第22届ICSH国际历史科学大会日程
其中“ST25分会场”由姜生教授担任召集人
CISH’s
XXIInd CONGRESS
XXIIème
Congrès du CISH
JINAN
(23-29 August /23-29 août 2015)
Draft
Programme/Programme provisoire
Different types of sessions/ Les différents types de sessions
A Major Theme (with its organizers, discussants and 12 paper givers) is
organized in a session which lasts an entire day (morning: 3 hours; and
afternoon: 3 hours)
A Specialised Theme (with its organizers, discussants and 6 to 8 paper
givers) is usually proposed and supported by one member of the CISH (National
Committee or International Affiliated Organization or Internal Commission); the
session lasts a half-day (3 hours)
A Joint Session (with its organizers, discussants and 6 to 8 paper
givers) has to be proposed and supported by at least two members of the CISH
(National Committee or International Affiliated Organization or Internal
Commission); the session lasts a half-day (3 hours)
A Round Table is a session where the organizer gives a paper which is
discussed by 4 commentators; the session lasts a half-day (3 hours)
Un thème majeur (avec
ses responsables de séances, ses discutants et ses 12 auteurs de contributions)
est organisée dans le cadre d’une séance qui dure une journée entière (matin : 3 heures ; après-midi : 3 heures)
Un thème spécialisé
(avec ses responsables de séances, ses discutants et ses auteurs de
contributions – entre 6 et 8) est habituellement proposé et soutenu par un
membre du CISH (comité national, ou organisation internationale affiliée, ou
commission interne) : la séance dure une demi-journée (3 heures)
Une session jointe
(avec ses responsables de séances, ses discutants et ses auteurs de
contributions – entre 6 et 8) est obligatoirement proposée et soutenue par deux
membres du CISH au moins (comité national, ou organisation internationale
affiliée, ou commission interne) : la séance dure une demi-journée (3 heures)
Une table ronde est
une session où le responsable de séance livre une contribution qui est discutée par 4 commentateurs ; la
séance dure une demi-journée (3 heures)
Organization of the sessions/organisation des séances
– Major Themes, Specialised themes, Joint
sessions/Thèmes majeurs, thèmes specialises, sessions jointes
. The authors of papers must submit their text before the Congress to the organizer(s), to the discussant(s) of their session and to the
General Secretary of the CISH (sgcish1@gmail.com)
. In Jinan, the organizer(s)
will chair the session; introduce the theme and the problématique, introduce the participants (10 minutes); they will
conclude the session.
. Each participant will speak
for 10 minutes
. The discussant will then
take the floor for about 20 minutes and set out his/her views and comments
. Adequate time will be
reserved for the general discussion (about one hour)
. For the Major Themes, this
timing is valid for each of their half-days (except of course the final words
of the organizer(s) given once, at the end of the day)
.
Les auteurs des communications adressent leurs textes avant le Congrès, à
leur(s) responsable(s) de séances et à leur(s) discutant(s), ainsi qu’au
Secrétaire général du CISH (sgcish1@gmail.com)
. À
Jinan, le(s) responsable(s) de séance introdui(sen)t le thème et la
problématique, présente(nt) les participants à la séance (10 minutes) ; ils
concluent la séance
– Les auteurs des communications disposent de 10 minutes
chacun
–
Le discutant ou la discutante intervient ensuite pour présenter en 20 minutes
ses commentaires et réflexions
– Un temps suffisant doit être laissé pour un débat
général avec la salle (une heure environ).
– Pour les thèmes majeurs, ce déroulement de séance
s’applique à chacune de ses demi-journées (sauf évidemment pour la conclusion
du ou des responsables de séance, donnée une seule fois, en fin de journée)
– Round Tables/Tables rondes
–In
Jinan, the organizer(s) will introduce the commentators and will present the
paper which will be discussed (20 minutes)
– Each commentator will have 15 minutes for his/her comment
– Adequate time
must be reserved for the general discussion (about 1 hour and a half)
–
Les responsables des tables rondes envoient leur texte aux 4 commentateurs
avant le Congrès, ainsi qu’au
Secrétaire général du CISH (sgcish1@gmail.com)
– À Jinan, le(s) responsable(s) présente(nt) les
commentateurs et communiquent le texte qui fait l’objet de la discussion (20
minutes)
– Les commentateurs disposent de 15
minutes chacun pour réagir à ce texte
– Un temps suffisant doit être laissé pour un débat
général avec la salle (une heure et demie environ)
– Tea breaks
–During the Congress, tea and coffee will be served
at 10:15-11:15 on the morning, 15:15-16:15 on the afternoon. You will find the
service nearby the conference room.
-The organizer or chair of each panel has the right to decide the
starting-ending time. The recommended time of tea break is no more than 15
minutes.
General
Time Schedule/Calendrier
général
– Sunday 23
August/ Dimanche 23 août:
. 10 AM-12 1st CISH’s General Assembly (welcome and registration from 9:15 AM)
10h-12h 1ère Assemblée générale du CISH (accueil et émargement à partir de 9 h 15)
. 1:30 PM-3:30 PM 1st CISH’s General Assembly
13 h 30-15 h 30 1ère Assemblée générale du CISH
. 4 PM-6:30 PM Opening session: Nature and Human
History
16 h-18 h 30 Séance d’ouverture: Nature et histoire de l’humanité
–
Monday 24 and Tuesday 25 August/ Lundi 24-Mardi 25 août:
. 4 Major Themes (a whole day each, 9 AM-12:15 PM and 2 PM-5:15 PM)
Monday 24: Major themes 1 and 2; Tuesday 25: Major themes 3 and 4
4 thèmes majeurs (une journée entière pour chacun
d’entre eux, 9 h-12 h 15 et 14 h-17 h 15 )
Lundi 24: thèmes majeurs 1 et 2; Mardi 25: thèmes
majeurs 3 et 4
– Wednesday 26 (morning and afternoon) and Thursday
27 (morning) August
Mercredi
26 (matin et après-midi)-Jeudi 27 (matin) août:
. 27 Specialised Themes; 18 Joint Sessions; 19 Round Tables(one half day for each of these sessions)
27 thèmes spécialisés ; 18 sessions jointes ; 19 tables rondes (une demi-journée pour chacune de ces sessions)
– Thursday 27 (afternoon)-Friday 28 August (three
half days)
Jeudi
27 (après-midi)-Vendredi 28 août (trois demi-journées):
. 1 special session/1 session spéciale
. The International
Affiliated Organizations’ and Internal Commissions’ meetings (Conferences and General Assemblies)
Les réunions
des organisations internationales affiliées et commissions internes (colloques
et assemblées générales)
–
Monday 24, Tuesday 25, Wednesday 26, Thursday 27, Friday 28 August
lundi 24, mardi 25, Mercredi 26, Jeudi 27, Vendredi 28 août:
. 7:45 PM-9:30 PM Evening
sessions
19 h 45-21 h 30 Sessions de soirée
–
Saturday 29 August/ Samedi 29 août:
. 9 AM-11 AM 2nd CISH’s General
Assembly
9 h-11h 2nde Assemblée générale du CISH
. 11:15 AM-12:45 PM Closing session
11 h
15-12 h 45 Séance de clôture
Session Type |
Abbreviation |
Major Theme |
MT |
Specialised Theme |
ST |
Joint Session |
JS |
Round Table |
RT |
International Affiliated Organization |
IAO |
Internal Commission |
IC |
Venue |
Abbreviation |
Shandong Hotel |
SD |
Nanjiao Hotel |
NJ |
Club of Nanjiao Hotel |
Club |
Shandong University |
SDU |
Code |
Names of International |
IAO 1 |
Commission |
IAO 2 |
International |
IAO 3 |
The International |
IAO 4 |
International |
IAO 5 |
International |
IAO 6 |
International |
IAO 7 |
International |
IAO 8 |
International |
IAO 9 |
Commission |
IAO 10 |
Commission of |
IAO 11 |
International |
IAO 12 |
The Society for |
IAO 13 |
The International |
IAO 14 |
International |
IAO 15 |
Network of World |
IAO 16 |
Commission |
IAO 17 |
International |
IC 1 |
International |
IC 2 |
International |
NOTE:
In the following forms: MT 1-1 stands for
Session 1 of Major Theme 1, IAO 1-1 means Session 1 of the meetings of IAO
1,and so on.
Sunday |
|
1st Generel Assembly( 10:00-12:00 ) |
Shandong |
1st Generel Assembly(13:30-15:30 ) |
Shandong |
Opening |
Shandong |
Welcome |
Golden |
Monday 24 August |
|||
Morning Session ( 9:00-12:15 ) |
|||
Code |
Room |
Code |
Room |
MT 1-1 |
Shandong Hall,SD |
MT 2-1; MT 2-2 |
Movie Hall,SD |
Afternoon Session ( 14:00-17:15 ) |
|||
Code |
Room |
Code |
Room |
MT 1-2 |
Shandong Hall,SD |
MT 2-3; MT 2-4 |
Movie Hall,SD |
Evening Session |
|||
Theme |
Room |
||
Change of Value-Value of Change. Transforming Societies in |
Movie Hall,SD |
||
Launch and Seminar of the |
Liaocheng Hall,SD |
Tuesday 25 August |
|||
Morning Session ( 9:00-12:15 ) |
|||
Code |
Room |
Code |
Room |
MT 3-1;MT 3-2 |
Shandong Hall,SD |
MT 4-1 |
Movie Hall,SD |
Afternoon Session ( 14:00-17:15 ) |
|||
Code |
Room |
Code |
Room |
MT 3-3;MT 3-4 |
Shandong Hall,SD |
MT 4-2 |
Movie Hall,SD |
Evening Session ( 19:45-21:30 ) |
|
||
Theme |
Room |
||
Promoting Digital History internationally |
Movie Hall,SD |
Wednesday 26 August |
|||||
Morning Session ( 9:00-12:15 ) |
|||||
Code |
Room |
Code |
Room |
Code |
Room |
ST 1 |
Shandong High Speed Hall,SD |
ST 8 |
Binzhou Hall,SD |
ST 15 |
Auditorium,NJ |
ST 2 |
Lu Xin VIP Hall,SD |
ST 9 |
Yantai Hall,SD |
JS 1 |
Conference Room, 5F,NJ |
ST 3 |
Jinan Hall,SD |
ST 10 |
Zaozhuang Hall,SD |
JS 2 |
Conference Room, S4F,NJ |
ST 4 |
Qingdao Hall,SD |
ST 11 |
Dongying Hall,SD |
JS 3 |
Room 1012, Club |
ST 5 |
Linyi Hall,SD |
ST 12 |
Zibo Hall,SD |
JS 4 |
Room 1013, Club |
ST 6 |
Rizhao Hall,SD |
ST 13 |
Dezhou Hall,SD |
RT 1 |
Room 3013, Club |
ST 7 |
Liaocheng Hall,SD |
ST 14 |
VIP Room Mu Dan,SD |
RT 2 |
Room 3012, Club |
Afternoon Session ( 14:00-17:15 ) |
|||||
Code |
Room |
Code |
Room |
Code |
Room |
ST 16 |
Yantai Hall,SD |
JS 5 |
Zaozhuang Hall,SD |
JS 12 |
Conference Room, 5F,NJ |
ST 17 |
Jinan Hall,SD |
JS 6 |
Dongying Hall,SD |
JS 13 |
Room 3012, Club |
ST 18 |
Qingdao Hall,SD |
JS 7 |
Zibo Hall,SD |
JS 14 |
Room 1012, Club |
ST 19 |
Linyi Hall,SD |
JS 8 |
Dezhou Hall,SD |
RT 3 |
Room 1013, Club |
ST 20 |
Rizhao Hall,SD |
JS 9 |
VIP Room Mu Dan,SD |
RT 4 |
Room 1018, Club |
ST 21 |
Liaocheng Hall,SD |
JS 10 |
Meeiting Room, S4F,NJ |
RT 5 |
Room 3018, Club |
ST 22 |
Binzhou Hall,SD |
JS 11 |
Auditorium,SD |
RT 6 |
Room 3015, Club |
Reception |
|||||
Theme |
Room |
||||
Reception by Association of Chinese |
Golden Hall,SD |
||||
Evening Session |
|||||
Theme |
Room |
||||
The CISH /Jaeger-LeCoultre International Award Ceremony ( 19:45-21:30 ) |
Shandong Hall,SD |
||||
Theme |
Room |
||||
Seminar on Ju Culture(19:30-21:30) |
Rizhao Hall,SD |
Thursday 27 August |
|||||||||
Morning Session ( 9:00-12:15 ) |
|||||||||
Code |
Room |
Code |
Room |
Code |
Room |
||||
ST 23 |
Room 3018, Club |
JS 18 |
Binzhou Hall,SD |
RT 14 |
Conference Room, 5F,NJ |
||||
ST 24 |
Shandong High Speed Hall,SD |
RT 7 |
Zaozhuang Hall,SD |
RT 15 |
Conference Room, S4F,NJ |
||||
ST 25 |
Lu Xin VIP Hall,SD |
RT 8 |
Dongying Hall,SD |
RT 16 |
Room 1012, Club |
||||
ST 26 |
Jinan Hall,SD |
RT 9 |
Zibo Hall,SD |
RT 17 |
Room 1013, Club |
||||
ST 27 |
Qingdao Hall,SD |
RT 10 |
Dezhou Hall,SD |
RT 18 |
Room 1018, Club |
||||
JS 15 |
Linyi Hall,SD |
RT 11 |
VIP Room Mu Dan,SD |
RT 19 |
Room 3012, Club |
||||
JS 16 |
Rizhao Hall,SD |
RT 12 |
Yantai Hall,SD |
|
|
||||
JS 17 |
Liaocheng Hall,SD |
RT 13 |
Conference Room, S3F,NJ |
|
|
||||
Afternoon Session ( 14:00-17:15 ) |
|||||||||
Code |
Room |
Code |
Room |
