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Center forSoutheast Asian Studies Kyoto University

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過去のセミナー案内:24年度

2013年3月

Special Seminar On Thai-Cambodian Relations: The Questions of the Preah Vihear Temple and a Clash of Two Nationalisms
  1. 日時:平成25年3月29日(金) 14:00 - 16:00
  2. 場所:京都大学稲盛財団記念館3階中会議室 (332室)
  3. スピーカー:Professor Charnvit Kasetsiri, Professor Emeritus at Thammasat University & Associate Professor Pavin Chachavalpongpun, CSEAS, Kyoto University
  4. タイトル:Thai-Cambodian Relations: The Questions of the Preah Vihear Temple and a Clash of Two Nationalisms
  5. 要旨:
    In this presentation, Professor Charnvit Kasetsiri will briefly explore conflicts between Thailand and Cambodia, the clashes of their brands of nationalism, and the question of war and peace. Citing the example of the July 2008 registration by UNESCO of the Preah Vihear temple as a World Heritage site belonging to Cambodia, Prof. Charnvit pointed out that history had been distorted for Thailand’s domestic politics. Meanwhile, Dr Pavin Chachavalpongpun will support this argument by elaborating on the politicisation of the Preah Vihear issue in Thailand which led to numerous armed conflicts between the two countries. In the end, Prof. Charnvit will propose to set up an ASEAN Eco-Cultural Trans-Boundary World Heritage site was designed to foster close cooperation and collaboration at the Temple site.
  6. Bio note:
    Charnvit Kasetsiri is a prominent historian and Thai Studies scholar. He is Professor Emeritus at Thammasat University, Bangkok, Thailand. After obtaining his bachelor’s degree in Diplomacy with Honor from Thammasat, 1963, he pursued his 1967 M .A. in Diplomacy and World Affairs at Occidental College, Los Angeles, California, under a Rockefeller scholarship, and his 1972 Ph.D. in Southeast Asian History at Cornell University. His thesis, The Rise of Ayudhya and a History of Siam in the 14th and 15th Centuries, was published by Oxford in Asia, 1972. He served as Lecturer of History at Thammasat from 1973-2001 and founded, in 2000, the Southeast Asian Studies Program. He was the President of Thammasat University in 1995-96. He has written approximately 200 articles and a number of publications on Thai and Southeast Asian History. He has been visiting fellow at various Southeast Asian studies institutions: Kyoto, Berkeley, Cornell, Singapore, etc.
    Charnvit has launched a ‘Siam not Thailand’ campaign to rename the country as to reflect the reality about its ethnics, languages and cultural identities. His latest works deal with questions of war and peace and good ASEAN neighbor relations, especially between Thailand and Cambodia.
    Pavin Chachavalpongpun is associate professor at the Centre for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University. Earning his PhD from the School of Oriental and African Studies, Pavin is the author of two books: A Plastic Nation: The Curse of Thainess in Thai-Burmese Relations and Reinventing Thailand: Thaksin and His Foreign Policy. He has written extensively on the issue of Thai-Cambodian relations, including “Embedding Embittered History: Unending Conflicts in Thai-Cambodian Relations”, Asian Affairs, Vol. XLIII, No. 1 (March 2012), pp. 81-102; and, “Temple of Doom: Hysteria about the Preah Vihear Temple in the Thai Nationalist Discourse”, Legitimacy Crisis in Thailand, edited by Marc Askew (Chiang Mai: Silkworm Books, 2010). Pavin and Charnvit, together with Pou Sothirak, are editing a forthcoming book, Preah Vihear: A Guide to the Thai-Cambodian Conflict and Its Solutions, to be released early 2013
Tonan Talk by Prof. Abigail Cohn
  1. 日時:平成25年3月29日(金)12:00 - 13:30
  2. 場所:京都大学東南アジア研究所東南亭(稲盛財団記念館201号室)
  3. タイトル:Local Languages in Indonesia: Language Maintenance or Language Shift?
