After the Assassination of Abe Shinzo.

In Japan today, political and religious opponents, lawyers, former adherents, and a host of other activists are advocating for the legal dissolution of the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification, the controversial South Korea-based religion formerly known as the Unification Church. This talk will discuss legal, political, and religious ramifications occasioned by efforts to remove religious juridical persons status from the church and the tumultuous events that inspired them.

Making Waves: Taiwan’s Presidential Election 2024

Join the UW Taiwan Studies Program in-person or online as three speakers, Kharis Templeman (Hoover Institution, Stanford), David Bachman (UW), and Ellen Chang (UW) discuss the 2024 elections and Wave Makers on Wednesday, November 1 from 5-6:30pm PT in HUB 340.

In January 2024, Taiwan will elect a new president and legislature. This election offers a potentially historic four-way race between the two party heavyweights, the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and Kuomintang (KMT), joined by the relatively new Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) and an independent candidate. As tensions are running high between Taipei and Beijing as well as Beijing and Washington, the implications of this election can reverberate across the Taiwan Strait and Pacific. What are the stakes of the 2024 elections, and what are the potential consequences for Taiwan’s domestic and foreign policies?

The 2024 elections follow the hit Taiwanese Netflix show, Wave Makers, earlier this year. Wave Makers portrays a fictional presidential election in Taiwan, offering audiences a glimpse into not just electoral politics but also hot button issues of environmentalism, social justice, and gender equality. After allegations of sexual crimes emerged that mirrored the fictional events in Wave Makers, the show was credited with sparking Taiwan’s MeToo movement. How does Wave Makers affect Taiwanese society’s relationship with elections? What are the broader implications of popular media portrayals of Taiwanese politics?

This event is free and open to the public and will be streamed via our Facebook page and YouTube channel. Click here to register via Facebook.

Chinese Art History Publishing: Meet Editors and Publishers

The Association for Chinese Art History is organizing a webinar “Chinese Art History Publishing: Meet Editors and Publishers” so that members have a chance to hear from and ask questions of journal and book editors. Amy McNair, Editor-in-chief of the journal Artibus Asiae; Sarah Schneewind, History Department, University of California, San Diego and editorial board member for the book series “Global Chinese Histories 250–1650,” Amsterdam University Press; and Shannon Cunningham, Commissioning Editor, Amsterdam University Press, will discuss publication of scholarship on Chinese art history in journal and book forms. Moderated by ACAH board member Michelle C. Wang, the event will be 90 minutes, beginning with each editor discussing the publication processes at their institutions and ending with 45 minutes of questions from the audience.This event will take place on Tuesday, September 19, 2023: 10:00am PDT/1:00pm EDT. Please register here and the Zoom link will be sent to you before the event: https://forms.gle/x4X6M5jQhZLK8SVM6.

Association for Chinese Art History — “Meet the Authors” Webinar

The Association for Chinese Art History is organizing a “Meet the Authors” Zoom webinar so that members have a chance to meet the three inaugural winners of the Bei Shan Tang book prizes: Aurelia Campbell, author of What the Emperor Built: Architecture and Empire in the Early Ming (University of Washington Press), Dora C. Y. Ching, author and editor of Visualizing Dunhuang: The Lo Archive Photographs of the Mogao and Yulin Caves (Princeton University Press), and Rachel Silberstein, A Fashionable Century: Textile Artistry and Commerce in the Late Qing (University of Washington Press). Moderated by Bei Shan Tang Prize Committee chair Roberta Wue, the event will be 90 minutes, beginning with each author discussing their projects and the publication process, from the conceptualization of the project to the nuts and bolts of bringing their work to press, and ending with 45 minutes of questions from the audience.  