Code |
Room |
||||
IAO 1-1 |
Shandong High Speed Hall,SD |
IC 1 Keynote Speech; IC 1-1 (13:00-16:00) |
VIP Room Mu Dan, SD |
IAO 11-5 (14:30-16:00) |
Room 3018, Club |
||||
IAO 2-1 |
Lu Xin VIP Hall,SD |
IC 1 General Assembly and Reception (17:00) |
VIP Room Mu Dan, SD |
IAO 11 Reception (17:00-19:00) |
Room Ju Xian, Blue Hall,NJ |
||||
IAO 5-1; IAO 5-2 |
Jinan Hall,SD |
IAO 9-1; IAO 9 General Assembly |
Dongying Hall,SD |
IAO 12-1 |
Conference Room, S4F,NJ |
||||
IAO 6-1 |
Linyi Hall,SD |
IAO 10-1; IAO 10-2 |
Zibo Hall,SD |
IAO 13-1; General Assembly (14:00-18:30) |
Conference Room, 5F,NJ |
||||
IAO 7-1; IAO 7 General Assembly |
Rizhao Hall,SD |
IAO 11-Opening; IAO 11-RT (14:00-16:30) |
Auditorium,NJ |
IAO 14-1 |
Conference Room, S3F,NJ |
||||
IAO 8 Plenary Session; IAO 8-1; IAO 8-4 (13:45-18:15) |
Liaocheng Hall,SD |
IAO 11-1; IAO 11-SUB A-1 (14:30-17:00) |
Room 3012, Club |
IAO 15-1 |
Room 1018, Club |
||||
IAO 8-2; IAO 8-5 (14:00-18:15) |
Binzhou Hall,SD |
IAO 11-2 (14:30-17:00) |
Room 3013, Club |
|
|
||||
IAO 8-3; IAO 8 Business Meeting (14:00-18:15) |
Yantai Hall,SD |
IAO 11-3; IAO 11-4 (14:30-17:00) |
Room 3015, Club |
|
|
||||
Evening Session ( 19:45-21:30 ) |
|||||||||
Theme |
Room |
||||||||
Global Connections:The Next Generation (Posters) |
Shandong Energy Hall,SD |
||||||||
Friday 28 August |
||||||
Morning Session ( 9:00-12:15 ) |
||||||
Code |
Room |
Code |
Room |
Code |
Room |
|
Special Session |
Room 1013, Club |
IAO 8-7; IAO 8-9 (8:30-12:45) |
Binzhou Hall,SD |
IAO 11-7 |
Room 3015, Club |
|
IAO 1-2 |
Shandong High Speed Hall,SD |
IAO 8 Business Meeting; IAO 8-10 (8:30-12:45) |
Yantai Hall,SD |
IAO 11-8a |
Room 3018, Club |
|
IAO 2-2 |
Lu Xin VIP Hall,SD |
IC 1-2 |
Dongying Hall,SD |
IAO 11-Lunch and Informal meeting (12:00-14:00) |
Room Ju Xian, Blue Hall,NJ |
|
IAO 3-1 |
Jinan Hall,SD |
IC 2 General Assembly |
Room 1012, Club |
IAO 12-2 |
Conference Room, S4F,NJ |
|
IAO 4-1 |
Qingdao Hall,SD |
IAO 9-2 |
Zibo Hall,SD |
IAO 13-2 |
Conference Room, 5F,NJ |
|
IAO 5-3; IAO 5 General Assembly |
Linyi Hall,SD |
IAO 10-3; IAO 10-4 |
Dezhou Hall,SD |
IAO 14-2 |
Conference Room, S3F,NJ |
|
IAO 6-2 |
Zaozhuang Hall,SD |
IAO 11-6 |
Auditorium,NJ |
IAO 15-2 |
Room 1018, Club |
|
IAO 7-2 |
Rizhao Hall,SD |
IAO 11-SUB B-1 |
Room 3012, Club |
|
|
|
IAO 8-6; IAO 8-8 (8:30-12:45) |
Liaocheng Hall,SD |
IAO 11-SUB A-2 |
Room 3013, Club |
|
|
|
Afternoon Session ( 14:00-17:15 ) |
||||||
Code |
Room |
Code |
Room |
Code |
Room |
|
IAO 1-3; IAO 1 Business Meeting |
Shandong High Speed Hall,SD |
IAO 8-12 |
Binzhou Hall,SD |
IAO 11-11 |
Room 3015, Club |
|
IAO 2-3; IAO 2 Business Meeting |
Lu Xin VIP Hall,SD |
IAO 8-13 |
Yantai Hall,SD |
IAO 11-SUB A-3 |
Room 3018, Club |
|
IAO 3-2 |
Jinan Hall,SD |
IC 1-3 |
Zaozhuang Hall,SD |
IAO 12-3 |
Conference Room, S4F,NJ |
|
IAO 4-2 |
Qingdao Hall,SD |
IAO 9-3 |
Dongying Hall,SD |
IAO 13-3 |
Conference Room, 5F,NJ |
|
IAO 5-4; IAO 5-5 |
Linyi Hall,SD |
IAO 10 General Assembly |
Zibo Hall,SD |
IAO 14 Business Meeting |
Conference Room, S3F,NJ |
|
IAO 6 Business Meeting |
VIP Room Mu Dan,SD |
IAO 11-9; IAO 11 Closing Words and Business Meeting |
Auditorium,NJ |
IAO 15-3 |
Room 1018, Club |
|
IAO 7-3 |
Dezhou Hall,SD |
IAO 11-8b |
Room 3012, Club |
IAO 16 Business Meeting |
Room 1012, Club |
|
IAO 8-11; IAO 8 Plenary Session (14:00-18:15) |
Liaocheng Hall,SD |
IAO 11-10 |
Room 3013, Club |
IAO 17 General Assembly (17:00-19:00) |
Room 1013, Club |
|
Evening Session ( 19:45-21:30 ) |
||||||
Theme |
Room |
|||||
History and Ethics |
Shandong Energy Hall,SD |
|||||
Saturday 29 August |
|
2nd General Assembly (9:00-11:00) |
Conference Room, 2F, Mingde Building,SDU |
Closing Session (11:15-12:45) |
Sheng Kunlun Music Hall,SDU |
Farewell Buffet Lunch (13:00) |
Qiyuan Cafeteria,SDU |
1st General
Assembly/1ère Assemblée générale
9:15 AM-10 AM
Rigistration
10 AM-12 and 1:30 PM-3:30 PM/ 10 h-12 h
et 13 h 30-15 h 30
Shandong
High Speed Hall, Shangdong Hotel
– Opening
Statement: Marjatta Hietala, president of the ICHS/Ouverture : Marjatta Hietala, présidente du CISH
– General
Secretary’s Report (2010-2015)/Rapport
moral du Secrétaire general (2010-2015) : Robert Frank
– Treasurer’s
report/Rapport financier du Trésorier : Laurent Tissot
– New
members: Presentation of the candidates to ICHS (National Committees and
International Affiliated Organizations); discussion and vote /Nouveaux membres : présentation des
candidats au CISH (comités nationaux et organisations internationals affiliées)
; discussion et vote
– Venue
of the General Assembly of 2017: Moscow’s application; discussion and vote / Lieu de l’Assemblée générale du
CISH en 2017, candidature de Moscou ; discussion et vote
– Members
of the new Board: outline of the procedure and introduction of the members
proposed by the Nominating Committee/ Membres
du nouveau bureau : rappel de la procedure et présentation des membres
proposés par la commission de nomination
– International
Prize of History: outline of the procedure 2014-2015; presentation of the
result; presentation of the rules governing the future prizes/ Prix international de l’histoire,
présentation de la procédure 2014-2015 et du résultat ; présentation du
règlement d’attribution des prochains prix
– Venue
of the 23rd International Congress of Historical Sciences in 2020: presentation
of the three candidacies (Athens, Poznan, Tampere)/ Lieu du 23e Congrès international des sciences historiques
en 2020 : présentation des trois candidatures (Athènes, Poznan, Tampere)
Opening Session/Séance d’ouverture
4 PM-6:30
PM/16 h-18 h 30
Shandong Hall, Shandong
Hotel
– Opening speeches/Discours
d’ouverture
– Entertainment/Divertissement
– 3 Keynote speeches on the theme: Nature and Human History/3 exposés d’ouverture sur le thème « Nature et histoire de
l’humanité »: Andrea Giardina(Italy), Mamadou Fall(Senegal) and Xia Mingfang(China). Chair: Robert Frank.
Welcome Dinner/Dîner-Buffet
de bienvenue
6:45 PM/18
h 45
Golden Hall, Shandong
Hotel; Blue Hall, Nanjiao Hotel.
Major Theme 1/Thème
majeur 1
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Shandong Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Wang Jianlang (Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences)
María Dolores Elizalde (CSIC, Madrid)
With the
support of the Association of Chinese Historians and the Spanish
National Committee
Discussant:
Kenneth Pomeranz (University of
Chicago)
–
Wan Ming (Chinese Academy of Social Science):
China
Silver monetization: Ming dynasty China and global interactions
– Guido Abbattista (University of Trieste):
Europe and China in the ‘long enlightenment’: civilization,
commercial ideology and the family of nations, 1780-1850
– Paul A. Kramer (Vanderbilt University):
The
Golden Gate and the Open Door: Civilization, Empire, and Exemption in the
History of U. S. Chinese Exclusion, 1868-1910
–
Pierre Singaravélou (Université
Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne):
Laboratory of Globalisation? Tianjin c. 1900
– Valdo Ferretti (University
of Rome La Sapienza):
China
and the international alliances at the beginning of the XXth century
– Kawashima Shin (University of Tokyo):
Internationalism and Nationalism on modern
and contemporary Chinese Diplomacy : Tribute system, Revolution and War
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Shandong Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers:
Wang Jianlang (Chinese Academy of
Social Sciences)
María Dolores Elizalde (CSIC, Madrid)
With the
support of the Association of Chinese Historians and the Spanish
National Committee
Discussant: Manel Oll (Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona)
– Michael Speidel and Anne Kolb (University of Zurich):
Imperial Rome and China: contacts and the
collection of information
– Abdullah Al Masum (University of Chittagong):
China-Bengal
Interactions in the early 15th Century: A Study on Ma-Huan’s and Fei
Shin’s Travels Accounts
– Salvatore Ciriacono (Padova University):
Europe and the Chinese silk (16th -19th
centuries)
– Ander Permanyer (Universitat Pompeu Fabra,
Barcelona):
The
Spanish link in the Canton trade, 1787-1830: silver, opium and the Royal
Philippines Company
– Alexander Petrov (Russian Academy of Sciences):
Commercial
relations of the Russian-American Company with China in the second half of the
XIX century
– Wu Linchun (Dong Hwa University):
Foreign Engineers’ Activities in China and the
Process of China’s internationalization: the case of « The Engineering Society of China”,
1901-1941 »
Two speakers in reserve:
– Yiwei Cheng (University of Alberta):
The
Chinese Eastern Railway and China’s Re-potrayal of Russia in the late 1910s and
early 1920s
– Liu Wenming (Capital Normal University, Beijing):
Caretakers of Sulu king’s Tomb in China,
1417-1733
Major Theme 2/Thème majeur 2
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Movie Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers:
Ute Frevert (Center for the History of Emotions, Max
Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin)
Andrew Lynch (Australian
Research Council Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions, Europe
1100-1800, The University of Western Australia)
With the
support of the American Historical Association and the Australian Historical
Association
Discussants: Charles Zika (University of Melbourne)
Jacqueline Van Gent (The University of
Western Australia)
– Laurence Fontaine (CNRS- ENS-EHESS, Paris):
Emotional economies in early
modern Europe
– Anna Geurts (University of Sheffield):
The Pre-History of Stress
– Anne Schmidt (Max Planck Institute for Human
Development, Berlin):
Advertising culture and the making of the modern consumer
– Andrea Noble (University of Durham):
Feeling Rules in Mexico: Crying in
Colonial Contexts
– Christianne Smit (Utrecht University):
Fear
and fascination – Savages in the Slums and the Colonies
– Makoto
Harris Takao (University of
Western Australia):
A Comparative Study of
Emotional Pedagogies within the Society of Jesus and its Presence in
Sixteenth-Century Japan
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Movie Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Ute Frevert (Center for the History of Emotions, Max
Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin)
Andrew Lynch (Australian
Research Council Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions, Europe
1100-1800, The University of Western Australia)
With the support of the American Historical
Association and the Australian Historical Association
Discussants: Charles Zika (University of Melbourne)
Jacqueline Van Gent (The University of
Western Australia)
–
Fabrizio Titone (Universidad
del País Vasco):
Emotions and mourning rites in late medieval Sicily
– Alan Maddox (University
of Sydney):
Emotional expression and the
Passion at the basilica of St Anthony of Padua in the early eighteenth century
– Benno Gammerl (Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin):
Love making homosexual bodies? 20th century
perspectives
– Meera Lee (Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY):
Psychoanalytic theory and trauma studies
– Tuomas Tepora (University of Helsinki):
What can the history of
emotions learn from the neurosciences, if any?
