Seminars
2006


The Second Korean-Japanese Conference of British History
Intellectual Framework, Education and a Birth of 'History' in Modern Britain
Novemberr 23 ,2006 Nakanoshima Center, Osaka University
Sponsored by: Haskins Society Japan
Korean-Japanese Forum for the Study of British History
The 21st Century COE Project of Osaka University: “Interface humanities” And Grant-in Aid (B) on Global History Project, Osaka University
Introduction: Hirokazu Tsurushima (Kumamoto University Kumamoto University & 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
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
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
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)
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)
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)
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)
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