This event will take place on Thursday, August 3, 2023: 10:00am PDT/1:00pm EDT/6:00pm BST. Please register here and the Zoom link will be sent to you before the event: https://forms.gle/a9xFPUJroK7jCCnAA

NYCAS: Fall 2023 Book Presentation and Discussion

Join the New York Conference on Asian Studies (NYCAS) this fall for an online book event on Saturday, October 14th, 10 am-12:30 pm EST. The event is free, but registration is required.
Dr. Albert Welter (Professor and Head of the Department of East Asian Studies at the University of Arizona) will talk about his book, The Future of China’s Past: Reflections on the Meaning of China’s Rise, published by SUNY Press in 2023. Dr. Welter’s presentation will be followed by a graduate student roundtable which will respond to the book, and the announcement of NYCAS’ 2023 Marleigh Grayer Ryan Student Writing Competition winners.

CALL FOR GRADUATE STUDENT ROUNDTABLE PARTICIPATION
Deadline: August 1, 2023
The roundtable will consist of selected graduate students who will each prepare a 5-minute response to the book and engage in a discussion. Each student selected for the roundtable will receive a complimentary copy of the book from SUNY Press. Please submit your application here by Aug 1, 2023, to be considered for participation in this roundtable.

Graduate student interest form can be found at this link: https://hawksites.newpaltz.edu/nycas/upcoming-conferences/

REGISTER FOR THE BOOK EVENT
Deadline: Oct 12, 2023

Registration form can be found at this link: https://hawksites.newpaltz.edu/nycas/upcoming-conferences/

If you have any questions, please contact: Natalie Sarrazin (nsarrazi@brockport.edu)

NYCAS: Fall 2023 Book Presentation and Discussion

This year, NYCAS will hold an online book event, featuring Dr. Albert Welter’s The Future of China’s Past: Reflections on the Meaning of China’s Rise, published by SUNY Press in 2023. This event is co-sponsored by SUNY Press. Dr. Welter’s presentation will be followed by a graduate student roundtable which will respond to the book.

GUEST LECTURE OF JUSTICE DR AZMIRALDA ZAHIR, SUPREME COURT OF MALDIVES

Honourable Dr Azmiralda Zahir , Justice Supreme Court of Maldives will deliver her online talk titled “Reinforcing Democratic Values Through Online Hearings – the Maldives Experience” on Monday 5th of June 2023 10 am UK time. Anyone wishes to attend this event may use this link if they wish to attend: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/global-south-network-second-guest-lecture-tickets-625793795087

‘Stand Up Like a Taiwanese!’: PRC Coercion and Public Preferences for Resistance

Taiwan’s opposition to PRC demands such as acceptance of the ‘92 Consensus’ and ‘One Country, Two Systems’ formula since 2016 has invited a series of retaliatory measures from Beijing, designed to coerce Taiwan into compliance. Given the stark asymmetry in economic size, military capability, and diplomatic status, Taiwan provides a case for studying coercive diplomacy that takes the form of threats to punish. Material differences suggest that Taiwan should capitulate, and ‘cheap talk’ theses expect PRC threats to have no discernible effect, while balance of threat arguments expect resolve. Chong argues that the popular support for resisting China rises as PRC coercion grows and Taiwanese citizens increasingly perceive China to be a threat. His research finds that citizens in a liberal democracy can develop the will to pushback against pressure from an authoritarian regime despite sharp asymmetries in capabilities and material limitations. Over time, the PRC has to decide how much it wishes to bear the growing costs and risks of escalation to overcome resistance.

Book Talk: Divided Allies w/ Hsiao-ting Lin

*RSVP requested

On Thursday, May 11, 2023, at 3:30p.m. PT, the UW Taiwan Studies Program will welcome Professor Hsiao-ting Lin to discuss his newly published monograph, Taiwan, the United States, and the Hidden History of the Cold War in Asia: Divided Allies. Lin’s book explores the challenges which faced the United States and Taiwanese alliance during the Cold War, addressing a wide range of events and influences of the period between the 1950s and 1970s. Tackling seven main topics to outline the fluctuations of the U.S.–Taiwan relationship, this volume highlights the impact of the mainland counteroffensive, the offshore islands, Tibet, Taiwan’s secret operations in Asia, Taiwan’s Soviet and nuclear gambits, Chinese representation in the United Nations, and the Vietnam War. Utilizing multinational archival research, particularly the newly available materials from Taiwan and the United States, to reevaluate Taiwan’s foreign policy during the Cold War, revealing a pragmatic and opportunistic foreign policy disguised in nationalistic rhetoric.