– Radmila Švaříčková Slabáková (Palacky
University Olomouc):
Emotions
and memory in ego-documents: from correspondence to oral history
Evening
Session
7:45 PM-9:30 PM/19 h 45-21 h 30
Movie
Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers:
Miroslav Vaněk (Czech
Academy of Sciences; Charles University Prague)
Discussant:
Rob Perks (National Life Stories,
British Library, London)
– Oldrich Tuma (Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague,):
Introductory speech: Position
of Oral History in Contemporary History research
– Miroslav
Vaněk (Czech Academy of Sciences,
Prague):
Introduction : Why Are We Here? Oral History in Past and
Future Perspectives
– Pavel Mücke (Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague):
Changing
of memory during and after political changes in Czechoslovakia
– Christina Landman (University of South Africa, Pretoria):
Youth on the margins as agents
of change in rural South Africa
– Indira Chowdhury (Srishti School of Art, Design and Technology, Centre for Public History, Bangalore):
Between
memory and history: The persistence of values at Gandhis ashram at Sewagram
– Joni Krekola (Veteran Members of Parliament Oral History Archive, Library
of Finnish Parliament):
Representative democracy from
inside. Characteristics of the Finnish veteran MPs’ oral history interviews
– Laura Benadiba (ORT Technical School, Buenos
Aires):
Oral History in Latin America:
building memories from the diversity
– Marta Kurkowska-Budzan (Jagellonian
University, Krakow):
Doing history – making the
historical change. Public history in Poland 1980s–2010s
Launch and
Seminar of the Publication
Chinese
Historiography 1978-2008(English
version)
7:30 PM-9:00 PM/19 h 30-21 h
Liaocheng Hall, Shandong Hotel
Major Theme 3/Thème majeur 3
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Shandong Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Alan Forrest (University
of York)
Mitani Hiroshi (University of Tokyo)
Pierre Serna (Université Paris 1
Panthéon-Sorbonne)
With
the support of the International Commission of History of French Revolution,
the French National Committee, the Network of Global and World History
Organizations, the Japanese National Committee, the Korean National Committee,
in association with the British National Committee and the African Network of
Global History
Discussant:
Anna-Maria Rao (Università
degli Studi di Napoli Federico II)
– Peter McPhee (University
of Melbourne):
Sister Republics? The American and French
Revolutions in Comparative Perspective
– Annie Jourdan (University of Amsterdam):
Revolutions in small countries in eighteenth- century Europe
– Annick Lempérière (Université Paris 1
Panthéon-Sorbonne):
The Mexican Revolution, 1910-1917: How Latin American People
Fought for a Modernity of their Own?
– Victoria Zhuravleva (Russian State University for the Humanities, Moscow):
The Limits of the Acceptable in Revolution: the First
Russian Revolution in American Representations
– Ikeda Yoshiro
(University of Tokyo):
The Quest for the Republican Regime in the Russian
Revolution
– Matthias Middell (University of Leipzig):
The revolutions in Eastern Europe – What is New since 1989?
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Shandong Hall, Shandong
Hotel
Organizers: Alan Forrest (University of York)
Mitani Hiroshi (University
of Tokyo)
Pierre
Serna (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne)
With the support of the International Commission of History
of French Revolution, the French National Committee, the Network of Global and
World History Organizations, the Japanese National Committee, the Korean
National Committee, in association with the British National Committee and the
African Network of Global History
Discussant: Mitani Hiroshi (University of Tokyo)
– Mulugeta Gebrhinot Berhe (Addis Ababa University):
1989: a Turning Point in the History of Modern Ethiopia
– Joanna De Groot(University of York):
Revolutions in another Language: a Comparative Evaluation of
Indigenous and Transnational Elements in the Iranian Revolutions of 1905-11 and
1977-82
– Nadia Marzouki (European
University Institute, Florence):
Beyond
the Secular/Religious Divide: Lessons from the Tunisian revolution
– Park Hun (Seoul National University):
The Emergence of the ‘Literati
Political Culture’ in Nineteenth Century Japan: Rethinking the Meiji Revolution
in an East Asian Context
– Wang Qisheng (Beijing University):
Continuity and Progression in the Twentieth Century Chinese
Revolution
– Fukamachi Hideo (Chuo University, Tokyo):
A Revolution Divided: China’s Ambivalence toward Modern
Polity
Major Theme 4/Thème
majeur 4
Digital Turn in
History/Le tournant numérique en
Histoire
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Movie Hall, Shandong
Hotel
Organizers: Claire Potter(The New School of Public Engagement)
Francis Blouin (University of Michigan)
With the
support of the American Historical Association
Discussants: Tom Dublin (SUNY Binghamton)
Kathryn Kish Sklar (SUNY
Binghamton)
–
Tom Dublin and Kathryn Kish Sklar (SUNY Binghamton):
History of
Women: Challenges of archival database construction
– Kathryn Sklar:
New
Digital Media and the New History of Human Rights
–
Patrick Murray-John :
Omeka, a
(partly) international platform
–
Serge Noiret :
Who owns History
and Memory in the web? Challenges and Possibilities of Digital
Public History
–
Alla Kovalova:
Digital
Historiography and Authors’ Rights: Challenges and Perspectives
–
Yvan Combeau (Université de
La Réunion-Océan Indien):
The Screen and Digital
Archives
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Movie Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Claire Potter(The New School of Public Engagement)
Francis Blouin (University of Michigan)
With the
support of the American Historical Association
Discussants: Tom Dublin (SUNY Binghamton)
Kathryn Kish Sklar (SUNY
Binghamton)
– Adam Kosto (Columbia University):
Digital Developments: Medieval European Diplomatic Sources
– Silvia Orlandi (Sapienza University of Rome):
EAGLE European
network of ancient Greek and Latin epigraphy:
Ancient inscriptions in the digital era
– Andrea Nanetti (Singapore
Nanyang Technical University) and Siew Ann Cheong (Singapore Nanyang
Technical University):
Web based automatic narratives for interactive
global histories: The maritime silk road 1205-1533
– Guido Abbattista:
Digital frontiers for
research on Modern History: resources and methodology
–
Jean-François Sirinelli:
L’historien, le
politique et le numérique : un triangle complexe
Promouvoir
l’Histoire Numérique internationale
Roy Rosenzweig Center for
History and New Media projects and the role of THATCamp (The Humanities and Technology Camp)
Les projets du Roy Rosenzweig Center for
History and New Media et le rôle de THATcamp (The Humanities and Technology
Camp)
7:45 PM-9:30 PM/19 h 45-21 h
30
Movie Hall, Shandong Hotel
– Serge Noiret (President of the International Federation for Public
History; European University
Institute, Florence):
Introduction
– Patrick Murray-John (Roy Rosenzweig Center for
History and New Media, Department of History and Art History, George Mason
University):
The Humanities And Technology
Camp: How an informal conference structure spreads knowledge and interest in
the Digital Humanities
Wednesday
26 August morning, Wednesday 26 August afternoon, Thursday 27 August morning:
the half days sessions/Mercredi 26 août matin, mercredi 26 août après-midi, jeudi 27 août
matin : les séances d’une demi-journée
Wednesday 26 August morning/Mercredi
26 août matin
SpecialisedTheme
1/Thème spécialisé 1
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Shandong
High Speed Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer: Martyn Lyons (University of New South Wales, Australia)
With the
support of the Australian Historical Association
Discussant: Rita Marquilhas (Lisbon University)
– Germaine Warkentin (University of Toronto):
Writing without the Alphabet: A New Typology of Writing
Systems
– Duncan Campbell (Australian National
University):
Liu E’s Diaries: The World of a Late Qing Collector
– Francis Joannès (Université Paris 1
Panthéon-Sorbonne):
The Babylonian scribes and their Libraries
– Antonella Ghignoli (La Sapienza University of Rome):
Scripts and Signs in Documents of Early Medieval Europe:
Origins, Transmission, Functions
– John Gagné (University of Sydney, Australia):
Paper World: The Materiality of Loss in the Premodern Age
– Arianne
Baggerman (Erasmus Universiteit
Rotterdam, Netherlands):
The changing perception of time and
the development of auto-biographical writing in the Netherlands in the 18th and
early 19th centuries.
– Anna Kuismin (University of Helsinki,
Finland):
Generic sources of life writing ‘from below’ in 19th-century
Finland
– Martyn Lyons (University of New South Wales,
Australia):
World War One and the Explosion of Popular Writing in
Europe, c.1860-1920
SpecialisedTheme
2/Thème spécialisé 2
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Lu Xin VIP Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers and Discussants : Rafael Dobado González (Universidad Complutense, Madrid)
Julio Djenderedjian (Universidad de Buenos Aires)
With the support of the Argentinian
National Committee, in partnership with the German National Committee
– Ciro Romano (University of Jyvaskyla):
The
“welfare” of religious initiative, in late medieval Italy; the case of the
Neapolitan Monastery of Saint Peter and Sebastian in the end of 15th century
– Ernesto López Losa and Santiago Piquero Zarauz (University of the Basque Country):
Spanish
Real Wages in the North-Western European Mirror, 1500-1800. On the Timings and
Magnitude of the Little Divergence in Europe
– Jorge Gelman and Daniel Santilli (Instituto
Ravignani, Universidad de Buenos Aires-CONICET):
The rich, the poor and
the others. Growth and inequality in Buenos Aires from colonial times to
the end of 19th Century
– María Inés Moraes and Carolina Vicario (Universidad
de la República, Montevideo; Universität Tübingen):
Been
equal and been unequal in an Old Regime economy: Montevideo and its
surroundings in the 18th century
– Moramay López-Alonso (Rice University, Houston):
Assessing
two centuries of poverty and inequality in Mexico (1750-1950): an anthropometric approach.
– Oluremi A. Abiolu,
Emmanuel B. Famokun (Federal
University of Technology, Akure) and Grace Oluremi Akanbi (Emmanuel Alayande College of Education, Oyo):
Wealth
circulation in West Africa: an assessment of the old Oyo and Benin Kingdoms,
and postcolonial Nigeria
– Timothy Cuff (Westminster College, New Wilmington, PA):
Cadets
Over the Life Course: The Relationship
of Early Adult BMI, Height, and Relative Mortality Among a Mid-Nineteenth
Century U.S. Upper Class Cohort
– Zhou Yuxiang (Ludong University,Yantai):
Relatively “affluent” and Labor
Relations. An Analysis of American Labor of Consumption during Calvin Coolidge
Government
Specialised Theme 3/Thème spécialisé 3
Crisis and Social Representations of History
in the Post-1989 Era
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Jinan Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers and Discussants: Antonis Liakos (University of Athens)
Chris Lorenz (Free University of Amsterdam)
With the support
of the International Committee for the History and Theory of
Historiography
Two speakers in reserve
– Kalle Pihlainen (Turku University):
The
idea of history in the post-1989 crisis of the radical left
– Rolf Torstendahl (Uppsala
University):
History versus treaties. Historical and legal arguments in
past and present conflicts on state frontiers
– Maria Bratolyubova (Southern Federal University, Russian Federation):
Monuments and historical memory within the urban
space of Rostov-on-Don
– Nino Chikovani (Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University):
Who is the “Other”?
Identity Construction through History Education in the post-Soviet Georgia
– Antonie Dolezalova (University of Economics in Prague):
Between Continuity and
Discontinuity: The History Education in the Czech Republic after Velvet
Revolution
– Marat Gibatdinov (Tatarstan Academy of Sciences):
History Wars in
Tatarstan
– Volodymyr V. Kravchenko (University of Alberta):
Ukraine:
re-interpretations and representations of the Soviet past
– Ivan Kurilla (European University at
St.Petersburg):
Patchwork of History:
the Position of Russian Historians in the Epoch of Politicization of their
research field
– Polina Verbytska (Lviv Politechnic University):
Search for social
consensus in the issue of historical memory through Teaching History in border
areas
– Joanna Wojdon (University of Wrocław
and Institute of National Remembrance):
Wars over the image of the communist past in history
education in Poland
Specialised Theme 4/ Thème
spécialisé 4
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Qingdao Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer: Sándor Horváth (Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest)
With
the support of the Hungarian National Committee
Discussant: Rosemary Wakeman (Fordham University, New York)
– Barbara Klich-Kluczewska (Jagiellonian University, Krakow):
The Great Expectations. Concepts of Urban Life and Everyday
Practices of Newcomers in Nowa Huta
– Ana Kladnik (Centre for Contemporary History
– ZZF,Potsdam):
The Regulation of Leisure for Building a New Town Center.
The Case of Velenje in Slovenia in the Late 1950s
– Jérôme Bazin (University of Paris-Est Créteil):
The Visual Frontier between City and Country: Landscapes on
the Cities of a New Type
– Igor Duda (Juraj Dobrila University of Pula):
Pioneers and the Urban Life.
Modernization and Ideologization of Children’s Leisure in Socialist Croatia
– Dariusz Jarosz (Polish Academy of Sciences):
‘Peasantness’ and the Style of Everyday Life within the
Polish Urban Expanse post 1945
– Elisabet Prudant (University of São Paulo) :
The Democratization of the City during the Unidad
Popular Government, 1970–1973
– Maria Vasekha (Russian Academy of Sciences,
Moscow):
Modern Moscow Tradition of Hovering in the Public Baths as
an Urban Leisure Phenomenon
Specialised Theme 5/Thème spécialisé 5
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Linyi Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer and
Discussant:
Donald Baker (University of British Columbia)
With the
support of the Canadian National Committee
– LiuFengjun (Shandong University):
The
discovery of Gukewan
– Jin Guiyun (Shandong University):
Prehistoric subsistence —new
data from China.
