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Global History Seminars and Workshops in Osaka

•  1st Global History Seminar

8-9 November 2003 at Graduate School of Letters, Osaka University

・Brian R. Tomlinson (SOAS, University of London)

South Asia in Global History

・Book Review: Norihisa Yamashita, Sekaishisutemu-ron de yomu Nihon [Japan seen from the Modern World-System] (Tokyo: Kodansha, 2003

Comments by Yujiro Aga(Osaka University of Foreign Studies), Masashi Haneda (University of Tokyo),
Shigeru Akita (Osaka University) and Toshiaki Tamaki (Kyoto Sangyo University)

 

•  2nd Global History Seminar

16 April 2004 at Graduate School of Economics, Osaka University,
co-organized by Economic History Research group of Osaka

David Washbrook (St Antony's College, University of Oxford)

South Asia in World Capitalism

17 April 2004 at Graduate School of Letters, Osaka University

・David Washbrook (St Antony's College, University of Oxford)

Colonialism and the Economy of South-East India , c.1700-1900

・Tsukasa Mizushima (University of Tokyo)

South India between 1770s and 1880s: a view from the bottom

 

• 3rd Global History Seminar

7 May 2004 at Graduate School of Economics, Osaka University
co-organized by Economic History Research group of Osaka

・ Jack Goldstone (George Mason University, USA)

Efflorescences and Economic Growth in World History: Rethinking the ‘The Rise of the West' and the Industrial Revolution

Comment by Kaoru Sugihara (Osaka University)

8 May 2004 at Nakanoshima-center, Osaka University

・Jack Goldstone (George Mason University, USA)

It's all about State Structure? New Findings on Revolutionary Origins from Global Data

Comment by Norihisa Yamashita (Hokkaido University)

• 4th Global History Seminar

8 June 2004 at Graduate School of Economics, Osaka University
co-organized by Economic History Research group of Osaka

・ John Brewer (California Institute of Technology, USA)

Fiscal Military State and After

Comment by Takuo Dome (Osaka University)

9 June 2004 at Graduate School of Letters, Osaka University

・ John Brewer (California Institute of Technology, USA)

Historians and the Study of Everyday Life

Comment by Shigeru Akita (Osaka University)

 

• 5th Global History Seminar

23 July 2004 at Graduate School of Economics, Osaka University

co-organized by Economic History Research group of Osaka

・ Bruce Cumings (University of Chicago, USA)

The Korea-Centric Japanese Imperium and the Transformation of the International System from the 1930s to the 1950s

Comments by Shigeru Akita (Osaka University) and Toru Kubo (Shinshu University)

・Katsuhiko Kitagawa (Kansai University)

The Problem for the revision of the Treaty of Congo-basin and Japan in the 1930s

 

• 6th Global History Seminar

1 November 2004 at Graduate School of Letters, Osaka University

・ Leos Muller (Sodertorn University College, Sweden)

Swedish East India Company and trade in tea, 1731-1813

Comment by Toshiaki Tamaki (Kyoto Sangyo University)

 

• 7th Global History Seminar

15 December 2004 at Graduate School of Letters, Osaka University
co-organized by Economic History Research group of Osaka

・ Patrick K. O'Brien ( London School of Economics , UK )

Colonies in a Globalizing Economy 1815-1948

Comment by Shigeru Akita (Osaka University)

 

• 8th Global History Seminar>

7 February 2005 at Graduate School of Letters, Osaka University

・Dennis Flynn (University of Pacific, USA)

Globalization Began in 1571

9 February 2005 at Graduate School of Economics, Osaka University
co-organized by Economic History Research group of Osaka

・Dennis Flynn (University of Pacific, USA)

Silver Circulation in Early Modern Asia

10 February 2005 at Graduate School of Humanities and Sociology, University of Tokyo

co-organized by Japan Association for South Asian Studies

・Dennis Flynn (University of Pacific, USA)

Silver Circulation and South Asia in the 17-18 centuries

Comment by Tsukasa Mizushima (University of Tokyo)

 

• 9th Global History Seminar

7 May 2005 at Graduate School of Economics, Osaka University

co-organized by Economic History Research group of Osaka

・Patricia Hudson (Cardiff University, UK)