Hsiao-ting Lin is a research fellow and curator of the Modern China and Taiwan collection at the Hoover Institution, for which he collects material on China and Taiwan, as well as China-related materials in other East Asian countries. He holds a BA in political science from National Taiwan University (1994) and an MA in international law and diplomacy from National Chengchi University in Taiwan (1997). He received his DPhil in oriental studies in 2003 from the University of Oxford. He has published extensively on modern Chinese and Taiwanese politics, history, and ethnic minorities, including Accidental State: Chiang Kai-shek, the United States, and the Making of Taiwan (2016); Modern China’s Ethnic Frontiers: A Journey to the West (2011); and Tibet and Nationalist China’s Frontier: Intrigues and Ethnopolitics, 1928–49 (2006).

Book Talk: Diasporic Cold Warriors with Chien-Wen Kung

On Thursday, April 13, 2023, at 6p.m. PT, the UW Taiwan Studies Program will welcome Professor Chien-Wen Kung to discuss his newly published monograph, Diasporic Cold Warriors: Nationalist China, Anticommunism, and the Philippine Chinese, 1930s-1970s.

From the 1950s to the 1970s, the Philippine Chinese were Southeast Asia and possibly the world’s most exemplary overseas Chinese Cold Warriors. Fears of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and Southeast Asia’s Chinese as conduits for PRC influence gripped states and societies then – as indeed they do today. Yet, ironically, the example of the Philippines shows that the “China” which intervened the most extensively in any Southeast Asian country during the Cold War was not the PRC. It was, rather, the Republic of China (ROC) on Taiwan. Drawing upon archival research and fieldwork in Taiwan, the Philippines, the United States, and China, Diasporic Cold Warriors tells for the first time this story of the Philippine Chinese as anticommunist partisans by tracing their evolving relationship with the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) and Philippine state over the middle third of the 20th century.

Chien-Wen Kung is an Assistant Professor of History at the National University of Singapore and the author of Diasporic Cold Warriors: Nationalist China, Anticommunism, and the Philippine Chinese, 1930s-1970s. His scholarship has also been published in Modern Asian Studies, the International History Review, and Asian Ethnicity. Born and raised in Singapore, he received his B.A. in History and English from Dartmouth College and Ph.D. in Modern Chinese and International and Global History from Columbia University. With funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council and National Heritage Board in Singapore, he is currently working on a cultural history of Singapore-China-Taiwan relations in the 1970s and 1980s.

Book Talk: Island Fantasia with Wei-Ping Lin

On Tuesday, February 28, 2023, at 5p.m. PT, the UW Taiwan Studies Program will welcome Professor Wei-Ping Lin to discuss her newly published work, Island Fantasia: Imagining Subjects on the Military Frontline between China and Taiwan. This is a virtual event which will be livestreamed on our Facebook and YouTube pages. Click here to register.

The Matsu archipelago between China and Taiwan, for long an isolated outpost off southeast China, was suddenly transformed into a military frontline in 1949 by the Cold War and the Communist–Nationalist conflict. The army occupied the islands, commencing more than 40 long years of military rule. With the lifting of martial law in 1992, the people were confronted with the question of how to move forward. Professor Lin’s in-depth ethnography and social history of the islands focuses on how individual citizens redefined themselves and reimagined their society. Drawing on long-term fieldwork, Lin shows how islanders used both traditional and new media to cope with the conflicts and trauma of harsh military rule. She discusses the formation of new social imaginaries through the appearance of “imagining subjects,” interrogating their subjectification processes and varied uses of mediating technologies as they seek to answer existential questions.