– Dennis Lee (Harvard University):
Early Korean-Japanese
Relations: Hegemonic Texts and Invisible Frontiers in the 5th – 6th Century
– Mark Byington (Harvard University):
What
archaeology tells us about the early history of states in and around the Korean
peninsula
– Jorrit Kelder(University of Oxford) and Henk Singor (Leiden University):
The
use of texts as a guide to archaeological discoveries related to Troy
– Tammi Schneider (Claremont Graduate University, California) and Norma Franklin (University of Haifa):
Biblical
Archaeology
Specialised Theme 6/Thème
spécialisé 6
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Rizhao
Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer: John Rogister (Institut de
France) and Alan
Forrest (University of York)
With
the support of the International
Commission for the History of Representative and Parliamentary
Institutions
Discussant:Maria Sofia Corciulo (University « La
Sapienza », Rome)
– Zhu Xiuchun (Shandong University):
System
and Circumstance. The practice of a parliamentary system in late Quin
dynasty and in the Republic of China
– Mario Di Napoli (Chamber of deputies,
Rome):
The
evolution of Parliaments after the Arab Spring
– Christiana Senigaglia (Université de Trieste):
Parliament
and Public Opinion in Max Weber’s analysis
– Nertila Ljarja (Luigj Gurakuqi University, Shkodra):
Parliamentarism
in Albania between the wo World Wars
– Alicia Salmeron (Instituto de Investigaciones Dr Jose-Luis Mora, Mexico):
La
idea de democracia y de vida parlamentaria en el Mexico
–
Valentina Vardabasso (Université
Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne):
Les
conférences interparlementaires du Parlement européen et les parlements de
l’Amérique latine: échanges réciproques, 1970-1990
SpecialisedTheme 7/Thème spécialisé 7
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Liaocheng Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer: Pascal Bastien (Université
du Québec, Montréal)
With the support of the Canadian National Committee
Discussant: Frédéric Chauvaud (Université de
Poitiers)
–
Jérôme Bourgon (IAO-CNRS/ENS de
Lyon):
Pour
l’exemple, mais pas pour le spectacle. Le paradoxe des exécutions chinoises et
de leurs sources iconographiques ou textuelles.
–
Falk Bretschneider (EHESS, Paris):
Rituels
punitifs et pluralité territoriale : la peine de mort dans l’espace
germanique, 18e-19e siècles
–Robert Jacob (Université de Liège et Université Saint-Louis de Bruxelles):
Fonder
la cité, inventer l’homicide d’État
–
Sofia Ciuffoletti (Università
degli Studi di Firenze):
La
guerre de la nation contre un citoyen. Réflexion juridique sur la peine de mort
en Italie et sur le dialogue transnational de son abolition
–
Simon Grivet :
Les
exécutions californiennes : d’une justice frontière à un rituel d’État
moderne, 1860-1940
–
Ludovic Maugué (Université de
Genève):
La peine
de mort en Suisse entre archaïsme et progressisme pénal : un bilan
historiographique (18e-19e siècle)
–
Xavier Rousseaux (Université
Catholique de Louvain):
Révolutions,
dominations et peine capitale : le laboratoire belge, 18e-20e siècle
SpecialisedTheme 8/Thème
spécialisé 8
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Binzhou Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Gregory Downs (University
of California,Davis)
Jane Landers (Vanderbilt
University)
With the support of the American
Historical Association
Discussant: Jane Landers
– Graham Russell Gao Hodges (Colgate University):
The American Revolution and the Underground
Railroad
–
João Reis (Federal University of
Bahia):
The Hausa Rebellions in Bahia,
Brazil, 1807- c. 1816
–
Michael Zeuske (University of
Cologne):
The Grand Narrative of “Abolition/
Emancipation” and the Realities of Slaveries and Trades in Human Beings in the
19th and 20th Century – A Global Perspective
–Patrick Manning (University of Pittsburgh):
Datasets
on the History of Slavery:Creating, Exchanging, and Preserving an Electronic
Record for Study Worldwide
– Gregory Downs(University of California, Davis):
Emancipation, Sovereignty and
State-Building: The Challenge of Practical Freedom
Specialised Theme 9/Thème
spécialisé 9
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Yantai Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer: Zhang Baichun (Institute
for the History of Natural Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences)
With
the support of the Association of Chinese Historians
Discussant: Zhao Zhijun (Institute of Archaeology,
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing)
– Yuan Jing (Chinese Academy of Social
Science, Institute of Archaeology):
Research
on Early Horse Domestication in China
– Liu Yu (Institute of Archaeology, Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing):
– Marko Nenonen (University of Tampere):
–
Chen Wei (Institute for the
History of Natural Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing):
The
Early History of Horseshoe: East and West
– Michael J. Neufeld (National Air and Space Museum
Smithsonian Institution):
The
Global Proliferation of German Rocket Technology after World War II
– Li Chengzhi (Beihang University,
Beijing):
Chinese
Manned Spaceflight: Retrospect and Prospect
– Wang Fang (Institute for the History of
Natural Sciences, CAS, Beijing)and Yury
M. Baturin (S.Vavilov Institute
for the History of Science and Technology, Russian Academy of Sciences):
The Carvingup of German Rocket Technology by the USSR(1944-1945)
– Olga Zinovieva (Lomonosov Moscow State
University):
Communicating Discoveries in
Urban Environment: Postmodernism and Science
One speaker in
reserve
– Sun Lie (Institute for the History of
Natural Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing):
Specialised Theme 10/Thème
spécialisé 10
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Zaozhuang Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer: Paul Dietschy(Université de
Franche-Comté)
With the support of the French
National Committee
Discussant: Pascal François (Institut d’Études Politiques de Paris)
– John Maynard (University of Newcastle, Australia):
The Dragon Down Under – The 1922 Chinese Soccer Tour of
Australia
– Stéphane Mourlane (Université d’Aix-Marseille):
Italian Emigration and Football in the New World: Cultural
Circulation and Transfers
– Bernardo Buarque(Fundação Getulio Vargas, Rio de Janeiro):
The experience of the World Cups : Testimonials from
Brazilian former players of the National Team from 1954 to 1982
– Thomas Fischer (Katholische Universität Eichstätt):
Diego Maradona actor and product of football globalisation
in practice and discourse
– Irakli Chkhaidze (Iv. Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University, Institute of Cultural Studies):
Georgian Football: a Mirror of Nationalism’s history in the
Era of Globalization
– Shao Minghua (Shandong University):
Globalisation, integration, and development of cultural and
creative industries of Soccer
– Fernando SeguraTrejo (CIDE, Mexico):
FIFA as a non governmental organisation
Specialised Theme 11/Thème
spécialisé 11
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Dongying Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers:
Jean-Pierre Deschodt (Institut
catholique d’études supérieures)
With the support of the French
National Committee
Discussant : Cylvie Claveau (Université
de Québec à Chicoutimi)
– Jean-Marc Joubert (Institut catholique d’études supérieures, La
Roche-sur-Yon):
Les
pratiques de la suspicion
– Luca Fezzi (Università degli Studi di Padova):
Monitoring
the Suspect, private initiative and forged evidence. Roman Republic, the
Bacchanal Affair and the Catilinarian Conspiracy
– Éric Georgin (Université Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas):
Surveillance administrative et anticléricalisme :
l’affaire des fiches
– Guillaume Bernard (Institut catholique d’études supérieures, La
Roche-sur-Yon):
De
la suspicion de l’acte à celle de la personne au XVIIIe siècle
–Olivier Hanne (Centre de recherche des Ecoles de Saint-Cyr-Coëtquidan (CREC) et
laboratoire TELEMME de l’Université d’Aix-Marseille):
Contrôle
et « stigmatisation » dans l’Islam à l’époque médiévale
– Christophe Réveillard (CNRS-Université Paris 4 Sorbonne):
Le
suspect dans l’Union européenne
– Amadou Dramé (Université de Dakar):
La
figure du « suspect » en contexte colonial : la politique de surveillance et de
contrôle des marabouts en Afrique Occidentale Française
– André Louchet (Université Paris 4- Sorbonne):
Géographie du suspect
Specialised Theme 12/Thème
spécialisé 12
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Zibo Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer :
Jean-François Sirinelli (Sciences PoParis)
With the support of the French
National Committee
Discussant :
Jens Boel (UNESCO)
– Florian Bieber (Graz University, Austria):
A “Yugoslav” generation
– Duanmu Mei (Institut d’Histoire Mondiale,
CASS, Beijing):
A
Chinese baby boom generation ?
–
Ibrahima Thioub (Université Cheikh
Anta Diop, Dakar, Senegal):
Une
génération de la decolonisation ? (sous réserve)
–
Alexis Vrignon (Université de Poitiers,
France):
Baby
boom generation and environmental concern. A connected history
– Verónica Zárate Toscano (President of the Mexican
Committee of Historical Sciences, Instituto Mora,
México) et Eduardo Flores Clair (Direccion de Estudios Historicos INAH, Mexico):
La
génération du baby-boom mexicaine à travers les historiens Aguilar Camin et
Krauze
Specialised Theme 13/Thème
spécialisé 13
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Dezhou Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer: Angélique Janssens (Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen)
With the support of the International Committee for
Historical Demography
Discussant: David L. Thomson (The University of Hong Kong)
– Hao Dong, James Lee and Cameron Campbell (Hong Kong University of Science and Technology):
Gender,
Kin Group and Mortality Clustering
– Angélique Janssens and Ben Pelzer (Radboud University Nijmegen):
Intergenerational
mortality risks in adult years during the nineteenth century in the Sundsvall and Skellefteå area in Northern Sweden
– Valérie Jarry, Marianne Caron and Alain Gagnon (University of
Montreal):
Do parental and grandparental ages at reproduction influence
the offspring survival
?
–Sören Edvinsson (CPS, Umeå University):
How history comes into heredity. Epigenetic aspects of
disease and transmission over generations
–
Michel Poulain, Anne Herm, Dany Chambre and Gianni Pes (Tallinn University, Université catholique de
Louvain, Università degli Studi di Sassari):
An attempt to link exceptional longevity, gender
and genetics in an historical perspective: Villagrande (Sardinia)
– Jan Sundin,
Sam Willner (Linköping
University):
Genetics,
environment and gender. Two local societies through 260 years
Specialised Theme 14/Thème
spécialisé 14
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
VIP Room Mu Dan, Shandong Hotel
Organizer and Discussant: Stefan Berger (Ruhr-Universität
Bochum)
With the support of the International Commission for the
History and Theory of Historiography
– Antoon de Baets (University of Groningen):
Plutarch’s Thesis: the
Contribution of Refugee Historians to Historical Writing in the 20th and 21st Centuries
– Ragnar Björk (Södertörn University, Stockholm):
Temporary
or Permanent Exile – and Additional Preconditions for Exile Scholars and
Historical Scholarship from the Second World War until Today
– Volodymyr V. Kravchenko (University of Alberta):
Ukranian
Historical Writing in Canada: from Nationalism to Multiculturalism
– Marek Tamm (Tallin University):
A Displaced History? A new
“Regime of Historicity” among the Baltic Historians in Exile (1940s to 1970s)
– Edoardo Tortarolo (University of Eastern
Piedmont, Turin):
Gaetano Salvemini in Exile
–
Xin Fan (State University of New
York, Fredonia):
The
Anger of Ping-ti Ho: The China Complex in Double Exile
Specialised Theme 15/Thème
spécialisé 15
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Auditorium, Nanjiao Hotel
Organizer: Eileen Boris (University
of California Santa Barbara)
With the support of the International Federation for
Research in Women’s History
Discussant: Dirk Hoerder (Arizona
State University and University of Salzburg)
– Claire Lowrie(University of Wollongong):
Domestic Service and Colonial
Photography in Southeast Asia, 1880s-1930s
-Victoria Haskins (University of Newcastle,
Callaghan):
Domestic outsiders: Childcare and resistance in Indigenous
domestic service in Australia and the USA in the early 20th century
– Rosie Cox (Birkbeck College, University of London):
The new
servants for times of austerity: Au pairs in contemporary Britain
– Inger Jonsson and Marie Ulväng (Uppsala University):
Domesticity, new consumer goods and the development of the
breadwinner-homemaker household in Sweden ca 1880-1930
– Nicola Foote (Florida Gulf Coast University):
American
Neo-Colonialism, the Home and Domestic Service in Latin America
– Cynthia Cooper (Columbia University):
Sexual
Danger in the Home: Domestic Work and Reproductive Rights
JointSession 1/Session jointe 1
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Conference Room on the 5th
Floor, Nanjiao Hotel
Organizers: Yvan Combeau (Université
de la Réunion–Océan Indiemy)
Lucile
Rabearimanana (Université
de Tananarive)
With the support of the Commission
internationale des historiens de l’océan Indien and of the French National
Committee
Discussant: Jocelyn Chan Low (Université de Maurice)
– Shirin Akhtar (Jahangirnagar University):
Writing the History of the Indian Ocean: Bengal
Sea-borne Trade 14-15 Century
– Serge Bouchet (Université de La Réunion):
La construction
d’une image de l’océan Indien ancien : la perception de l’océan Indien
dans les textes et représentations d’avant le XVIe siècle
– Evelyne Combeau-Mari (Centre de Recherches sur les sociétés du Sud ouest de l’océan Indien,
Université de La Réunion):
Le basket-ball, vecteur de rayonnement des Chinois dans
l’océan Indien (1930-1970)
– Wang Juxin (Shandong Party School of
CPC, Jinan):
Research
on the political relationship between Burmese Konbaung Dynasty and China’s Qing
Dynasty
– Chantal Radimilahy (Musée d’art et d’archéologie, Université d’Antananarivo):
Madagascar et les peuplements
anciens dans le sud ouest de l’océan Indien
– Jeannot
Rasoloarison (Université
d’Antananarivo):
Impératifs
socio-économiques et mobilité des travailleurs dans les îles du sud-ouest de l’océan
Indien du début du XXème siècle à nos jours
JointSession 2/Session jointe 2
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Conference Room on the 4th Floor, Southern Building, Nanjiao
Hotel
Organizers: Pauli Kettunen (University of Helsinki)
Klaus Petersen (University of Southern Denmark)
With
the support of the Finnish and the Danish National Committees
Discussant: Pauli
Kettunen (University
of Helsinki)
– Pauli Kettunen and Klaus Petersen:
The Cold war and the Welfare
State – what are the possible links ?
