Institute of Asian and Oriental Studies

Culture & Society

Prof. Dr. Gabriele Alex

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Prof. Dr. Viktoria Eschbach-Szabo

 
Prof. Dr. Viktoria Eschbach-Szabo teaches and carries out research in Tübingen since 1991. At the department of Japanese Studies she holds the professorship in Japanese linguistics. Her focus lies on semiotics, onomastics, scientific relationships between Europe and East Asia as well as Japanese languages in diverse contexts. It involves also linguistic policies, migration, aging society and translations. Further information...

Prof. Dr. Regula Forster

 
Regula Forster (*1975) is Professor of Islamic History and Culture in Tübingen since 2020. Her research focuses on classical Arabic literature (dialogue as a literary form, literature conveying knowledge, Fürstenspiegel), the history of science (especially alchemy), the history of Koran exegesis and cultural contact. Further information...

Prof. Dr. Kurt Franz (visting professor)

 
Visiting professor Dr. Kurt Franz teaches Islamic Studies and does research on the history of the Middle East (600 to 1600). He is interested in the interlocking of political and social history as well as the history of science. Using the example of revolutionary movements and the relationships between nomads and the resident population as well as slavery and labor division, he examines social developments regarding the transmission of knowledge, its partiality and intertextuality. In connection with the excellence initiative he came to the University of Tübingen in 2014. Currently, he establishes the "Islamic History Geodata Initiative" which is a research group about spatial history and historical cartography of Islam. Further information...

Prof. Dr. Robert Horres

 
Since 2004, Robert Horres is professor for Japanese Studies at the Institute for Asian and Oriental Studies at the University of Tübingen and represents the work unit “modern Japan”. He works on this research at the University of Bonn and the German Institute for Japanese Studies, the National Institute for Science and Technology Policy and historiographic institute of the University of Tokyo.

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Assistant Prof. Dr. Huang Fei

 
Fei Huang was appointed W1 Junior Professor for Chinese History and Society at the Institute of Chinese and Korean Studies of Tübingen University in 2014. She earned her PhD in Chinese Studies at Leiden University in 2012. Before she joined Tübingen, she worked as a Teaching Associate and Visiting Scholar in The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (2012-2013). In December 2013, she was selected an Academia Sinica Postdoctoral scholar in Taipei. She was one of only two fellows to be awarded this additional distinguished fellowship in the field of Humanities and Social Science. Her research interests concentrate on landscape studies, material culture studies, historical anthropology, art history and cultural geography in late imperial China. Further information...

Prof. Dr. Heike Oberlin

 

Prof. Dr. Heike Oberlin is the Scientific Coordinator of the Institute of Asian and Oriental Studies and Associate Professor as well as Head of its Dept. of Indology. Her research expertise ranges from performing arts in/of India, especially the Sanskrit theater Kūṭiyāṭṭam, over the language and literature of Malayāḷam, South Asian manuscripts and gender studies to Indian folk religions. Her regional focus lies in Kerala / South India. Further information...

Prof. Dr. Monika Schrimpf

 

My research interests are in Japanese history of religion, with a particular focus on modern and contemporary times. Presently, my research focuses on the fields of gender and religion, as well as medicine and religion in Japan. With regard to the first topic, I investigate the role of gender concepts in the self-understandings of contemporary ordained Buddhist women, thus reconstructing changed interpretations of religious roles. Besides, I examine diverse ways in which religion and medicine are entangled in contemporary Japan, asking for strategies of legitimation and self-positioning among religious actors offering therapeutic practices. Here, Buddhism and new religious movements serve as examples. I am professor for Japanese Studies at the Institute of Asian and Oriental Studies of the University of Tübingen since 2014. Further information...

Prof. Dr. Gunter Schubert

 
Prof. Schubert (born 1963) teaches and carries out research in Tübingen since 2003. He holds the professorship for Greater Chinese Studies at the department of Chinese and Korean Studies. Also, he is director of the European Research Center on Contemporary Taiwan, which cooperates with the Institute of Asian and Oriental Studies. Current focal points are: political steering policy implementation in China’s local state; the political role of private entrepreneurs in China; the political economy of cross-strait relations; nationalism in Greater China; and East Asian comparative political development. Further information…

Prof. Dr. Hans Ulrich Vogel

 
Prof. Vogel (born in 1954) teaches and carries out research in Tübingen since 1994. At the department of Chinese and Korean Studies he holds the professorship in Chinese History and Society. His focal point lies on economic and social history, the history of natural sciences and technology as well as general cultural history of traditional China. He publicizes intensively to the realms of the history of money, mining and salt production, meteorology and sports (kickball ). More recent areas of interests cover research on Marco Polo and the role of China in the early history of globalization. Further information...

Assistant professor Dr. Jerôme de Wit

 
Jerôme de Wit received his Ph.D. from Leiden University, Netherlands. He is a Korean specialist on North and South Korean Wartime Literature and modern Korean culture. His research interest in Korean culture is focused on public discourses concerning history and society and how cultural sources can provide us with different viewpoints on debates such as nationalism, identity, and history. His recent projects deal with such topics as postcolonialism in contemporary South Korean alternate history novels, a study on North Korean children’s animated cartoons, and a study on the representation and the changes in identity in the literature and movies of ethnic Koreans in China. through his teaching of undergraduate and graduate courses at several universities. Further information...