  4. スピーカー:Prof Abigail Cohn, Department of Linguistics, Cornell University
  5. アブストラクト:
  6. The choice and subsequent development of Bahasa Indonesia as the national language following the founding of the Republic of Indonesia in 1945 is widely cited as a great success story in language planning. The results of this policy decision have indeed been very positive in terms of unity and nation building, and have led to increased literacy throughout Indonesia. The development of Indonesian has occurred in the context of an incredibly rich and complex linguistic situation, where hundreds of distinct languages have been used as native languages throughout the archipelago and multilingualism has been the norm. With increased use of Indonesian―both formal (bahasa resmi) and informal (bahasa sehari-hari)―in all facets of daily life, the question arises as to whether Indonesia will continue as a highly multilingual society or move toward monolingualism. The answer to this question has implications for language policies in Indonesia as well as for the vitality of the hundreds of languages in the archipelago at risk of endangerment.
  7. In this talk we consider this issue from the perspectives of research on language policy, language endangerment, and language ideologies, and show that only through integrating these approaches can we understand the complexity of the linguistic situation in Indonesia. As a case study, we consider current trends and shifts in use of Javanese (both Ngoko and Krama) by younger speakers as influenced by increased use of Indonesian, as well as other linguistic trends such as the increasing use of English, the role of social media, etc. Rarely if ever are languages like Javanese, with over 80 million speakers, considered endangered. However, as Indonesian takes over in more and more domains of communication and intergenerational transmission of Javanese breaks down, we are led to conclude that even a language with over 80 million speakers can be at risk, a trend that has serious implications for all of the local languages of Indonesia.
  8. Bio Note:
  9. Dr. Abigail C. Cohn is a Professor of Linguistics and Southeast Asian Studies at Cornell University, Ithaca, NY. Her research interests include the study of the Austronesian languages of Indonesia, with a particular focus on their phonetics, phonology, and morphology, as well as topics in theoretical linguistics. Her publications include articles and book chapters in both general linguistics and areal linguistics venues and she is co-editor of The Oxford Handbook of Laboratory Phonology. Recently she has turned her attention to the sociolinguistic situation in Indonesia as more and more young people switch from using a local language as their first language to using Indonesian. In 2012-13, she is a Fulbright Senior Research Scholar, at Atma Jaya Catholic University, Jakarta, Indonesia, carrying out a research project entitled Language Contact in Indonesia: Shifts in Usage and their Structural Manifestations, investigating the mutual influences of Sundanese and Indonesian as a case study.
  10. Moderator:Caroline Hau (CSEAS, Kyoto University)
CSEAS Colloquium by Dr. Porphant Ouyyanont
  1. 日時:平成25年3月28日(木)16:00 -
  2. 場所:京都大学稲盛財団記念館3階中会議室(332号室)
  3. タイトル:The Crown Property Bureau in Thailand and Its Role, Past & Present
  4. スピーカー: Porphant Ouyyanont, Ph.D, Associate Professor, School of Economics, Sukhothai Thammathirat Open University
  5. アブストラクト:
  6. The seminar deals with an analysis of the work and role of the Crown Property Bureau (the monarchy’s investment arm in Thailand ) from its beginning in late 19th Century until the present day, with a focus on the foundations prior to the revolution of 1932, and the re-emergence of the Bureau as a significant economic institution after 1945. Standard economic histories of Thailand largely ignore the work and the role of the CPB was a significant agent in the modernization of the country and in securing the financial independence and strength of the monarchy. In this seminar, attempt is made to a comprehensive study shown of the development, functions (including its composition, management, and decision-taking), and economic significance of the CPB. It will seek to quantify the total investments of the Bureau, to classify the broad areas of investments, and to estimate the returns on the investments. We will look also at how the 1997 crisis affected the Crown Property Bureau. The Bureau was particularly vulnerable because of its dependence on the performance of two private companies in which the Bureau was a major shareholder. Both companies, the Siam Commercial Bank and the Siam Cement Group, were in sectors that were hit hard by the crisis. The Bureau survived the crisis by making significant changes in its own management and investment policies, and by promoting similar reforms in two affiliated companies. As a result, the Bureau emerged with an income significantly higher than its peak pre-crisis level.