– Silvia Inaudi (University of Turin):
An Italian case of study between Welfare State and
international relations: the Amministrazione Aiuti Internazionali (1947-1962)
– Eloisa Betti (University of Bologna):
Gendering welfare policies in the Cold War. The
case of Bologna, a Communist city in the West
– Tapio Bergholm (University of Eastern Finland) and Matti Hannikainen (University of Tampere):
Between East and West: The
Making of the Finnish Welfare State Model 1944–1990
–
Monika Baár (University of
Groningen):
Disability Welfare as a Subject of Systemic Competition
during the Cold War
– Mette Buchardt (Aalborg University) and Maja
Plum (University of Copenhagen):
The Nordic model of education and “the Sputnik shock”.
Systemic competition during the Cold War and its aftermath in the educational
system, Denmark 1957-1961 and 2008-2012
– Dean J. Kotlowski (Salisbury University):
A
Foretaste of Cold War Liberalism? Paul V. McNutt and the Idea of Security in
the United States and the Philippines during 1930s and 1940s
Joint Session 3/Session jointe 3
Globalization, National
Patterns of Development and Strategies of Firms (XIXth-XXth Century)*
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Room
1012, Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizers: Dominique
Barjot (Université
Paris 4 Sorbonne)
Lu Yimin (Zhejiang University, Hangzhou)
With the support of the French National Committee and the
International Economic History Association
Discussant: Harm Schroeter (University of Bergen)
– Dominique
Barjot (Université Paris-Sorbonne):
Globalization,
National Patterns of Development and Strategies of Firms (XIXth-XXth Century). Summary
report on the Preconferences of Paris and Hangzhou
– Gong Yingyan (Ningbo
University):
The Bao-Shun Steamship and her captain: a Chinese way to react the
Globalization in the late 19th century
– Huang Chun (Renmin University in
China), WANG Jue (Renmin University in China):
China’s
Path to Become a Modern Nation: Industrialization, Learning Strategy and System
Choice
– Hong Sung Chan (Yonsei University), LEE Jong Hwa (Yonsei
University), KI
Mi Lim (Yonsei
University) : The Internal Origins and
Continuance of Korean Capitalism: Based on the Kims of Seoul’s Il-gi (1919)
– Yago Kazuhiko (Waseda University):
Japanese
economic growth after WWII: international aspects revisited
– Pierre Lanthier (University of Trois-Rivières, Québec, Canada):
The Indian Economy and Technological Transfers since 1949
– Youssef Cassis (European University Institute, Florence):
Europe’s
financial capitals since the early twentieth century
– Philippe Mioche (University of Provence):
Globalization and the European Steel and
Iron Industry since 1945
– Fan Dingliang (Zhejiang
University):
Family
and World: The German Family Firms in the Second Half of the 20th Century
* This session is the continuation of two conferences which were
held in Paris (18th September 2014- 19th September 2014) and Hanghzou (6th
November 2014- 8th November 2014) and
the organizers of this session will present in
their introduction the
summary report of these conferences /Cette session se place dans la suite de
deux colloques qui ont eu lieu à Paris (18
septembre 2014- 19 septembre 2014) et à Hanghzou (6 novembre 2014- 8
novembre 2014), et
les organisateurs de cette session présenteront dans leur introduction le
résumé des résultats de ces colloques
Joint Session 4/Session jointe 4
New Approaches to History of Diplomatic Practices /Nouvelles approches
de l’histoire des pratiques diplomatiques
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Room 1013, Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizers:Laurence Badel (Université de Paris 1
Panthéon-Sorbonne)
Eckart
Conze(Philipps-Universität Marburg)
Rui Kohiyama (Tokyo Woman’s Christian
University)
With the support of the Commission of History of
International Relations, the Japanese National Committee and the International
Federation for Research in Women’s History
Discussant: Eckart Conze(Philipps-Universität Marburg)
–
Glenda Sluga (University of
Sydney):
From
Germaine de Staël to Dorothea Lieven: Women, diplomacy and international
politics before and after the Congress of Vienna / De Germaine de Staël à
Dorothea Lieven : femmes, diplomatie et relations internationales avant et
après le Congrès de Vienne
– Matthias Schulz(Université de Genève):
Between
International Governance and Imperialism: Diplomatic Practices and Repertoires
of Action of the European Concert of Powers
–
Vincent Laniol (Université Paris 1
Panthéon-Sorbonne):
Culture
of war and men of peace ? French diplomats at the end of the Great War /
Culture de guerre et hommes de paix ? Les diplomates français au sortir de la
Grande Guerre (1918-1919)
–
Andrea Wiegeshoff (University of
Marburg):
The « New Look » of German diplomacy facing the challenges of
multilateralization after the Second World War / Le « New Look » de
la diplomatie allemande face aux défis du multilatéralisme après la Seconde
Guerre mondiale
–
Alexandre Moreli (Fundação
Getulio Vargas, Rio-deJaneiro):
Aiming
to rise and to lead: the reorganization of the Brazilian diplomatic corps in
the aftermath of the Second World War/A la recherche de croissance et
d’influence: la reconstruction du corps diplomatique brésilien au lendemain de
la Seconde Guerre Mondiale
–
Pauline Milani, Matthieu Gillabert(Université de Fribourg):
A
public diplomacy for the Neutrals? The Swiss, Finish and Swedish cases during
the Cold War (1948-1975) / Une
diplomatie publique pour les Neutres ? Les cas suisse, finlandais et suédois
pendant la Guerre froide (1948-1975)
–
Pierre Journoud (Institut de
Recherches stratégiques de l’École militaire, Paris):
Public and secret diplomacy during the
Vietnam War. The French connection
Round Table 1/Table ronde 1
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Room 3013, Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizer:
Tiina Kinnunen (University of Oulu)
With the
support of the Finnish National Committee
Commentators:
– Birgitte Possing (Danish National Archives)
– Benito Bisso Schmidt(Federal
University of Rio Grande do Sul)
–
Maarit Leskelä-Kärki (University of Turku)
– Catherine Horel (CNRS, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne)
Round Table 2/Table ronde 2
Closing the Blue Whole
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Room 3012, Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizer: Ingo Heidbrink (Old Dominion University, USA)
With the
support of the International Committee for Maritime History
Commentators:
– Fei Sheng (Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou)
– Lewis R. Fischer (Memorial University of
Newfoundland, Canada)
– Malcolm Tull (Murdoch University, Australia)
and James Reveley (University of
Wollongong, Australia)
– Stig Tenold (Norwegian
School of Economics) and
Jari Ojala (University
of Jyväskylä)
Wednesday 26 August afternoon/Mercredi
26 août après-midi
Specialised Theme 16/Thème spécialisé 16
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Yantai Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer:
Rita Lizzi Testa (Università
di Perugia)
With
the support of the Italian National Committee
Discussant: Hervé Inglebert(Université
de Paris Ouest Nanterre-La Défense)
–
Ando Cliff (University of
Chicago):
Empire
and aftermath
– Jean-Michel Carrié (EHESS, Paris):
The
forms of Transition between Late Antiquity and higher medieval time
– Pablo Diaz (University of Salamanca):
Crisis,
Transition, Transformation. The End of the Roman World and the Usefulness of
Useless Categories
– Noel Lenski (Yale University):
Peasant and Slave in Late Antique North Africa, c. 200-600
CE
– Jutta Dresken-Weiland (University of Göttingen):
Transformation and Transition in the Art of late
Antiquity
– Ignazio Tantillo (Università degli studi di
Cassino e del Lazio Meridionale):
Defining
Late Antiquity through Epigraphy?
– Gilles Bransbourg (Institute for the Study of the Ancient World at New York University and American Numismatic Society):
Reddite quae sunt Caesaris, Caesari. Late Antiquity and the
Dream of Fair Taxation
Specialised Theme 17/Thème spécialisé 17
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Jinan Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer: Marcello Verga (Università
di Firenze)
With
the support of the Italian National Committee
Discussant:
Stefan Berger (Ruhr-Universität
Bochum)
– Jaime Olmedo Ramos (Director Técnico of the
Diccionario Biográfico Español in the Real Academia de la Historia):
¿Qué cosa no es un diccionario biográfico? Errores y desenfoques en su
recepción
–
Mikel Urquijo and Joseba Agirreazkuenaga (University of the Basque
Country):
Why and
how national biography in the XXI Century?
– Marco Jorio (Chief director of the Swiss biographical dictionary):
From National Biography to Transnational Biography Portal
– Fulvio Conti (Università di Firenze):
Un popolo di poeti, di artisti, di eroi…”. Men and women in
the Italian Dictionary of Biography
– Marja Jalava (University of Helsinki):
Reparation of Historical
Injustices or Forced Integration? – The Role of Minorities in the National
Biography of Finland Vol. II
– C. W. (Mineke) Bosch (University Groningen):
Writing the national
biographical dictionaries: a gender perspective
Specialised Theme 18/Thème spécialisé 18
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17
h 15
Qingdao Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Sari Autio-Sarasmo (University
of Helsinki)
Philipp Sarasin (University
of Zurich)
With the support of the Finnish and the Swiss National
Committees, in partnership with the Danish National Committee
Discussant: Ilkka Tapio Seppinen (University
of Helsinki)
– Francisca de Haan (Central European University,
Budapest):
New Cold War Studies: Feminists Interacting Across the Cold
War Divide
– Ivan Kurilla (European University at St.Petersburg):
Soviet Studies in the United States, Americanistika in the
USSR: Image of the Other as a Tool of National Identity Construction
– Jovan Cavoski (Insitute of Recent History of Serbia):
The
Rise and Fall of China’s Revolutionary Third World Strategy, 1954-1966
– Silvia Berger Ziauddin (University of Zurich) and Sibylle Marti (University of Zurich):
Life after the Bomb. The Production and Circulation of
Knowledge on Long-term Nuclear War Effects and the Public Debate on Civil
Defence in the 1980s
– Simo Mikkonen (University of Jyväskylä):
Transnational East-West networks in arts during the Cold War
–
Luca Polese Remaggi (University of Salerno):
A
global war for the mind. The Commission Internationale contre le régime concentrationnaire and
the inquiry into forced labor in Mao’s China (1952-1958)
– Leena Riska-Campbell (University of Helsinki):
Bridge
Building on the Offensive. Epistemic Control of the Cold War Concepts of
Modernization
Specialised Theme 19/Thème
spécialisé 19
Researches on the History
of World Exhibitions: Contributions to a Comparative Cultural History/Recherches sur l’histoire des expositions universelles :pour une histoire
culturelle comparée
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Linyi Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Duanmu Mei (Institute of World History, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences,
Beijing)
Pascal Ory (Université
Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne)
With
the support of the Association of Chinese Historians and the Committee of History
of International Relations
Discussant: Gu Ning (Institute of World History, Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences, Beijing)
– Claude Hauser (Université de Fribourg/Suisse):
L’exposition
de Montréal 1967: matrice et empreinte d’une francophonie émergente
– Klaus Dittrich (University of Luxembourg):
World Exhibition and the Global Circulation of Expert
Knowledge,1851-1910
–
Guido Abbattista (Università di
Trieste):
Human Diversity on Display in
the European Great Exhibitions, 19th-20th Century
–
Yu Wenjie (Nanjing University):
A
Study of the nations industrial exposition in London and its origin and
significance
– Qiao Zhaohong (Academy of Social
Sciences, Shanghai):
World
Expo and the Overall Development of World
History
– Wu Zhiqiang
(Tongji University, Shanghai):
Shanghai EXPO and Urban Future
– Myriam Boussahba-Bravard (Université Paris- Diderot):
Women promoting women at the Chicago World Fair (1893):
representations, politics and national identities – How international/ national structuring and labeling mattered at Chicago
in 1893
– Yohan
Ariffin (IEPI, University of
Lausanne):
Treading the line between education and
entertainment: The evolution of the international exhibition movement,
1851-2010
Specialised Theme 20/Thème
spécialisé 20
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Rizhao Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer and
Discussant : Alain Beltran (CNRS, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne)
With the support of the French
National Committee
– Yves Bouvier (Université Paris 4-Sorbonne):
Souveraineté énergétique et
stratégies autour du nucléaire civil en Europe occidentale
– Richard R. John (Columbia University, New York):
Coal, Cables, and Radio:
U. S. Communications Policy in the Pacific Before the Second World War
– Pascal Griset (Université
de Paris 4-Sorbonne, Office européen des brevets):
Les réseaux de données brevets,
objets techniques et négociation politique : le rôle de la Trilatérale puis de l’IP5
dans la mondialisation
– Jean Manore (Bishop’s University, Québec):
First Nations and
intracontinental energy systems : a means to preserve the
nation-state ?
