Friday, September 29
09:45 - 10:00 Registration
10:00 - 10:10 Opening Remarks
10:10 - 12:00 Session 1: Historical Origins of Colonialism // Chair: HATTORI
- Klaus ANTONI (Universität Tübingen)
"Okinawa – Japan’s first colony? Tametomo and the historical Japanization of the Ryûkyû kingdom" - David WEISS (Universität Tübuingen)
"A Prehistory of Colonialism: Views of Korea in Tokugawa Japan"
12:00 - 13:00 Lunch
13:00 - 14:50 Session 2: Citizenship and Nationality // Chair: SCHRIMPF
- AN Jong Chol (Universität Tübingen)
"From Gender-Biased to Gender Equality Citizenship? The Politics of the Nationality Law, 1948-1997" - Tobias SCHOLL (Universität Tübingen)
"Korean-Japanese Relations and South Korean Transborder Citizenship"
15:10 - 17:00 Session 3: Divided / Shared Memories of the Cold War // Chair: WACHUTKA
- ITAGAKI Ryuta (Doshisha University)
"Divided Family and Shared Memories: Ego-narratives of a North Korean Linguist Kim Sugyŏng and His Family" - You Jae LEE (Universität Tübingen)
"Migration to a Divided Nation: Korean Former Miners and their Memory"
18:00 - 20:00 Dinner
Saturday, September 30
10:10 - 12:00 Session 4: Colonial Migration // Chair: AKIYAMA
- JUNG Byung Wook (Korea University)
"Chinese Workers and Anti-Chinese Riots in Colonial Korea" - YOON Hyo Jung (Korea University)
"A Study on a United Front in the Colony Korea on a Transnational Perspective: Singanhoe Agitating for Acquirement of Chinese Nationality of Immigrant Koreans in Manchuria"
12:00 - 13:00 Lunch
13:00 - 14:50 Session 5: Rethinking North Korea // Chair: KIM-WACHUTKA
- Isabella JUKAS (Universität Tübingen)
"North Korea’s Third World Offensive" - KIM Yeo-kyung (Doshisha University)
"Social Movement and Cultural Reproduction: Focusing on Meanings of Korean Schools in Zainichi Korean Women’s Life Histories"
15:10 - 17:00 Session 6: Politics of Comparison // Chair: HORRES
- KOTERA Ai (Doshisha University)
"Myth making? The Holocaust memory of the third generation in Israel" - MIZUTANI Satoshi (Doshisha University)
"British attitudes to Korea’s claim for independence, ca. 1905-20―the trans-imperial significance of Britain’s colonial experience in India and Egypt"
17:10 - 18:00 Discussions
18:30 - 20:30 Dinner