  7. Bio Note:
  8. Porphant Ouyyanont is associate professor of economics at Sukhothai Thammathirat Open University. He obtained his doctorate in economic history from the University of New England, Australia, and has been a visiting researcher at Kyoto University Center for Southeast Asian Studies. His publication and research interests include the economic history of Bangkok and Thailand, village economy, The Crown Property Bureau in Thailand and its investment role. Some of his works include The Village Economy in the Central Region of Thailand (Bangkok:Vitheethud, 2003), "The Crown Property Bureau in Thailand and Crisis of 1997" (Journal of Contemporary Asia, 38(1)February, 2008) "Underdevelopment and Industrialization in Pre-War Thailand" (Australian Economic History Review 52 (1), March 2012).
  9. Moderator:小泉順子 (CSEAS, Kyoto University)
Tonan Talk by Prof. Duncan McCargo
  1. 日時:平成25年3月27日(水)12:00 - 13:30
  2. 場所:京都大学東南アジア研究所東南亭(稲盛財団記念館201号室)
  3. タイトル:Policing Bangkok: Nights out with the detectives
  4. スピーカー:Prof. Duncan McCargo, School of Politics and International Studies, University of Leeds
  5. アブストラクト:
  6. This paper draws on participant observation and interview research conducted in Bangkok during the first few months of 2012. It examines the methods and practices used by a team of city detectives during near-nightly ‘raids,’ targeted mainly at local slum communities. These raids focused primarily on drug use and petty gambling, often with purpose of arresting a pre-determined number of suspects in order to meet performance indicators set by senior commanders. Most of the arrests were random and arbitrary, with an emphasis on low-income, low-level offenders. Formal procedures concerning suspects’ rights were honoured mainly in the breach. The research raises questions about the nature of criminal justice as understood by the Thai police, and the high value apparently placed on routine, ritualized arrests which have no obvious impact on levels of serious crime. The paper argues that such activities may have the effect of undermining the rule of law and eroding the legitimacy of the criminal justice system.
  7. Bio Note:
  8. Duncan McCargo is Professor of Southeast Asian Politics at the University of Leeds, and a Visiting Scholar at Columbia University, New York. He is best known for his ground-breaking work on the politics of Thailand. He has published ten books, including the award-winning Tearing Apart the Land: Islam and Legitimacy in Southern Thailand (Cornell 2008) and most recently Mapping National Anxieties: Thailand’s Southern Conflict (NIAS 2012). He currently holds a Leverhulme Trust Major Research Fellowship to examine the politics of justice in Thailand.
  9. Moderator:Noboru ISHIKAWA (CSEAS, Kyoto University)
平成24年度東南アジア研究所共同利用・共同研究拠点 「東南アジア研究の国際共同研究拠点」年次研究成果発表会
  1. 日時:平成25年3月22日(金) 9:30 - 18:20
  2. 場所:京都大学東南アジア研究所稲盛財団記念館3階大会議室
  3. プログラム:
  4. 9:30 開会 松林 公蔵(京都大学東南アジア研究所)
    9:30 - 9:40 所長挨拶 清水 展(京都大学東南アジア研究所)