– Peter A. Shulman (Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland):
From Securing Markets to Market
Security: Global Oil and Domestic Land Policy in the Twentieth Century United
States”
– Emmanuel Sebag de Magalhaes, Janaina Pinto Bezerra (Université
de Rio de Janeiro):
The geopolitics of oil before
the American power
– Valentina Vardabasso (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne):
Une radio au service de la paix.
La politique de communication de la Société des Nations
Specialised Theme 21/Thème
spécialisé 21
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Liaocheng Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer and Discussant:
Mary O’Dowd (Queen’s
University Belfast)
With the support of the International Federation for
Research in Women’s History
– Marja Van Tilburg (University of Groningen):
Gender and
Adolescence: the Problematic Integration of Rousseau’s Concept into the
Education of Girls
– Mary Jo Maynes and Ann Waltner (University of Minnesota):
Young
Woman, Textile Labor and Marriage in Europe and China around 1800
–Emily
Bruce (University of Minnesota)and Fang Qin(Capital Normal University, Beijing):
‘Our
Girls have Grown Up in the Family’: Education, European and Chinese Girls in
the 19th Century
– June Purvis (University
of Portsmouth):
Growing Up
Political: the Pankhurst Daughters in Victorian Britain
– Alison Mackinnon (University of South Australia):
‘Sweet Girl Graduates’: Girls
coming of Age through Higher Education
– Isobelle Barrett Meyering (University of New South Wales):
The Girl in Australian Second-Wave
Feminism (1969-79)
– Alice Arinlade,
JEKAYINFA, (University of Ilorin, Nigeria):
History of the Girl in Nigeria
– Yan Hu (Minzu University, China):
Bio-Politics of Dai Girls: Marriage
and ‘Desirable’ Living Style
Specialised Theme 22/Thème
spécialisé 22
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Binzhou Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer:
Verónica
Zárate Toscano (President
of the Mexican Committee of Historical Sciences; Instituto Mora, México)
With the support of the Mexican National Committee
Discussant:
Esteban Buch (EHESS,
Paris)
–
Asahiko Hanzawa (Meiji Gakuin
University, Japan):
A musical portrait of Kimigayo:
politics and physicality
–
Javier Moreno Luzón (Universidad Complutense de
Madrid):
The Strange Case of a National
Anthem without Lyrics: Music and Political Identities in Spain (1898-1931)
–
Violeta Nigro-Giunta (EHESS, Paris):
Music and the Crisis of the State.
Music in Buenos Aires during the 2001 Argentine crisis
– Jim Samson (Royal Holloway, University of London):
Polyphony and the Nation
– Verónica Zárate Toscano (Instituto Mora, México):
Music
as commemoration in Mexican History
Joint Session 5/Session
jointe 5
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Zaozhuang Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Xu Lan (Capital
Normal University)
Jay Winter (Yale University)
With the support of the Australian Historical Association
and the Association of Chinese Historians
Discussant: Jay Winter(Yale University)
– Xu Guoqi (Hong Kong University):
The Great War and Asia’s great transformation
– Santanu Das (King’s College, London):
Beyond nation and the Great War: Indian and trans-national
intellectual responses to violence, 1914-1922
– Erez Manela (Harvard University):
Empires at War: The Great War as global conflict
– John Horne (Trinity College, Dublin):
Empires and occupations: the global dynamics of the
illiberal wartime state
– Bianka Pietrow-Ennker(University of Konstanz):
National liberation at the imperial
peripheries – concepts and conflicts on post-war order: The case of Poland in
transnational perspective
– María, INÉS TATO
(University of Buenos Aires):
The Great War in the confines of the world: Its impact on
Argentine society
– Emilia Salvanou (University of Peloponnese):
Beyond rational choice and national historiographies: World
War I, minorities and the un-mixing of populations
–
Peter Gatrell (University of
Manchester):
‘Refugeedom’
during the Great War and its aftermath, 1914-23
Joint Session 6/Session jointe 6
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Dongying Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer:
Katalin Szende (Central European University, Budapest)
With the support of the International Commission for the
History of Towns and the Finnish National Committee
Discussant:
Marjaana Niemi (University of Tampere)
– Anna Anisimova (Institute of World History, the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow):
Spatial Structures and their
Construction in English Monastic Towns
– Laurentiu Radvan (Facultatea de Istorie, Universitatea “Al. I.
Cuza”, Iasi):
Space
distribution in late medieval and pre-modern towns in the Romanian
Principalities
– Preston Perluss (IAE, Université Pierre Mendès France, Grenoble):
Mortmain Properties in the
Urban Environment and microscale neighbourhood social reconstitutions
– Salvatore Bottari (University of Messina):
The
Sicilian port towns in the eighteenth century: trade, social actors,
infrastructure improvements and urban development
– Li Wei (Shandong University):
Gentrification
in Canadian Inner Cities: Its Impact on Society
– Lars Nilsson (Institute of Urban History, Stockholm University):
Urban
Space in the Post-industrial Era
Joint Session 7/Session jointe 7
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Zibo Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Kimura Shigemitsu (Teikyo
University)
Katō Chikako (Yokohama National University)
With the support of the Japanese National Committee and the
International Federation for Research in Women’s History
Discussant: Kimura Shigemitsu (Teikyo
University)
– Itō Takayuki (International Research Centre for Japanese Studies):
Cataclysmic Disasters in Pre-modern East Asia
– Kojima Kyōko (Sapporo Gakuin University):
A Historical Research of Natural Disasters of the Japan
Ancient Times and the Medieval Time from the Viewpoint of Gender
–
Ueda Kiwako (Hitotsubashi
University):
A
Comparative History of the Japanese and Chinese Communities after the 1906 San
Francisco Earthquake and Fire
– Luigi Chiara (University of Messina):
La reconstruction post-séisme comme politique
d’urgence
–
Daniel Robert Curtis (Utrecht
University):
Seventeenth-century
plague in Europe: a rejoinder to the ‘epidemiological hypothesis’ and its
suggested role in the ‘Little Divergence’
–
Alessandro Cavagna (University of
Milan):
Antioch
and the Earthquake (115 AD)
Joint Session 8/Session jointe 8
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Dezhou Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer: Arja Virta (University of Turku)
With the
support of The International Society for History Didactics and The
International Standing Conference for the History of Education
Discussant: Elisabeth
Erdmann (University of
Erlangen-Nuremberg)
– Angela Bartie, Linda Fleming, Mark Freeman,
Tom Hulme, Paul Readman and Charlotte
Tupman (University of Strathclyde, University
of Glasgow, University of London, King’s College, London):
The redress of the
past: historical pageants in twentieth-century Britain
– Adele Nye (University of New England, New South Wales):
The Objects of Nostalgia: Embedded historical narratives
– Penelope Harnett (University of the West England, Bristol):
‘The air raid
shelter was great.’ Nostalgic
experiences or authentic historical learning? Analysing interactive approaches to learning
about World War Two War with
primary children
–
Joanna Wojdon (University of
Wrocław, Institute of National Remembrance):
Nostalgia of the Polish political
émigrés in America after WWII
– Patrizia
Audenino (Università degli Studi
di Milano):
Public compensation and
private perpetual loss in the memory of Nineteenth century European refugees
–
Ilya Kalinin (St Petersburg State
University):
Future-in-the-Past / Past-in-the-Future:
Nostalgia as Neutralization of History
Joint Session 9/Session jointe 9
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
VIP Room Mu Dan, Shandong Hotel
Organizers and
Discussants: Frank
Hadler (GWZO Leipzig/CIEHS)
Matthias
Middell (University of Leipzig/NOGWHISTO)
With the support of the Commission
Internationale des Etudes Historiques Slaves, the Network of Global and World
History Organizations and the National Committee of Slovak Historians
– Margaret Crosby-Arnold (Columbia University, New
York City):
From Economic Warfare to Legal Synchronization in the Long
Nineteenth Century
– Marina Formica (University of Rome):
The
Impact of Pontifical State Restoration in a Global Perspective
– Dušan KovÁč (Slovak Academy of Sciences,
Bratislava):
The
Vienna Congress of 1815 and „the Spring of Nations“ in Central Europe:
Causality, or Discontinuity?
– Glenda Sluga (University of Sydney):
Cosmopolitanism,
Nationalism, and a Christian Europe
– Janneke
Weijermars (Rijksuniversiteit
Groningen):
An Unfolding European Consciousness. The Conference of Vienna and the
Battle of Waterloo in Dutch, Luxembourgian and Belgian Literature, 1815-1915
– Deborah Besseghini
(Trieste University):
The Rio de la Plata Independentists and the Vienna Congress
Joint Session 10/Session jointe 10
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Conference Room on the 4th Floor, Southern Building, Nanjiao Hotel
Organizers: Enrique García Hernán (Institut of
History, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas – CSIC, Madrid)
Wu Yixiong (Sun
Yatsen University, Guangzhou)
With the support of the Association of Chinese Historians,
the Spanish National Committee and the Italian National Committee
Discussant: Alberto Melloni (University
of Modena)
– Paul
Oberholzer (Università Gregoriana Roma):
The
grand strategy of the Society of Jesus in the reports of Matteo Ricci about the
identity of Catay with China.
– Michela
Catto (Centro per le Scienze religiose, Fondazione Bruno Kessler,
Trento):
The
Chinese rites: An attempted dialogue and a driver of European modernity. The
case of the Society of Jesus and
Enlightenment.
