The Early Modern in East Asia: The Challenges of Periodization

East Asia Seminar: A Symposium

Friday, February 01, 2008
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
SOS 250
USC- University of Southern California

 
9:00 - 9:10 a.m.           Welcome and Opening Remarks

9:00 - 10:50 a.m.         East Asia and the Early Modern World


John Wills Jr., USC
“Some Earlier Divergences: China-Europe Differences that Mattered,
Han to Ming”

Robert Marks, Whittier College
“Early Modern or Late Imperial: An Environmental Perspective”

Richard von Glahn, UCLA
“An East Asian Early Modernity? Kinsei in Japanese Scholarship on
Japanese and Chinese History”

11:00 a.m. - 12:10 p.m.    Consciousness and Culture

Samuel Yamashita, Pomona
“Reimagining the Intellectual Landscape of  'Early Modern Japan”

Jahyun Kim Haboush, Columbia University
“Discourse of 'Nation' in Chosôn Korea: Early Modern?”

1:30 - 2:40 p.m.      Interactions

John Duncan, UCLA
“From External Stimulus to Internal Integration in Late Koryo and
Early ChosonKorea”

Kenneth Pomeranz,  UC Irvine
“Early Modern Networks Without an Early Modern Period-or is it the
Other Way Around?”

3:00 - 4:40 p.m.      Authority Structures


R. Bin Wong, UCLA
“The Eighteenth-century Qing State: Fantasies and Fallacies of the
'Early Modern'”

Kyung Moon Hwang, USC
“Constructions of State and Society in the Late Chosôn”

Morgan Pitelka, Occidental College
“Afterlives of the Shogun: Tokugawa Ieyasu’s Material Legacy in
Early Modern Japan”

4:40 - 5:00 p.m.         Closing Discussion

 

Download File: periodization-th.jpg

Sponsor(s): The East Asia Seminar of the USC-Huntington Early Modern Studies Institute, and the Department of History, East Asian Studies Center, and Korean Studies Institute at USC