    9:40 - 9:50 拠点の状況報告 松林 公蔵(京都大学東南アジア研究所)
    セッション1  司会 大野美紀子(京都大学東南アジア研究所)
    9:50 -10:00 終了課題Ⅰ-1(代表:松浦史明・上智大学・アジア文化研究所)
    「アンコール後期王道ネットワークの意義」
    10:00 - 10:10 終了課題Ⅰ-2(代表:小座野八光・愛知県立大学・外国語学部)
    「20世紀ジャワにおける農村史研究」
    10:10 - 10:20 終了課題Ⅱ (代表:Venkatesh Raghavan・大阪市立大学大学院創造都市研究科)
    「持続可能な資源管理のための土壌マッピングと土壌ダイナミクスモデリングに関するWeb-GISシステムの開発」
    10:20 - 10:30 終了課題Ⅲ(代表:鈴木伸隆・筑波大学人文社会系)
    「フィリピンにおける人口問題と開発政策――新聞・官報等逐次刊行物を利用した調査研究」
    10:30 – 10:40 終了課題Ⅳ-1 (代表:矢野正隆・東京大学大学院経済学研究科)
    「東南アジア逐次刊行物に関する情報の発信」
    10:40 - 10:50 終了課題Ⅳ-2(代表:船引彩子・日本大学工学部機械工学科)
    「紅河デルタ平野氾濫原地域の長期河道変遷と集落立地から見た住民の水害対応」
    10:50-11:05 質疑応答
    セッション2  司会 三重野文晴(京都大学東南アジア研究所)
    11:05 - 11:15 終了課題Ⅳ-3(代表:西村謙一・大阪大学国際教育交流センター)
    「東南アジア地方自治論の構築――タイ、フィリピン、インドネシアの自治体サーヴェイを基に」
    11:15 - 11:25 終了課題Ⅳ-4(代表:林 泰一・京都大学防災研究所)
    「バングラデシュにおける気象環境と人間活動に関する研究」
    11:25 -12:35 終了課題Ⅳ-5(代表:長野宇規・神戸大学大学院農学研究科)
    「東南アジアを対象とした過去50年間の広域再解析気象データと村落レベル農業活動履歴の照合」12:35-12:45 終了課題Ⅳ-6(代表:相沢伸広・日本貿易振興機構アジア経済研究所)
    「亡命の政治学――権力の国際的基盤をめぐる比較研究」
    12:45 – 12:55 終了課題Ⅳ-7(代表:津田浩司・東京大学大学院総合文化研究所)
    「移動する華人から見た東南アジア」
    12:55-13:05  終了課題Ⅳ-8(代表:祖田亮次・大阪市立大学大学院文学研究科)
    「熱帯環境からみた商品連鎖の時空間的分析・グローバルな分野横断型研究の創出に向けて」
    13:05-13:20 質疑応答
    13:20-14:00 昼食
    セッション3 司会 水野広祐(京都大学東南アジア研究所)
    14:00- 14:10 継続課題Ⅰ-1(代表:横山智・名古屋大学大学院環境学研究科)
    「メコン流域圏における農林水産物リソース・チェーンと土地利用変化の解明」
    14:10 - 14:20 継続課題Ⅰ-2(代表:林憲吾・総合地球環境学研究所)
    「居住地区分類に基づいたジャカルタ大都市圏における建造環境の構造分析」
    14:20 - 14:30 継続課題Ⅱ(代表:柴山守・京都大学地域研究統合情報センター)
    「東西文化回廊研究-ミャンマーからタイ・カンボジアを中心に-」
    14:30 -14:40 継続課題Ⅲ (代表:植村泰夫・広島大学)
    「植民地後期インドネシアの社会と経済に関する歴史資料の研究」
    14:40-14:55 質疑応答
    14:55 - 15:20 コーヒーブレイク
    セッション4 司会 安藤和雄(京都大学東南アジア研究所)
    15:20 - 15:30 継続課題Ⅳ-1(代表:津村宏臣・同志社大学文化情報学部)
    「文化遺産情報のシステム化とオントロジー構造によるLocal Knowledgeの理解」
    15:30 -15:40 継続課題Ⅳ-2 (代表:岡本郁子・日本貿易振興機構アジア経済研究所)
    「ミャンマー経済発展のためのロードマップと政策に関する研究」
    15:40 -15:50 継続課題Ⅳ-3 (代表:鈴木玲治・京都学園バイオ環境学部)
    「日本の焼畑に受け継がれてき在来知の現代意義-東南アジアとの比較視座からの検討」
    15:10 - 16:00 継続課題Ⅳ-4(代表:嶋村鉄也・愛媛大学農学部)
    「ムラピにおける大規模噴火後の景観復興過程」
    16:00 - 16:10 継続課題Ⅳ-5(代表:中村均司・京都大学東南アジア研究所)
    「アジアの棚田稲作における持続的農法と棚田保全に関する研究」
    16:10-16:20 質疑応答
    セッション5 司会 甲山 治(京都大学東南アジア研究所)
    16:20 - 16:30 継続課題Ⅳ-6(代表:杉原薫・東京大学大学院経済学研究科)
    「東南アジア交易史における『長期の19世紀』」
    16:30 - 16:40 継続課題Ⅳ-7(代表:吉川みな子・京都大学学際融合教育研究推進センター)
    「都市・観光地における感染症の流行の情報発信方法に関する研究-インドネシアの都市と観光地域における予防強化をめざして-」
    16:40 - 16:50 継続課題Ⅳ-8(代表:松野明久・大阪大学国際公共政策研究科)
    「東南アジアにおける戦争の記憶と戦後和解をめぐる環境の再構築」
    16:50 – 17:00 継続課題Ⅳ-9(代表:金子芳樹・獨協大学外国語学部)
    「教育・研究交流を通じた東アジアにおける産官学ネットワークの社会的影響の評価-東方政策の30年を振り返って」
    17:00 - 17:10 継続課題Ⅳ-10(代表:平田昌弘・帯広畜産大学畜産学部)
    「乳利用の有無からの牧畜論再考-旧・新大陸の対比」
    17:10 - 17:25 継続課題 質疑応答・討論
    17:25 - 17:40 コーヒーブレイク
    17:40 - 18:20  総合ディスカッション
            河野泰之(司会)、小林知、中村均司、植村泰夫、平田昌弘、山本博之)
    18:30 - 懇親会
    京都大学東南アジア研究所稲盛記念館中会議室、会費:3000円
Special Seminar by Dr. Porphant Ouyyanont
  1. 日時:平成25年3月21日(木)13:30 - 15:00
  2. 場所:京都大学稲盛財団記念館東南亭(201号室)
  3. タイトル:Underdevelopment and Industrialization in Pre-War Thailand
