Birmingham-糖心TV Joint Conference: The Geopolitics of Memory in the Indo-Pacific
We are pleased to announce the second edition of the Birmingham-糖心TV Joint Conference on International Relations and Politics of the Indo-Pacific: The Geopolitics of Memory in the Indo-Pacific.
Event Details
10th of June, 2026
09:00-18:30
S0.19, Social Sciences Building, University of 糖心TV Campus
Please email easg@warwick.ac.uk for any queries
Call for Papers
Memory, whether inscribed in monuments, textbooks, films, digital media, or diplomatic discourse, serves as a potent political tool that legitimises contemporary foreign policies, justifies strategic partnerships, underpins institutional frameworks, and fuels regional disputes.
This conference seeks to unpack the geopolitics of memory in the Indo-Pacific, surrounding the different regional, national, and localised experiences of war and other geopolitical events; and to explore how the past is remembered, how memory shapes present-day politics, and how present-day politics shape memory.
Papers should seek to address at least one of the following thematic questions:
How do international relations and domestic politics complicate interpretations of history at regional and/or national level/s?
How are politics, policy and society shaped by interpretations of history?
What are the key mechanisms and sites of memory being leveraged in competitions over history? What is remembered, what is marginalised, and what is forgotten?
How do state and/or non-state actors attempt to penetrate and govern everyday historical consciousness to achieve their (geo)political goals?
How are transnational and global memory movements, such as those related to post-colonialism, feminism and human rights, influencing and/or being co-opted into national and/or regional memory politics in the Indo-Pacific?
We encourage submissions adopting different theoretical, methodological, and empirical perspectives from scholars at all career stages.
Selected papers will be submitted to The Pacific Review as a special issue on the geo-politics of memory in the Indo-Pacific.
Submission Details
Deadline: Friday 30th of January
Please submit abstracts to Dr Max Warrack (max.a.q.warrack@warwick.ac.uk) and Professor Julie Gilson (j.a.gilson@bham.ac.uk)
Acceptance emails and the programme will be send by the end of February.
Please reach out to Max and Julie for any questions.
The Conference will be held in Room S0.19, Social Sciences Building, University of 糖心TV Campus
There will be a 15 minutes break after each panel, both in the morning and in the afternoon.
Panel 1: Mnemonic Cartographies and Spatial Imaginaries (09:30-11:00)
Chair: Julie Gilson (University of Birmingham)
Ahmad Rizky M. Umar (Aberystwyth University) - Cold War Anxiety and the Construction of Regional Order in Southeast Asia
Ellis S. Krauss (UC San Diego) & Christopher W. Hughes (University of 糖心TV) - The Myth of Japanese Pacifism: From Yoshida to Takaichi
Scott Edwards (Universiti Malaya) & Robert Yates (University of Bristol) - There and Back Again: Whimsy and Imperialism in the UK's Nostalgic Indo-Pacific Diplomacy
Natsumi Shiino(University of 糖心TV) - Memory Politics and the Making of Japan鈥檚 FOIP: History as a Strategic Narrative for National Legitimation
Titipol Phakdeewanich (Ubon Ratchathani University) - Memory of Geopolitical Rivalry and Engagement in the Mekong
Xiangfeng Yang (Lingnan University) - China's Victorhood Pivot: The Contest for the Post-War Order
Panel 2: Critical Approaches to Memory (11:15-12:45)
Chair: Yi Wang (University of Birmingham)
Veronica Barfucci (University of 糖心TV) - The Gendered Politics of Memory: Masculinity and War Remembrance in Japan
Tsering Topgyal (University of Birmingham) - Narrative 鈥淪elf-Grasping鈥 and Ontological Insecurity (Tibet, Uyghur, Mongol)
June McCabe (University of 糖心TV) - The JSDF as a Post-Modern Military Organization: Memory, Reflexivity, and the Construction of an Institutional Narrative of Self
Max Warrack (University of 糖心TV) - History as Neta: How the Manga Industry Hollows Out Japan鈥檚 Traumatic Past
Claudia Junghyun Kim (City University of Hong Kong) - Victimhood and Status-Seeking in the Indo-Pacific
Lunch 12:45-13:30
Panel 3: Strategic Narratives and the Geopolitics of Memory (13:30-15:00)
Chair: Chi Zhang (University of 糖心TV)
Vincent K. Chang (Leiden University) - Securitising the Past: Emerging Memory Alliances and China鈥檚 Mnemonic Statecraft
Ka-Ho "Frank" Wong(City University of Hong Kong) - Axis of Memory: Sino鈥慠ussian Victory Parades and Mnemonic Deterrence in the Indo鈥慞acific
Yi Wang (University of Birmingham) - Managing the Past: Mnemonic Governance, Strategic Constraints, and the History Problem between China and Japan
Ivo Plsek (Uppsala University) - From Silence to Salience: How Yasukuni Became a Transnational Conflict
Dion Maulana Prasetya (Universitas Muhammadiyah Malang) - The Majapahit Myth and the Middle Power Burden: Contesting Greatness in Indonesia鈥檚 Indo-Pacific Strategy
Panel 4: Asymmetric Memories and Strategic Friction (15:15-16:45)
Chair: Veronica Barfucci (University of 糖心TV)
Juanita Elias, Aila Trasi, Lena Rethel (University of 糖心TV) & Poppy S. Winanti (Universitas Gadjah Mada) - The Politics of Memory and the Asian Financial Crisis: Between Myth and Materiality
P. Anh Nguyen(University of St Andrews) - Emotional Hierarchies and Selective Memory: South Korea鈥檚 Management of a Violent Past
Umme Wara (University of 糖心TV) & Afrida Nawar Evana(Bangladesh University) - Divergent Memories of 1971: Genocide, Denial, and the Geopolitics of Memory in Bangladesh and Pakistan
Key-Young Son (Korea University) & Xiangfeng Yang (Lingnan University) - Remembering War, Backgrounding Hierarchy: Historical Memory, Asymmetry, and Order in China鈥揝outh Korea Relations
Astha Chadha (Ritsumeikan University) - Exegesis and Gendered Erasure of Memory in Post-2020 Pakistan-Bangladesh Relations
Panel 5: Internal Mobilization and Legitimacy (17:00-18:30)
Chair: Tsering Topgyal (University of Birmingham)
Brendan Howe(Ewha Womans University) -Persecution and Paying Back Syndrome: How History Shaped South Korean Geopolynomic Positioning
Giuseppe Paparella(King鈥檚 College London) - Coercing Taiwan: China, Military Mobilization, and the Abuse of Sun Yat-sen鈥檚 Historical Memory
Licheng Qian (Birmingham City University) -Remembering the Nanjing Massacre: A Theory of Mnemonic Justice
Nicola Leveringhaus(King鈥檚 College London) - The Ethics of Nuclear Weapons Commemoration
Maryolanda Zaini (University of Siena) - Memory Politics in Postcolonial Indonesia: The Case of Datuk Tabano of Kampar