– Richard Fox Young (Princeton Theological Seminary):
Altar of All Brilliant Sages:
The Daoyuan of Jinan (Shandong)and Its Missionary Interlocutors in the Early
Republican Era
–
Dominic Sachsenmaier (Jacobs University, Bremen):
Dual Sociopolitical
Constraints: The Jesuits as Agents Between Europe and China
– Liu Jiafeng (Shandong University):
Encounters between Christianity
and Islam: Chinese Muslims’ Experience in early 20th Century
– Watanabe Yuko (Meijigakuin University, Tokyo):
Japanese
mission work in China during the Sino-Japan war; Negative Heritage of Society
for Christian missions in East Asia
– Olga Volosyuk and Olga Solodkova (National
Research University Higher School of Economics):
Understanding the other:
Xavier´s Japan and Montseratte´s Mughal Empire
Joint Session 11/Session jointe 11
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Auditorium, Nanjiao Hotel
Organizers: Lex Heerma Van Voss (Huygens Institute for the History of the
Netherlands)
Magaly Rodriguez Garcia (Vrije Universiteit Brussel)
With the support of the Dutch National Committee, the
Belgian National Committee, the Network of Global and World History
Organizations, the International Institute of Social History and the International Federation for Research in
Women’s History
Discussant: Lex Heerma Van Voss (Huygens Institute for the History of the
Netherlands)
–
Thaddeus Gregory Blanchette (Universidade Federal do Rio de
Janeiro-Macaé) and Christiana Schettini:
“More
than tolerated: effectively managed”. The non-regulation of prostitution in Rio
de Janeiro, 1808-2013
– Genevieve Galán Tamés and Andrés Calderón Fernández (Universidad Iberoamericana,
Ciudad de México):
Spaces of sin, spaces of redemption: prostitution and its
architectural and urban frame in Mexico City, 17th-20th centuries
– Julia Martínez (University of Wollongong, New
South Wales):
Comparing the colonial
regulation of prostitution in Singapore, Batavia and Manila
– Gretchen Head (University of California,
Berkeley):
Women’s Imaginative Appropriation of Tunis’s Red-Light
District: from the Colonial Period to
after
the Arab Spring
– Sue Gronewold (Kean University):
Selling Sex In Shanghai, China,
1600 To Present
Joint Session 12/Session jointe 12
Sport and
Education from the Ephebe to the Teenager/Sport
et éducation de l’Ephèbe au teenager
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Conference Room
on the 5th Floor, Nanjiao Hotel
Organizer: Jean
Saint–Martin (Université de Strasbourg)
Eckhardt Fuchs (University
of Braunschweig)
With the support of the International Society for the
History of Physical Education and Sport, the International Standing Conference
for the History of Education and the French National Committee
Discussant: Eugenia Roldán Vera (CINVESTAV, México)
– Amaekeivi Gabriel (River State University Port Harcourt) and Mathilda Maduike Ifeoma:
The prospects and challenges of sports in Africa
– Evelyne
Combeau-Mari (Université
de La Réunion):
L’éducation
sportive, levier d’identité et d’intégration communautaire. Les Chinois dans
les petites îles du sud-ouest de l’océan
indien (1930-1970)
– Yohann Fortune and Jean-Marie Lemonnier (Université de Caen):
Acculturation
sportive d’une génération dans les années soixante
– Nicolas Martin-Breteau (University
of Lille-3):
Physical Education, Political Education : Sport
and African Americans’ Struggles for Dignity, Equality and Rights (1890-1940)
–
Tajudeen A. Asiru (Emmanuel Alayande College of Education, Oyo):
The
Role of Sports in the promotion of Peace and Integration among the the Diverse
Ethnic Groups in Nigeria
– Hannah Okediji (Ministry of Education, Nigeria):
The Relevance of sports to the Development of Education in
Nigeria, 1904 till date
JointSession
13/Session
jointe 13
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Room 3012, Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizers: Meng Zhongjie (Eastern Normal
University, Shanghai)
Susanne Popp (University of Augsburg)
With the support of the International Society for History
Didactics, the Association of Chinese Historians and the Korean National
Committee
Discussant: Alois Ecker (University of Vienna)
– Ge Huanli (Shandong University):
On the Modernization of Confucian Classics Education at New
Style Colleges in Late Qing China—Based on the Confucian Classics Textbooks
–
Olu Osokoya and Bandele Okunnuga (University of Ibadan):
Historical
Patterns, Customs and Traditions Restricting Women’s Participation in
University Education in African Sub-Sahara in the 21st Century
– Shen Chencheng (East China Normal University,
Shanghai):
Silk
Road: How an « old tradition » is constructed and reconstructed in
the globalizing society of China
– Olga Vladimirovna Maltseva (Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Novosibirsk):
Old
Traditions of Indigenous Peoples of Russia –The Cultural Adaption to a Changing
World. The Example of Amur Nanai
– Sun Joo Kang (Gyeongin National University of
Education, An Yang, South Korea):
Traditional Cultural Values Transmitted by Korean History
Curricula and Textbooks
Facing Cultural Challenges by Western Ideas Since 1960’s
– Adrian Shubert (York University, Toronto):
Bullfighting: a Hispanic tradition in a globalizing world
– Michael Wobring (University of Augsburg):
Transcultural reception of „old traditions“ – Examples for a
global transfer of traditions as an approach to teach the history of
globalization
Joint Session 14/Session jointe 14
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Room 1012, Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizers: Antoon De Baets (University of Groningen)
Sacha Zala (University
of Bern)
With the
support of the International
Committee for the History and Theory of Historiography, the
Korean,
the Swiss and the Dutch National Committees
Discussant: Jie-Hyun Lim (Critical Global
Studies Institute,Sogang
University, Seoul)
–
Antoon De Baets (University of Groningen):
The Subversive Use of Historical Parallels
– Sacha
Zala (University of Bern):
Fabricating a Suitable Past:
From the “raison d’état” to the “raison privé”
–
Shraddha Kumbhojkar:
“Gandhiji,
I Have No Homeland”: Untouchables and Contested History
– Zhao Bo:
Protection
of Posthumous Reputation and Privacy and History Censorship in the Digital Age
–
Cécile Gonçalves:
Salazar and the “Myth of the
Eternal Portugal”
– Johnny Roberto Rosa:
The Brazilian Amnesty Law And Its Impasses: Dealing with
Impunity, Reconciliation and Reparation
Round Table 3/Table ronde 3
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Room 1013, Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizer: Edoardo Tortarolo (Università
del Piemonte orientale)
With the support of the Italian National Committee
Commentators:
– Chi Xinyan and Wang Yongxiang (Nanjing Normal University)
– Poul Duedahl (Aalborg University, Denmark)
–
Sebastian Conrad (FU Universität
Berlin)
–
Blythe Alice Raviola (IULCE-Madrid)
Round Table 4/Table ronde 4
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Room 1018, Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizers: Laura Malosetti Costa (University of San Martin, Buenos Aires)
Natalia Majluf (University of Lima)
With
the support of the Argentinian National Committee
Commentators:
– Benno Ennker (University of Tübingen,
University of St. Gallen)
– Valerie Mainz (University of Leeds)
– Andrea Giunta (University of Texas, Austin, and Universidad de Buenos
Aires – CONICET)
– Fergus Robson (Trinity College, Dublin)
Round Table 5/Table ronde 5
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Room 3018,
Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizer: Eliana
R. De Freitas Dutra (Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais)
JorgeMyers (Universidad Nacional de Quilmes/CONICET)
With the
support of the Brazilian National Committee
Commentators:
– Regina Aída Crespo (Universidad Nacional
Autónoma de México)
– Gabriela Pellegrino Soares (Universidade de São Paulo)
– Jorge Myers (Universidad Nacional de Quilmes/CONICET)
– Patrícia Funes (Universidad de Buenos Aires)
Round Table 6/Table ronde 6
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Room 3015, Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizer:Eva Doležalová (Academy
of Sciences of the Czech Republic)
With the support of the Czech National Committee
Commentators:
– Larry
D. Harwood (Viterbo University, La
Crosse, Wisconsin)
– Norbert Fabian (University of Duisburg)
– Zhao Wenhong (Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing)
6 PM-7:30 PM/18 h-19 h30
Golden Hall,
Shandong Hotel
Cérémonie
de remise du prix d’histoire CISH/Jaeger-LeCoultre
7:45 PM-9:30 PM/19 h
45-21 h 30
Shandong Hall, Shandong Hotel
– Opening of the ceremony: Marjatta Hietala, President of the
CISH
– Speech of of Daniel Chang,
representing the firm Jaeger-LeCoultre
– Laudatio speech by Laurent Tissot (Treasurer of the CISH)
– The winner, Serge Gruzinski (EHESS, Paris), receives the
prize (a Reverso watch Jaeger-LeCoultre and a special CISH medal) fom Marjatta
Hietala and Daniel Chang,
representing the firm Jaeger-LeCoultre
– Conference delivered by Serge Gruzinski, the winner of the
prize
– Closing of the ceremony: musical performance
– Ouvertutre de la cérémonie par Marjatta
Hietala, Présidente du CISH
– Discours de Daniel Chang représentant Jaeger-LeCoultre
– Éloge du lauréat par Laurent Tissot
(trésorier du CISH)
– Remise du prix (une montre Reverso
Jaeger-LeCoultre et une médaille spéciale du CISH) par Marjatta Hietala,
présidente du CISH et Daniel Chang,
representant la firme Jaeger-LeCoultre
au lauréat : Serge Gruzinski (EHESS, Paris)
– Conférence de Serge Gruzinski, le lauréat
– Clôture de la cérémonie : concert
Seminar on Ju(莒) Culture
7:30 PM-9:30 PM/19 h 30-21 h 30
Rizhao Hall,Shandong Hotel
Thursday 27 August morning/Jeudi 27 août matin
Specialised Theme 23/Thème spécialisé 23
The Right of Intervention for Humanitarian Reasons: an History/ Droit d’ingérence pour raisons humanitaires :
une histoire
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Room 3018, Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizers: OlivierGrenouilleau (Centre Roland Mousnier, Université Paris Sorbonne)
Jenny
Raflik (Université
de Cergy-Pontoise):
With
the support of the French National Committee
Discussant: Robert Frank (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, Secrétaire
général du CISH)
– Olivier Grenouilleau(Centre Roland Mousnier, Paris-4 Sorbonne):
Human
rights and the abolition of slave trade and slavery (1780s-1880s): a moment of
crystallization
– Jenny Raflik (Université de Cergy Pontoise):
Human
rights versus people rights since 1945
– Georgios Giannakopoulos (Queen Mary College, London):
Debating humanitarian intervention in late
Victorian and Edwardian Britain
– Pierre Journoud (Institut de Recherches stratégiques de l’École militaire, Paris):
France and the
American POW-MIA issue during the Vietnam War: a humanitarian issue
– Jean Manore (Bishop’s University, Quebec):
Intervention
in First Natons societies by the Canadian State
Specialised Theme 24/Thème
spécialisé 24
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Shandong High Speed Hall,
Shandong Hotel
Organizer: Zlatica
Zudová-Lešková (Institute
of History, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Prague)
With the
support of the Australian Historical Association and the Czech National
Committee
Discussant: Lyndall Ryan (Centre
for the History of Violence, University
of Newcastle, New South Wales)
– Nigel Penn (University of Cape Town):
Massacre and Forced Migration:
The South African Frontier Zone Reconsidered
– Elena Belova (Sholokhov Moscow
State University for Humanities):
Bad experience resettlement of the southern Slavs in Russia
after the Crimean war
–
Philip G. Dwyer (University of
Newcastle, New South Wales):
Violence,
colonialism and empire in the Modern World
– Hans-Lukas Kieser (University of Zurich):
The
interior front of total war: Resettlement of populations and extermination in
the Ottoman Empire 1914-1918
– Anthony I. Asiwaju (University of Lagos):
Cross-border
‘Escape’ Migrations and Resettlements in Colonial West Africa: Focus on the
Yoruba Astrice the Nigeria – Dahomey (Benin) Frontier in the 20th century
– Michal Schvarc and Matej Hanula (Institute of History Slovak Academy of Sciences Bratislava):
Evacuation of German
Inhabitants from Slovakia 1944-45 as an Element of Nazi »Volkstumspolitik« in
Southeastern Europe
– Jan Kuklík and Jan Němeček (Charles
University, Prague ; Institute of
History, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Prague):
Migrations, Transfers of Minorities, Deportations and Expulsions in
Europe in first half of XX. Century and their Reflections and Reminiscences
after 1945
– Jan Rychlík (Charles University, Prague):
Freedom of
Movement: Restrictions on International Mobility in the Communist states
In reserve :
–
Liubov Zhvanko (National
University of Urban Economy in Kharkiv, сокр. О.М. Beketov):
Phantom pain Eastern European: refugees
of the Great War (1914 – 1918)
Specialised Theme 25/Thème
spécialisé 25
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Lu Xin VIP Room, Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Jiang Sheng (Sichuan University)
NicoleBelayche (École pratique des hautes études)
With the support of the Association of
Chinese Historians
Discussant: Nicole Belayche (EPHE)
– MiuraKunio (Sichuan
University):
Characteristic of
‘Religions’ for Chinese
– Anne-Françoise Jaccottet (University of Geneva):
Sacrifices
to Demokratia (Democracy) and Demos (People) as a way for enlightening
interactions between political structures and religious institutions (4th century BCE-2nd century CE)
– Lu Zongli (Hong Kong University of Science and Technology):
An
Inquiry of the Belief in Retribution for Good and Evil Deeds in Early China and
Early Medieval China
– Feng Yu-jie (Sichuan
University):
The
Managers of Providence: The Political Participation of Hermits in the Late
Eastern Han
– Jiang Sheng (Sichuan University):
The
Convergence of Beliefs from Mountains and Seas in Han Empire: The Witness of
the T-shape Silk Painting from Han Tomb No.1 of Mawangdui in Changsha
– Hsin-yi Lin (Columbia
University):
Reconsider Blood Pollution from Buddhist Gynecology: Healing
Knowledge and Practices of Female Reproduction in Medieval Chinese Buddhism
–
Gu Luan-zhai (Shandong
University):
On the Consciousness of Rights in Christianity
in Medieval Western Europe
Specialised Theme 26/Thème
spécialisé 26
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Jinan Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer: Juhani
Koponen (University
of Helsinki)
With the support of the Finnish
National Committee
Discussant: Robert Shenton (Queen’s University,
Kingston, Ontario)
– Juhani Koponen (University of Helsinki):
When did development begin?
–
Mamadou Fall (Université Cheikh
Anta Diop, Dakar):
Entre universalisme et domination ; les dynamiques
non- coloniales du développement
– Eileen Boris (University of California, Santa Barbara):
The
International Labor Organization and the Construction of Social Knowledge on
Rural Women in the Global South
–
Bandana Gyawali (University of
Helsinki):
Conceptual history of Bikas
1932 – 1960
– Valentina Vardabasso (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne):
Le
développement durable entre regionalisation et mondialisation
– Annette Skovsted Hansen (University of Aarhus):
Telling Successes
of Japanese Foreign Aid
Specialised Theme 27/Thème spécialisé 27
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Qingdao Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer: Bertram
M. Gordon (Mills College, Oakland, California)
Laurent Tissot (University of Neuchâtel)
With the support of the International Commission for the
History of Travel and Tourism
Discussant: Michael Herzfeld (Harvard University, Shanghai International Studies University)
– Paul-Marie Arpaia (Indiana University of
Pennsylvania):
An Italian Love-Hate Relationship with Tourism and the Wars
it Engendered
– Hamish Bremner (Auckland University of
Technology):
Using history for tourism or using tourism for history?
Examples from post-colonial Aotearoa/New Zealand
– Wojciech Iwanczak (Kielce University):
The Image of the Town in old Cartography. Travel Tourism
Symbolism
– Alexei Kraikovski (European University, St. Petersburg) and Aisulu Shukurova (Museum-Reserve “Gatchina”, St.
Petersburg):
Noble life for common public – management of heritage and
touristic services in the historic manors of Gatchina and Fall in comparative
perspective
– Amaury Lorin (Yangon University, Myanmar):
Maymyo (Pyin Oo Lwin), British
Hill Station in Burma (1896): The Rise of a “Colonial Tourism”?