  4. スピーカー:Porphant Ouyyanont, Associate Professor, Ph.D, School of Economics, Sukhothai Thammathirat Open University
  5. アブストラクト:
  6. Thailand's economy before 1940 was marked by remarkably low long-term real economic growth, unusually high levels of the population living in rural areas, and limited industrialisation and urbanisation. This paper examines reasons for the lack of diversification, looking in particular at industrial development. We emphasize Thailand’s role in the world economy, sources of labour supply, and the concentration of industry in the capital Bangkok. The impact of the world depression of the 1930s on the Thai economy was only moderate, which obviated the need for state policies that might have prompted significant economic change.
  7. Bio Note:
  8. Porphant Ouyyanont is associate professor of economics at Sukhothai Thammathirat Open University. He obtained his doctorate in economic history from the University of New England, Australia, and has been a visiting researcher at Kyoto University Center for Southeast Asian Studies. His publication and research interests include the economic history of Bangkok and Thailand, village economy, The Crown Property Bureau in Thailand and its investment role. Some of his works include The Village Economy in the Central Region of Thailand (Bangkok:Vitheethud, 2003), "The Crown Property Bureau in Thailand and Crisis of 1997" (Journal of Contemporary Asia, 38(1)February, 2008) "Underdevelopment and Industrialization in Pre-War Thailand" (Australian Economic History Review 52 (1), March 2012).
  9. Moderator:Mieno Fumiharu, Koizumi Junko (CSEAS, Kyoto University)
京都大学生存基盤科学研究ユニット・東南アジア研究所京滋FS事業 第54回実践型地域研究定例研究会
  1. この3月末で、朽木FSのメンバーで ある黒田末寿さん滋賀県立大学を退職されます。今後もメンバーとして継続して 関わっていただきますが、この区切りの時に、これまでのご自身の地域研究を振 り返ってもらい、今後の展望を語っていただきます。興味のある方は是非ご参加ください。今回は開催時間が通常より40分遅れていますので、ご留意ください。
  2. 日時:平成25年3月21日(水) 17:40 ~ 19:00
  3. 場所:「もやいネット交流空間」守山駅前 コスモ守山5番館 (守山市勝部1丁目16-27)
  4. 発表タイトル:地域研究と暮らしをふり返るー明日への展望ー』
  5. 発表者:黒田末寿(滋賀県立大学)
  6. 研究会終了後に懇親会を行います。
  7. ★以上の催し物への参加ご希望の方は,必ずご連絡ください。部屋のスペースと 懇親会の準備があります。  京都大学 東南アジア研究所 実践型地域研究推進室  担当:安藤和雄(ando@cseas.kyoto-u.ac.jp)まで。
The 8th Southeast Asian Studies for Sustainable Humanosphere Research Seminar
  1. 日時:平成25年3月19日(木) 12:00 - 14:00
  2. 場所:京都大学稲盛財団記念館2階 東南亭 (201号室),
  3. タイトル:Political and Social Dynamics of Coal Railway Project in Kalimantan, Indonesia
  4. 発表者:Akiko Morishita, Ph.D. (Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University
  5. Abstract:
  6. Indonesia's local politicians in natural resource rich regions are embarking on economic development projects at a rapid pace, using their influence as a leverage to broker deals with foreign investors. Democratization and decentralization has also brought about unremitting struggles over local power and resources among local political elites. Both the central government and international business forces find it hard to ignore the local power holders when venturing into local development projects.