“Refugee Youth Agency in Flux: Active and Passive Waiting in Transit Country Indonesia”

Talk by Realisa Masardi, Universitas Gadjah Mada and University of Michigan

For more than two decades, Indonesia has been a transit spot for asylum seekers from Central Asia, South Asia, East Africa, and Southeast Asia while irregularly en route to Australia. Following Australia’s controversial ‘stop the boats’ policy, thousands of refugees, including the young population, must wait longer in Indonesia to get their refugee status processed by UNHCR and to have a chance to resettle in a third country. As a non-signatory state to the 1951 Refugee Convention, Indonesia has a limited legal framework to protect the rights of refugees and asylum seekers, which causes grave precarious conditions for them. Nevertheless, arbitrariness in Indonesia’s legal framework and its flexibility in handling refugees surprisingly has provided a certain level of “informal protection” and opportunities for young refugees to make maneuvers in the fluid arenas. As they wait, the young people also plan, anticipate, negotiate, hustle, play, and rest. This talk will focus on the dynamics of refugee youths’ agency-in-waiting. Professor Masardi explores how young refugees exercise passive and active waiting and what contributing factors catalyze or impede the distribution of their agency.

Realisa D Masardi is an assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia. She is the awardee of the prestigious 2022 Gosling-Lim Postdoctoral Fellowship in Southeast Asian Studies. Currently, Professor Masardi is completing her postdoc program at the Center for Southeast Asian Studies and the Department of Anthropology at the University of Michigan. Professor Masardi has been working on the issues of children and young people in several migrants/refugees communities in Southeast Asia, focusing on their identities, access to rights, and agency, particularly on their everyday survival movements. She received her PhD in anthropology at the University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Her dissertation focuses on the social navigation of independent young refugees from diverse countries facing precarities during transit in Indonesia.

Boundary Pushing in Asian Studies: Editors’ Roundtable

This roundtable is part of the “Boundary Pushing in Asian Studies” workshop organized by the editors of the Journal of Asian Studies in partnership with the Asian Studies Center at the University of Pittsburgh. Editors of leading journals — Tina Chen (Verge: Studies in Global Asias), Suzy Kim (positions: asia critique), Sumit Guha (Modern Asian Studies), Paolo Sartori (Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient), Hyung Gu Lynn (Pacific Affairs), and Andrea Jain (Journal of the American Academy of Religion) — will join Joseph Alter, Purnima Dhavan, Kelly Anne Hammond, Kate McDonald, and Albert Park (Journal of Asian Studies). Each editor will talk briefly about their experience highlighting things that are especially important for early career scholars to know and understand about the peer review process. This will be followed by Q&A with participants in the workshop. Registration is free and the roundtable is open to the public.

Book Talk: Imperial Gateway with Seiji Shirane

On Thursday, January 19, 2023 from 3:30 to 5:00p.m. PT, Professor Seiji Shirane will join the UW Taiwan Studies Program to discuss his newly published monograph, Imperial Gateway: Colonial Taiwan and Japan’s Expansion in South China and Southeast Asia, 1895-1945.

Shirane’s book explores the political, social, and economic significance of colonial Taiwan in the southern expansion of Japan’s empire from 1895 to the end of World War II. Challenging understandings of empire that focus on bilateral relations between metropole and colonial periphery, the book uncovers a half century of dynamic relations between Japan, Taiwan, China, and Western regional powers. Japanese officials in Taiwan did not simply take orders from Tokyo; rather, they often pursued their own expansionist ambitions in South China and Southeast Asia. When outright conquest was not possible, they promoted alternative strategies, including naturalizing resident Chinese as overseas Taiwanese subjects, extending colonial police networks, and deploying tens of thousands of Taiwanese to war. Drawing on multilingual archives in six countries, Imperial Gateway shows how Japanese officials and Taiwanese subjects transformed Taiwan into a regional gateway for expansion in an ever-shifting international order.

Book Break: ‘Comfort Stations’ as Remembered by Okinawans during World War II

The speakers will be Yunshin Hong and Robert Ricketts.