Everyday Life in Textile manufacturing communities

Comments by Tomoko Hashino (Kobe University) and Yoshihiko Okabe (Osaka University)

 

• 2nd Global History Workshop

Globalization in Northeast Asia in the 20th Century

Part 1: From the Harbin Station: Globalization goes West

25 June 2005 at Graduate School of Letters, Osaka University
co-organized by the Association of Modern Chinese History

・David Wolff (Woodrow Wilson Center, USA and Seikei University)

Globalization and the Soybean: Interdisciplinary and Intercultural Perspectives

・Takako Ueda (Kinki University)

Chinese network in Northeast Asia: Its growth, decline and revival

Comment by Shuji Matsuno (Ritsumeikan University)

Part 2: To the Harbin Station: Globalization comes East

26 June 2005 at Nakanoshima-center, Osaka University
co-organized by the Association of Russian-East European History

・David Wolff (Woodrow Wilson Center, USA and Seikei University)

To the Harbin Station, 1898-1920

Comments by Eisuke Kaminaga (University of Tokyo) and Yukimura Sakon (Hokkaido University)

 

• 10th Global History Seminar

16-17 July 2005 at Kitakyushu City University
co-organized by Research group of Prof. Kan on American diplomatic history

・Jun Furuya(Hokkaido University)

New Historiography for the study of American Empire

・Takeshi Igarashi (University of Tokyo)

Informal type of the Republic of America and the Present World

・Yuta Sasaki (Aichi Prefectural University)

Political and Social factors of Imperialistic interventions and their logic: British case in post-Second World –War era

・Bruce Cumings (University of Chicago)

Westward Expansion and the Pacific in American Global Power

・Norihisa Yamashita (Hokkaido University)

Empire as a Mode of Globality: Rethinking the Early Modern Globality and Alternation of‘Long Centuries'

 

• 11th Global History Seminar

27 September 2005 at Graduate School of Letters, Osaka University

Walter Demel (Universitat der Bundeswehr Munchen)

Nobility in a Global Perspective

・Aoki Atsushi (Osaka University)

Local Elites in Medieval China

 

• 12th Global History Seminar

4 October 2005 at Graduate School of Letters, Osaka University
co-organized by Economic History Research group of Osaka

・Shigeru Akita (Osaka University)

International Economic Order of East Asia in the 1950s - focusing on the sterling area and Japan

・David Washbrook (St Antony's College, University of Oxford)

The British Community in India

 

• 13th Global History Seminar

8 December 2005 at Graduate School of Letters, Osaka University

・Toshiaki TAMAKI (Kyoto Sangyo University)

Shift of the Core of European World Economy 1500-1815: The Dutch Produced British Hegemony

・Anthony C. Howe (University of East Anglia)

Free Trade and Global Order: the rise and fall of a Victorian Vision

・Peter J. Cain (Sheffield Hallam University)

Bayly's new Global History and Traditional theories of European Imperialism

 

• 3rd Global History Workshop

Global History and Asia/Europe

14-15 January 2006 at Nakanoshima-center, Osaka University

・Juergen Osterhammel (University of Constanz)

"Civilization" and the "Civilizing Mission" as Keys to Nineteenth-Century World

Comment by Wolfgang Schwentker (Osaka University)

・Kaoru Sugihara (Osaka University)

The Emergence of a Resource-saving Path of Economic Development in East Asia

Comment by Shigeru Akita (Osaka University)

・Robert Bickers (University of Bristol)

Shanhailanders and others: British communities on the China coast, 1843-1954

Comment by Toru Kubo (Shinshu University)

・Tsukasa Mizushima (University of Tokyo)

Institution as Social Grammer: Colonial Land System in India and Malaysia

Comment by Tomotaka Kawamura (Toyama University)

 

• 14th Global History Seminar

28 March 2006 at Graduate School of Letters, Osaka University

・Paul Kratoska (National University of Singapore)

How the British altered the ecology of Irrawaddy Delta

 

• 4th Global History Workshop and Seminars

20 April 2006 at Graduate School of Letters Osaka University
co-organized by Economic History Research group of Osaka

・Jan Luiten van Zanden(Utrecht University, The Netherlands)

Wages, Prices, and Living Standards in China, Japan, and Europe

・ Osamu Saito (Hitotsubashi University)

