糖心TV

Skip to main content Skip to navigation

Composite Calendar

This is a composite calendar page template pulling in feeds from events calendars in department and research centre sites. It is purely used as a tool to collect the event details before filtering through to a publicly-visible calendar filter page template. To remove or add a feed to this composite calendar, please contact the IT Services Web Team (webteam at warwick dot ac dot uk).

Show all calendar items

Transnational History and Japan’s “Comparative Advantage”

- Export as iCalendar
Location: Pavilion Room, St Antony’s College, Oxford

A seminar with Sheldon Garon, Princeton University.

 

Transnational History and Japan's "Comparative Advantage"

Professor Sheldon Garon, Princeton University

 

Friday 20 October, 5.30pm

Pavilion Room, St Antony's College, Oxford

 

Based on his recent essay in Journal of Japanese Studies, Garon suggests ways in which historians of modern Japan might contribute to transnational history, taking advantage of their Japanese subjects鈥 determined emulation of other nations鈥 ideas and practices. Thinking transnationally about Japan not only challenges myths of Japanese exceptionalism, but also enriches transnational history by going beyond Eurocentric and U.S.-centered accounts to illuminate global currents. To demonstrate the benefits, he draws on several transnational studies plus his global history of saving money and his current research on the 鈥渢ransnational home front.鈥

 

Sheldon Garon is Nissan Professor of History and East Asian Studies at Princeton University. A specialist in modern Japanese history, he also writes transnational history that charts the flow of ideas and institutions between Asia, Europe, and the United States—notably Beyond Our Means: Why America Spends While the World Saves (2012). His current project is a transnational history of 鈥渉ome fronts鈥 in Japan, Germany, and Britain in World War II, focusing on aerial bombardment, food insecurity, and civilian 鈥渕orale.鈥 Previous publications include Molding Japanese Minds: The State in Everyday Life (1997) and The State and Labor in Modern Japan (1987), and he coedited The Ambivalent Consumer: Questioning Consumption in East Asia and the West (2006).

 

All welcome. See .

 

Japanese History Workshop, Nissan Institute of Japanese Studies, and Oxford Centre for Global History

 

 

 

Claire Phillips

Network Facilitator 'Global Nodes, Global Orders' Leverhulme International Network

Project Administrator 鈥楥omparing the Copperbelt鈥 ERC Project

Oxford Centre for Global History

 

History Faculty, University of Oxford

George St, Oxford OX1 2RL

Tel: +44 (0)1865 615027

claire.phillips@history.ox.ac.uk

 

Tags: Seminar Research

Show all calendar items

Let us know you agree to cookies