my trip east, 1764) and Zaishinkiji (Record of my stay in
> Osaka, undated), the paper will investigate Shunsui's formation of a
> personal network that would ultimately bring him employment at the
> Hiroshima domain school and help him establish a reputation as one of the
> most influential and respected scholars of the late eighteenth and early
> nineteenth centuries.
>
>
> 16:30–17:00
>
> Takeshi Moriyama (Murdoch University, Perth)
>
> Between a Snowy Village and the Edo Bunjin Salon
>
> Apart from his book Hokuetsu seppu, pub. 1837-1842, Suzuki Bokushi
> (1770-1842) is famous for his extensive communication network,
> notwithstanding his location in a remote rural town in Echigo province and
> his modest lifestyle as a farmer-merchant. One of his address books,
> 'Kumoino kari', contains hundreds of entries listing people from whom he
> received letters. These correspondents were geographically spread from
> Mutsu to Higo, and ranged socially from famous authors and kabuki actors
> to rural intellectuals and samurai officials. Examples of illustrious
> figures in the address book are Kyôden, Bakin, Ikku, Hokusai, Bôsai,
> Nampo, Danjûrô and Ebizô. Several courtesans in the pleasure quarter of
> Yoshiwara, including the celebrated beauty Hanaôgi, are also named. This
> paper examines the cultural and social mechanisms which enabled Bokushi to
> make contact with such celebrities in Edo, and the extent to which Bokushi
> was able to participate in the urban bunjin salon.
>
> Access to Sophia
> University:http://www.sophia.ac.jp/eng/info/access/directions/access_yotsuya
>
> Campus map: http://www.sophia.ac.jp/eng/info/access/map/map_yotsuya
>
> Institute of Comparative Culture Office
> Sophia University
> 7-1 Kioicho, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 102-8554, JAPAN
> +81-(0)3-3238-4082 (Tel)
> +81-(0)3-3238-4081(Fax)
> Email: diricc@sophia.ac.jp
> Visit the website at
> http://http://icc.fla.sophia.ac.jp/index.html
>
>
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