Wages and Incomes as Indicators of the Standard of Living: Early Modern England and Japan Compared

Comments by Chiaki Yamamoto (Kansai University) and Kounosuke Odaka (Housei Universitry)

21 April 2006 at Nakanoshima-center, Osaka University

・Jan Luiten van Zanden (Utrecht University, The Netherlands)

Girlpower: The European Marriage Pattern (EMP) and labour markets in the North Sea region in the late medieval and early modern period

Comment by Osamu Saito (Hitotsubashi University)

・Toru Kubo (Shinshu University)

History of East Asian Cotton Industry in the 20th Century

Comment by Shigeru Akita (Osaka University)

22 April 2006 at Kyoto Sangyo University
co-organized by Association of Dutch History

・Jan Luiten van Zanden(Utrecht University, The Netherlands)

Common workmen, philosophers and the birth of the European knowledge economy. About the price and the production of useful knowledge in Europe 1350-1800

 

• 15th Global History Seminar

20 April 2006 at Graduate School of Letters, Osaka University
co-organized by the Department of World History

・Harriet T. Zurndorfer (University of Leiden)

Science without Modernization: China’s First Encounter with Useful and Reliable Knowledge from Europe

Comment by Tsuyoshi Katayama (Osaka University)

 

• 16th Global History Seminar

20 May 2006 at Graduate School of Letters, Osaka University

・Pierrick Pourchasse (University of Bretagne, France)

The Consulates, an essential Service for the World of Trade: A Comparative Approach between France and Scandinavia

Comment by Toshiaki Tamaki (Kyoto Sangyo University)

・Wolfgang Schwentker (Osaka University)

Globalization and Historiography: Themes, Methods and the Critique of Global History

Comment by Shigeru Akita (Osaka University)

 

• 17th Global History Seminar

15 July 2006 at Nakanoshima-center, Osaka University

・Antony G.Hopkins (University of Texas, Austin)

Interactions between the Universal and the Local

Comment by Shigeru Akita (Osaka University)

 

• 5th Global History Workshop

America’s Wars and the Making of the World Order

15-16 July 2006 at Kansai University
co-organized by Research group of Prof. Kan on American diplomatic history and Institute of Law Studies, Kansai University

・Satoru Mori (University of Tokyo)

The Vietnam War’s Impact on the Special Relationship: Johnson-Wilson Years

・Andrew Rotter (Colgate University)

Just and Unjust Wars: The American Experience, 1892-2004

・Robert McMahon(Ohio State University)

The Impact of the Korean War and the American Order in East Asia

・Takeshi Matsuda (Osaka University of Foreign Studies)

Cold War Politics, Racism and 'Soft Power'

・Hideki Kan (Seinan Jogakuin University)

The Cold War and the Nixon Administration’s Initiative for Sino-American Rapproachment

・Masaaki Gabe (Ryukyu University)

The U.S.-Japan Security Relation and the Cold War in Asia

・Hiroshi Matsuoka(University of Tsukuba)

The Vietnam War and the American Order

 

• 6th Global History Workshop

Maritime Trade and Trading Metropoles: Europe and Asia, 17thto 20th Centuries

30-31 August 2006 in Hamburg

Held at Museum für die Geschichte der Stadt Hamburg, Holstenwall 24, 20355 Hamburg.
Organised by PD Dr Frank Hatje, Prof Toshiaki Tamaki and Dr Klaus Weber,
in cooperation with Prof Dr Franklin Kopitzsch (Arbeitsstelle für Hamburgische Geschichte, Universität Hamburg) and Wirtschaftsgeschichtliche Forschungsstelle (Hamburg)

Franklin Kopitzsch (Universität Hamburg), Key Note Lecture

Session I: Economy and Political Order in Europe and Asia

・Shigeru Akita (Osaka University)

The International Order of Asia and Hong Kong in the 1930s and 1950s from a Comparative Perspective

・Toshiaki Tamaki (Kyoto Sangyo University)

A Tale of Three Cities – Amsterdam, London, and Hamburg: Dutch Contribu¬tions to the Growth of European Economy

・Tsukasa Mizushima (University of Tokyo)

The Development of a Port City and Its Impact on Indian Economy: Pondicherry in the mid-18th Century