  7. Now in the pipeline, a multi-billion dollar railway project in Kalimantan is a case that shows how the central and local government leaders are promoting infrastructure development for the extractive industries particularly for coal at a time when the global demand for it is rising. In my presentation, I will explore how the local government leaders are dealing with the central government and foreign investors in their attempt to secure financial assistance for the coal railway project, which was once part of the trans-Borneo rail network concept that failed to take off.
  8. Studies on foreign company-host government relations in Indonesia have focused on interactions between foreign firms and the central government (Khong 1980; 1986) given that the country was highly centralized during the New Order period (1967-1998) and local authorities acted as mere agents of the central government. In decentralized Indonesia today, local governments are also taking part in the negotiation processes of foreign investment projects. In my presentation, I will show the reality on the ground and how the local power players operate to secure their position in a project venture by manipulating the local communities and environment concerns regardless of the impact such development projects and mining activities will have on the Kalimantan region.
Tonan Talk by Prof. Siddharth Chandra
  1. 日時:平成25年3月18日(月)12:00 - 13:30
  2. 場所:京都大学稲盛財団記念館小会議室I (330号室)
  3. タイトル:Demographic and geographic aspects of the influenza pandemic of 1918-19 in Indonesia
  4. スピーカー:Prof. Siddharth Chandra, Director of the Asian Studies Center at Michigan State University
  5. アブストラクト:
  6. This presentation draws on recently published work and ongoing research on the influenza pandemic of 1918-19 in Indonesia. The influenza pandemic of 1918-19 was arguably the most devastating global pandemic of the 20th century, taking between 50 and 100 million lives worldwide in the short span of one year. For Indonesia, the world’s fourth most populous country, the most widely-used estimate of mortality from the pandemic is 1.5 million. Estimates of mortality using recently-developed statistical methods and data from multiple quinquennial population counts and two decennial censuses suggest, however, that the toll may have been much higher, with population loss (which includes higher mortality and lower fertility) in the range of 4.26 to 4.37 million. In addition, because little is known about the pattern of spread of the disease across Java, data from the Civil Medical Service of the Dutch East Indies are used to reconstruct the spread of influenza across the island, shedding new light on the nature of the epidemic.
  7. Bio Note:
  8. Siddharth Chandra is Professor and Director of the Asian Studies Center at Michigan State University. He has a PhD in Economics with a graduate specialization in Southeast Asian Studies from Cornell University and a Masters Degree in Economics (with a PhD pass) from the University of Chicago. His research focuses on the intersection of economics, health, and history in Asia, behavior and policy relating to addictive substances, and applications of portfolio theory to fields outside finance, for which the theory was originally developed. He has received funding from the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation for his work, which has appeared or will appear in a variety of journals including Emerging Infectious Diseases, Demography, Population Studies, the Journal of Economic History, Explorations in Economic History, Drug and Alcohol Dependence, Nicotine and Tobacco Research, Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology, the Journal of Research in Personality, the Journal of Regional Science, and Land Economics. Prior to joining Michigan State University, he was Director of the Asian Studies Center and Associate Professor at the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Pittsburgh.