Okinawa was the only Japanese prefecture to be invaded by US forces during the battle fought there in the spring of 1945. It was also the only part of Japan proper forced to accommodate a network of 146 Japanese military “comfort stations”. After the war, how did Okinawans remember the intrusive and intimidating spaces of the sex venues and their destructive impact on village society? What was their role in the Japanese army’s battle plans? To answer these questions, the author focuses not on Korean and Okinawan comfort women per se, but on the comfort stations and the Okinawans who witnessed them in their daily lives.

Choson History Society Talk (Gowoon Seong)

The Choson History Society is inviting Gowoon Seong (Fudan Univ.) for a talk titled, “Hakata merchants and the distribution of ceramics in Northeast Asia in the 15th-16th centuries”
Presented by Gowoon Seong, PhD Candidate, Fudan University (复旦大学)
Date: July 28, 2022, 11:00pm (Seoul) / 7:00am (Los Angeles) / 4:00 pm (Paris)

Visit the event website to register. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

Hakata merchants served an essential role in the circulation in Northeast Asia of Ming ceramics and Chosŏn ceramics in the 15th to 16th centuries. In scholarship on the Chinese ceramic trade, Ryukyu islanders have received significant attention. However, Ryukyu islanders were more involved in Southeast Asia trading deeper than in Northeast Asia. Investigating the role of Hakata merchants provides a more profound understanding not only of ceramic trading in Northeast Asia but as well as of its changing value in different cultures. This presentation will use a combination of historical documents and excavated materials to examine three different roles of Hakata merchants in the ceramic trade.

Beyond the Verse of Korea

This is a special literary lecture by David McCann, a Harvard professor specializing in Korean Literature. It will be an online lecture, as the in-person event is now full. It is commemorating the 10th anniversary of King Sejong Foundation Institute with the guest speaker Professor David McCann presenting “The Charm of Korean Literature: Sijo”. We are diving into the depth of Korea’s literature and poetic beauty!

AAS Digital Dialogues: Meet the Asia Shorts Editor

Join us June 29 at 3:00 pm ET for an AAS Digital Dialogue session featuring David Kenley, editor of the Asia Shorts book series. Published by AAS in conjunction with Columbia University Press, Asia Shorts has a unique mission in our contemporary publishing environment. Kenley will introduce the series and, more importantly, discuss how potential authors can prepare a manuscript for submission. Participants can submit questions regarding Asia Shorts in particular or about the broader state of disseminating scholarship in a rapidly changing publishing industry. Open access, “pay to publish,” the explosion of social media, and the blurring of the boundary between trade texts and scholarly monographs—these are only some of the topics Kenley will address in this important Digital Dialogue session.

 

Register Now

ASPAC Webinar on Research and Publishing Trends in Asian Studies, 2022

In lieu of both an in-person conference and a virtual conference, our region decided to take the opportunity to do a webinar to showcase award-winning graduate student research with the winners of our two graduate student paper prizes: Li Haoyue, the Mori Prize in Asian Studies and Sean Cronan, the Barlow Prize in Chinese Studies, to offer expert advice on transforming your dissertation into a publishable book with Lorri Hagman, Executive Editor at University of Washington Press, and to inspire with a keynote address from the AAS Vice President, Kamran Ali through his current and future research on Pakistani cinema in the 1960s.

Click on this LINK to join the Zoom Webinar

All are welcome!

Meet the Journal of Asian Studies (JAS) Editor (Virtual)

This AAS Digital Dialogue session will be an opportunity to meet with Joseph S. Alter, the editor of the Journal of Asian Studies, to learn about the preparation of manuscripts for submission and the peer review process. Alter will begin the session with a brief overview of points that are outlined in a short document entitled “Guidelines for Publishing in the Journal of Asian Studies,” which you may access below. The document is designed to address many common questions that relate to publishing and to highlight key points that are especially relevant as you consider submitting your work to the JAS.

Following this overview, the session will be structured around questions you are invited to submit in advance (you may submit questions when registering for the session, or through the button below). These may range from the practical and procedural to broader concerns about how the field of Asian Studies is changing, and how to conceptualize your work in relation to changes in academia more broadly.