Session II: Merchant Networks Going East & Going West

・Takashi Oishi (Kobe City University of Foreign Studies)

Reaching Kobe, Japan, Along the Chain of Colonial Ports and Settlements: Intra-regional Networks of Indian Merchants from the 1880s to the 1930s

・Margrit Schulte Beerbühl (Universität Düsseldorf)

Klaus Weber (The Rothschild Archive, London)

Central Europe’s Informal Atlantic Empire? German Merchants in London, Cadiz, Bordeaux and the Caribbean (c. 1650 - 1850)

・Jorun Poettering (Universität Hamburg)

Hamburg’s 17th-Century Admiralty Toll-Books: Investigating the City’s Foreign Merchants

Session III: Imperial and Neutral Maritime Ports

・Miki Suguira (Tokyo International University)

The Merchants’ Divisions of Functions and Specialization in Early Modern Am¬sterdam in a Comparative Perspective

・Silvia Marzagalli (Université de Nice)

Strengths and Weaknesses of 18th-century Atlantic trade: the Case of Bordeaux

・Frank Hatje (Universität Hamburg)

Liberty, Neutrality, and Trade: Hamburg, 17th to 19th Centuries

 

• 18th Global History Seminar

21 September at Nakanoshima-center, Osaka University
co-organized by Research group of Prof. Kan on American diplomatic history

・Ilya V. Gaiduk (Russian Academy of Sciences, Institute of World History)

The Cold War: New Approaches, New Documents

Comment by Hideki Kan (Seinan Jo Gakuin University)

 

• 19th Global History Seminar

6 October 2006 at Kyoto Sangyo University
co-organized by Faculty of Economics, Kyoto Sangyo University

・Lars Magnusson (Upsala University, Sweden)

Proto-industrialization in Sweden: Context and consequences

Comment by Osami Saoto (HitotsubashiUniversity) ‘Proto-industrialization’ in the light of a recent debate in global economic history

 

• 20th Global History Seminar

Time, Space, and Economic Institutions of Early-Modern Maritime Asia

30 October 2006 at Graduate School of Letters, Osaka University
co-organized by the Department of World History

・R. Bin Wong (UCLA Asia Institute)

Maritime Asia in the Longue Duree: Institutional Change in Regional Focus

・George Bryan Souza (National University of Singapore)

A Global History of the Political Economy of Commerce and Commodities in Asia and the Early Modern World—an Introduction

 

• 7th Global History Workshop and Seminars

Impact of‘China’and International Order of East Asia

11 November 2006 at Senri Life-Science Center
co-organized by Project team on Contemporary China at Osaka University of Foreign Studies

・Manabu Shimizu (Sophia University)

The Shanghai Cooperation Organization and the Transformation of Central Eurasia

Comment by Akihiro Iwashita (Slavic Research Center, Hokkaido University)

・Mihoko Kato (Hokkaido University)

‘The formation of multipolar world’and Asia-Pacific in Russian diplomacy: policies towards China and Southeast Asia

Comment by Humio Goto (Osaka University of Foreign Studies)

・Yu-Ming Hsu (National Dong Hwa University)

Postwar dealings and An attempt of Reorganizing Regional Politics: Taiwanese Policy to Ryukyu Island in the 1940s and 50s

Comment by Hotoshi Tanaka (Osaka University of Foreign Studies)

・Zhu Yingquan (Nanjing University)

Peaceful Rise of China and International Relations in Asia

Comments by Tsutomu Himeno (Osaka University) and Yukimura Sakon (Hokkaido University)

・Zhu Dong Qin (Huaqiao University, China)

New Overseas Chinese in contemporary China

Comment by Kazuaki Tsutsumi (Osaka University of Foreign Studies)

12 November 2006 at Nakanoshima-center, Osaka University

・Zhu Yingquan (Nanjing University)

Economic Globalization and International Relations(経済全球化与国際関係)

Comment by Toru Kubo (Shinshu University)

・Norihisa Yamashita (Hokkaido University)

From World-System Analysis to Global History

Comment by Shigeru Akita (Osaka University)

15 November 2006 at Graduate School of Integrated Sciences, University of Tokyo
co-organized by the Association of Contemporary China Studies