  9. Moderator:Caroline Hau (CSEAS, Kyoto University)
CSEAS Visual Documentary Project film forum on “Care”in Southeast Asia: Every Day and into the Future
  1. You are cordially invited to participate in Visual Documentary Project film forum. The Center for Southeast Asian Studies (CSEAS), Kyoto University will host a film forum to show five selected documentaries by independent, young filmmakers from Southeast Asia, on the topic of “care.” Five documentaries were selected by an international committee from a total of 36 original entries submitted from the region.
  2. This film forum hopes to stimulate, and raise awareness of how Southeast Asian filmmakers consider the relevance and meaning of “care,” and how they visually document it in their own societies. This is an open forum and we invite anyone who is interested to participate.
  3. This project is part of “Southeast Asian Studies for Sustainable Humanosphere” program. For more details of the film forum, please check the following link: http://sea-sh.cseas.kyoto-u.ac.jp/en/visual_documentary_project-3/
  4. You are welcomed to forward this announcement to any one interested to participate the film forum.
  5. 日時:平成25年3月15日(金)13:00-18:15
  6. 場所:京都大学稲盛財団記念館3階大会議室(333号室)
Plural Coexistence & Asian Sustainability International Conference
  1. 日時:平成25年3月11日(月)-12日(火)
  2. 場所:HSS Conference Room (HSS-05-57), Nanyang Technological University
  3. プログラムとアブストラクト:PDF
  4. 共催:School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Nanyang Technological University and Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University
Asian CORE Workshop on Interface, Negotiation, and Interaction in Southeast Asia, Part Two
  1. 日時:平成25年3月11日(月) 13:30 -
  2. 場所:京都大学稲盛財団記念館3階小会議室(330号室)
  3. プログラム:PDF
  4. アブストラクト:PDF
Asian CORE International Seminar on Socio Political and Economic Reform in Southeast Asia: Assessments and the Way Forward
  1. 日時:平成25年3月9-12日
  2. 場所:LIPI, Indonesia
  3. プログラム:PDF
Tonan Talk by David Michael MALITZ
  1. 日時:平成25年3月7日(木) 12:00 - 13:30
  2. 場所:京都大学稲盛財団記念館東南亭(201号室)
  3. タイトル: Japanese Views of Siam/Thailand from the bakumatsu-period to the end of World War II
  4. スピーカー:David Michael MALITZ, JSPS funded visiting project researcher at CSEAS
  5. Abstract:
  6. In this talk the changing portrayals of Siam, later Thailand, in Japanese eyes from the mid-nineteenth century to the end of World War II shall be presented focusing on the impact of Japanese perceptions of themselves on these portrayals.
  7. Recently Japanese “Asianism“, the intellectual engagement with the regions surrounding the Japanese archipelago from the Meiji Restoration onwards, has received renewed attention after having been shunned since the postwar period for its associations with Japanese aggression. While this field of study in Japanese intellectual history remains highly contested – most importantly the questions remains open, if one can speak of an “Asianist”-ideology given the heterogeneity of the ideas understood to belong to this category – these new studies haves advanced not only the understanding of Japanese views of “Asia” but also of the Japanese views of themselves before 1945, views that continue to influence how present-day Japan sees herself and interacts with the neighboring regions.
  8. In these previous studies of Japanese “Asianism” Siam or Thailand has so far played a very limited role. This is of course for very good reasons: the kingdom was not referred to extensively in the “Asianist”-literature and more importantly there were very limited political, economic or cultural ties between the two countries before the late 1930s. But a country-study of Siam/Thailand in Japanese thought from the mid-nineteenth century to 1945 is highly interesting precisely because of these limited links, as one could argue that there was thus less motivation to portray the kingdom in accordance with tangible political or economic goals. Instead portrayals of Siam/Thailand in books and newspapers seem to mirror closely the development of Japan’s view of herself vis-à-vis “Asia”and the “West”, while also exhibiting continuities with the pre-Meiji past.
  9. Biographical Note:
  10. David Malitz is a doctoral student at the Japan-Center of Ludwig-Maximilians-University in Munich, Germany, and currently a JSPS funded visiting project researcher at CSEAS. He has studied finance, accounting and Japanese studies at the Universities of Mannheim and Heidelberg in Germany as well as Hitotsubashi University in Tokyo.
  11. Moderator:Junko KOIZUMI (CSEAS, Kyoto University)