・Zhu Yingquan (Nanjing University)

Economic Globalization and International Relations(経済全球化与国際関係)

comment by Shin Kawashima (University of Tokyo)

 

• The Second Korean-Japanese Conference of British History

Intellectual framework, Education and a birth of ‘History’in modern Britain

23 November 2006 at Nakanoshima Center, Osaka University
sponsored by: Haskins Society Japan and Korean-Japanese Forum for the Study of British History

Introduction: Hirokazu Tsurushima (Kumamoto University and Haskins Society Japan)

Session One: Intellectual framework

・Seungrae Cho (Chongju University)

Two Rival Views of Liberty in Early Modern Britain

・Rie Tomita (Tokai Women’s University)

Seventeenth Century Revolutions in Scottish Parliamentary Acts

・Tarou Inai (Hiroshima University)

The King’s two bodies in Tudor Monarchy

・Woon-Ok Yeom (Hanyang University)

Making a‘Social Body’and Gender: Edwin Chadwick's 1842 Sanitary Report

Session Two: Institutionalization of Education

・Young-Suk Lee (Gwangju University)

Disputes on Examination and Intellectuals in the Late Victorian Age

・Yoshihito Yasuhara (Hiroshima University)

The Social Origins and Post-Graduate Careers of Cambridge Senior Wranglers 1748-1909

・Joong-Lak Kim ( Kyungpook National University)

The Institutionalization of Higher Education for Women in Cambridge,1870-1948

・Sung-Sook Lee (Hanyang Univ.ersity)

Education and Gender Equality in Britain, 1840-1902

Session Three: A birth of‘History'

・William M. Aird (University of Cardiff)

Edward A Freeman's Methods of Historical Study

Comment by Hirokazu Tsurushima (Kumamoto University)

Mr John Horace Round (1854-1928) and his attack against Professor Freeman; Science or Description?

・Sangsoo Kim (Hankuk University of Foreign Studies)

The Relationship between History and Literature: Intertextuality and Agency

 

• 8th Global History Workshop and Seminars

Global History and Chinese History

13-14 January 2007 at Nakanoshima Center, Osaka University

・Kent G. Deng (London School of Economics)

Miracle or Mirage ? : Foreign Silver, China’s Economy and Globalization from the Sixteenth to the Nineteenth Centuries

Comment by Akinobu Kuroda (University of Tokyo)

・Susanne Weigelin-Schwiedrzik (University of Vienna)

World History and Chinese History: 20th Century Chinese Historiography between Universality and Particularity

Comment by Shin Kawashima (University of Tokyo)

・Wolfgang Schwentker (Osaka University)

The Growth of the Mega-cities in the Twentieth century

・Toru Kubo (Shinshu University)

Development of Cotton Industry in Postwar Hong Kong and Taiwan

・Kaoru Sugihara (Kyoto University)

Energy Use and the East Asian Path of Economic Development

15 January 2007 at Housei University
co-organized by NPO-IF Research Institute of World History and the Research Group on the 1980s

・Susanne Weigelin-Schwiedrzik (University of Vienna)

World History and Chinese History: 20th Century Chinese Historiography between Universality and Particularity

Comment by Toru Kubo (Shinshu University)

15 January 2007 at Graduate School of Letters, Osaka University

・Kent G. Deng (London School of Economics)

The State and Market in China’s Traditional Maritime Sector

Comment by Atsushi Aoki (Osaka University)

 

• 21st Global History Seminar

Reconsideration of Sixty Years of the People’s Republic of China: Historiography of Contemporary Chinese Studies in Japan

17 February 2007 at Senri-Asahi Building
co-organized by Project team on Contemporary China at Osaka University of Foreign Studies

・Kazuko Mouri (Waseda University)

A note on the Study of Contemporary Chinese Diplomacy

Comment by Shigeo Nishimura (Osaka University of Foreign Studies)

・Akio Takahara (University of Tokyo)

Growth or Equilibrium: Controversies on Economic Policies in China and the Central-local governments relationship

Comment by Xu Wei-tong(Osaka University of Foreign Studies)

・Tatsuo Yamada (University of the Air)

The People’s Republic of China in a historical perspective

Comment by Hitoshi Tanaka (Osaka University of Foreign Studies)