– Cynthia J. Miller (Emerson College, Los Angeles) and
Thomas M. Shaker, Dean College,
Massachusetts):
Vernacular Museums: Tourism and the Everyday
Joint Session 15/Session jointe 15
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Linyi Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer: Simone Lässig (Georg
Eckert Institute for international Textbook Research and German
Historical Institute, Washington, DC; Max Weber
Foundation)
With the support of the German National Committee, the
Italian National Committee, the International Standing Conference for the
History of Education and the International Commission for the History and
Theory of Historiography
Discussant: Luigi Cajani(University of Sapienza, Rome)
– Israel Bartal
(The Hebrew University of Jerusalem):
« A World of Changes »: The 2000
History Curriculum Scandal
–
Denise Bentrovato (Georg Eckert
Institute for International Textbook Research):
Memory
Wars and History Education in Central Africa: The Cases of Rwanda and Burundi
– Snježana Koren (University of Zagreb):
“Useful past?” Debates on history teaching in Croatia after 1990: World War II and
the 1990s war
–
Falk Pingel (Georg
Eckert Institute for International Textbook Research):
War Museums – Museums at Memory
Wars
–
Victor Shnirelman (Institute of
Ethnology and Anthropology, Moscow):
“Mutual
past”: a competition between Russian and Tatar textbooks in history
– Johannes Michiel Wassermann (University of KwaZulu-Natal):
“Well we know where we’re we goin’. But we don’t know where
we’ve been.”- History
Education for a post-apartheid rainbow nation
– Biao Yang (East China Normal University,
Shanghai):
War memories in China and Japan
Joint Session 16/Session jointe 16
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Rizhao Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Géza Pálffy (Institute of History of the
Research Centre for Humanities of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest) and John Rogister (Institut de France)
With the support
of the Hungarian National Committee and the International
Commission for the History of Representative and Parliamentary
Institutions
Discussant: Pascal Cauchy (Sciences Po, Paris)
– Edward Rung (University of Kazan):
The
Political Rituals, Symbolism and Celebrations in the ancient east: the case of
the Achaemenid Persian Empire
– Vincent Laniol (Université
Paris Ouest Nanterre):
Rituels
diplomatiques, protocole et symboles a l’age de la guerre totale: l’exemple de
la Conference de Paix de 1919
– Javier
Moreno Luzón (Universidad Complutense de Madrid):
Ceremonial Monarchy and Political Rituals: the Spanish case
in a comparative perspective, 1902–1931
– Paola Salvatori (University
of Pisa):
Myths,
rituals and political liturgies of the Fascist regime
– Anna Rita Gori (Istituto da Ciencias Sociais – Universidade de Lisboa
(ICS-UL):
From Past to Future: Political Rituals, myths
and symbols of Estado Novo
in the 1940 Exhibition
Joint Session 17/Session jointe 17
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Liaocheng Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers and Discussants: Roberto Martínez González (UNAM,
Mexico)
Katarzyna Mikulska (University of Warsaw)
With the
support of the Mexican and the Polish National Committees
– Robert Wiśniewski (University of Warsaw):
Empire and divination in Late Antique Rome
– Roberto Martínez González (UNAM, Mexico) and Katarzyna Mikulska (University of Warsaw):
Priesthood and sorcery in the ancient Mexico / Sacerdocio
y brujería en el México antiguo
– Agnieszka Brylak (University of Warsaw):
Witchcraft and theater: Nahua
performance in Prehispanic and Early Colonial period
– Andrés Gabriel Freijomil (Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento, École des Hautes Études en Sciences
Sociales-EHSS, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y
Técnicas-CONICET):
Brujería, posesión y giro epistemológico en el siglo
XVII. El pasaje de la teología a la
“razón de Estado” en La Possession de Loudun de Michel de Certeau
– Eduardo Flores Clair (Direccion de Estudios Historicos INAH, Mexico):
Hechizos de amor en la sociedad novohispana,
siglo XVIII
–
Araceli Rojas Martinez Gracida (Leiden University):
Reading
Maize in an Ayöök community: an approach to the study of divination in
Mesoamerica
–M.S. Jayeola-Omoyeni (Adeyemi College of Education,
Ondo), Jayeola Oladele Omoyeni (Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife,
Osun-State) and Eunice M. Oyetade (Michael
Otedola College of Primary Education, Noforija, Epe, Lagos-State):
Witchcraft in the 20th And 21st Centuries in Nigeria: A Comparative Analysis
Joint Session 18/Session jointe 18
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Binzhou Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Ellen Schrumpf (Telemark University College)
Ning De Coninck-Smith (Aarhus University)
Bengt Sandin (Linköping University)
With the support of the Norwegian, the Danish and the
Swedish National Committees
Discussants: Ellen Schrumpf (Telemark
University College, Norway)
Ning De Coninck-Smith (Aarhus
University Denmark)
– Abdullah
Al Masum (University of Chittagong):
Child
Education in Bangladesh: Problems and Progress (1971-2000)
– Grace
Oluremi Akanbi (Emmanuel Alayande
College of Education, Oyo) and
Alice Arinlade Jekayinfa (University
of Ilorin):
From
Functionalism to Reductionism, Communalism to Individualism: Changing Cultural
and Social Values of Children in Nigeria from Pre-Colonial period to 1999
–
Denyse Baillargeon (University
of Montreal):
Save
the Child to save the Nation: the Foundraising drives of the Sainte-Justine
Hospital for Children of Montreal, 1920s – 1960s
– Satu Helena Lidman (University of Turku):
Can
you believe a child? Minors as victims and witnesses of violent crime in early
modern Europe
– Edin Omercic (University of Sarajevo):
Childhood
in wartime: Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia (1991-1995)
–
Ruobing Han (Leiden University):
The
Commodification of Childhood. The anime and manga character and the rise of the
child consumer in the post-war Japan
Round Table 7/Table ronde 7
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Zaozhuang Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer: Marco De Nicolò (University of Cassino)
With the
support of the Italian and the Ukrainian National Committees
Commentators:
– Andreas Etges (Amerika-Institute,Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität,
Munich)
– Marcello Verga (Università di Firenze)
–Volodymir Kovalenko (National Shevchenko Pedagogical University, Chernihiv)
Round Table 8/Table ronde 8
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Dongying Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Michael North (Ernst-Moritz-Arndt-Universität Greifswald)
Sun Lixin (Beijing
Normal University)
With the support of the German National Committee and the
Association of Chinese Historians
Commentators:
– Xiu Bin (Ocean University of China)
– David A. Chappel (University of Hawaii at Manoa)
– Renate Pieper (University of Graz)
– JiaJun (Beijing Normal
University) and Hu Xiaozhong(Shandong University)
Round
Table 9/Table ronde 9
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Zibo Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Arnita Jones (International Federation for Public History)
Alix
Green (University of Central Lancashire)
With the support of the International Federation for Public
History
Commentators:
– Anna Adamek (Canada Science and Technology
Museum)
– Philip L. Cantelon (History Associates,
Incorporated, USA)
– Bonny Ibhawoh (McMaster University, Hamilton,
Ontario)
– Serge Noiret (European University Institute,
Florence)
Round Table 10/Table ronde 10
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Dezhou Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Pim Den Boer(University
of Amsterdam)
Tamara
van Kessel (University of Amsterdam)
With the
support of the Dutch National Committee
Commentators (1 in
reserve):
– Edhem Eldem (Boğaziçi University, Istanbul)
– Astrid Swenson (Brunel University, London)
– Tanja Vahtikari (Tampere University)
– Han Chaojian (Shandong University)
– Mirjam Hoijtink (Amsterdam University)
Round Table 11/Table ronde 11
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
VIP Room Mu Dan, Shandong Hotel
Organizer: R. G. Tiedemann (Shandong University)
With the support of the
Association of Chinese Historians
Commentators:
– Thoralf Klein (Loughborough University)
– David Buck (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee)
– Roger Thompson (Western Washington University, Bellingham)
– Tao FeiYa(Shanghai
University)
– Yan Yan (Shandong University)
Round Table 12/Table ronde 12
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Yantai Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers : Luis Garcia Moreno (Real
Academia de la Historia)
Li Jinxiu (Institute of History, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences)
With the support of the Spanish National Committee and the
Association of Chinese Historians
Commentators (4 in reserve):
– Han-Je Park (Seoul National University)
– Melek Özyetgin (Yildiz
University)
– Peter Zieme (Berlin Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities)
– Rolando Minuti (University of Firenze)
– Borja Antela-Bernárdez (Autonomous University of
Barcelona)
– F. Javier Gómez Espelosín (University of Alcalá)
– Qiang Li (University of Ioannine)
– Stephanos Kordose (University of Ioannine)
Round Table 13/Table ronde 13
Les grandes archives et
les grandes bibliothèques, sources de l’histoire de l’humanité/ The Great Archives and Libraries as
Sources for the History of Humanity
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Conference Room on the 3rd Floor, Southern Building, Nanjiao Hotel
Organizer: Johannes Helmrath (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)
With the support of the Pontifical Committee of Historical
Sciences
Commentators:
– Timothy Janz (Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana)
– Gaetano Zito(Presidente Associazione Archivistica Ecclesiastica)
– Emmanuel Rousseau(Archives Nationales de France – Direction des Fonds / Conservatore
degli Archivi dell’Ordine di Malta)
Round Table 14/Table ronde 14
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Conference Room on the 5th
Floor, Nanjiao Hotel
Organizer: Ewa Domanska (Adam
Mickiewicz University, Poznan, and Stanford University)
With the support of the International Commission for the
History and Theory of Historiography
Commentators (one
in reserve):
– Nandipha Mntambo (artist,
Johannesburg,)
– Þóra
Pétursdóttir (The Arctic
University of Norway, Tromsø)
– Claudia Mandel Katz (University of Costa Rica)
– Yang Jiashen (Shandong University, Jinan)
– Andrea Giunta (University of
Texas, Austin, and Universidad de Buenos Aires – CONICET)
Round
Table 15/Table ronde 15
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Conference Room on the 4th Floor, Southern Building, Nanjiao Hotel
Organizers: Yan
Chen (Fudan University)
Karen
Offen (Clayman Institute for
Gender Research,Stanford
University)
With the support of the International Federation for
Research in Women’s History
(which will sponsor a second
session on this theme on Thursday afternoon)
Commentators:
– June Purvis (University
of Portsmouth)
– Natalia Pushkareva (Academy
of Sciences, Moscow)
– Françoise Thébaud
(University of Avignon)
– Rui Kohiyama (Tokyo Woman’s Christian University)
Round Table 16/Table ronde 16
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Room 1012, Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizer: Iijima Wataru (Aoyamagakuin University, Tokyo)
With the
support of the Japanese National Committee
Commentators:
– Wang Yong (Peking Union Medical College, Beijing)
– Yeo Insok (Yonsei University College of
Medicine, Seoul)
– Liu Shiyung (Academia
Sinica, Taipei)
– Christian Oberlaender (University
of Halle)
Round Table 17/Table ronde 17
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Room 1013, Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizer:
Matthias Middell (GESI Leipzig)
Katja
Naumann (GWZO Leipzig)
With the
support of the Network of Global and World History Organizations
Commentators:
–
Patrick Manning (University of
Pittsburgh)
– Edoardo Tortarolo (University of Eastern Piedmont)
– Poul Duedahl (Aalborg University)
– Hilda Sabato (University of Buenos Aires) and Mikhail Lipkin (Academy of Sciences, Moscow)
Round Table 18/Table ronde 18
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Room 1018, Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizer: Ioan-Aurel Pop (Babes-Bolyai
University, Cluj-Napoca)
With the
support of the Romanian National Committee
Commentators:
– Christian Gastgeber(Austrian Academy of Sciences,
Vienna)
– Martyn Rady (University College London)
– Natalia Samoylenko (Yuri
Kondratyuk National Technical University, Poltava)
– Michal Targowski (University of Torun)
Round Table 19/Table ronde 19
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Room 3012, Club
of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizers: Lorina Repina (Academy of Sciences, Moscow)
Hugues Tertrais (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne)
With the
support of the Russian National Committee and the Committee of History of
International Relations
Commentators:
– Pierre Boilley (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne)
–
Zinaida Chekantseva (Academy of Sciences, Moscow)
– Olga
Leontyeva (Samara State University)
– Pierre Singaravélou (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne)
The International Affiliated Organizations’ and
Internal Commissions’ meetings
(Conferences and General Assemblies)
Les réunions des organisations internationales affiliées et des
commissions internes (colloques et assemblées générales)
Thursday 27 August afternoon/Jeudi 27 août après-midi
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Shandong High Speed Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Yves Krumenacker (Université de Lyon)
Hugh McLeod (University of Birmingham)
Raymond Mentzer (University of Iowa)
Anton M. Pazos (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas –
CSIC, Santiago de Compostela)
Robert N. Swanson (University of Birmingham)
Chair : Hugh McLeod (University of Birmingham, Vice-President of CIHEC)
– R.N.Swanson (University of Birmingham, Member
of the Board of CIHEC):
Indigenisation and the longue durée: The English Medieval Experience
– Christine Dulnuan (National Historical Commission
of the Philippines):
The Filipinization of the Methodist Mission in the
Philippines, 1899-1948
– Kjell Lejon (Linköping University):
The Role of the Church in Making a Neighbouring Enemy a
Loyal Citizen. How Danes were turned into Swedes after the Peace Treaty in
1658: An Example of “Pseudo-Indigenisation” of Fellow Lutherans
– Gloria Tseng (Hope College, Michigan):
The Indigenization of Christianity in Twentieth-Century
China
– Willie Samuel Zeze (Theological Education by Extension,
Malawi):
Confrontation, Syncretism or
Christianization? The Attitude of the CCAP-Nkhoma Synod toward Pre-Christian
Religious Beliefs and Practices in Malawi
– Michael Gladwin (Charles Sturt University,
Canberra):
The “Aussification” of Christianity
IAO 2 International Commission for the History of
Representative and Parliamentary Institutions/Commission Internationale pour l’Histoire des Assemblées d’Etats (ICHRPI)
LXVIIth Conference
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Lu Xin VIP Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer: Maria Sofia Corciulo (President of ICHRPI, University
« La Sapienza », Rome)
Chair: Maria Sofia Corciulo
– Flavio Silvestrini (University « La Sapienza », Rome):
Towards
a Status Siciliae. Parliament and Sovereign from the Liber Augustalis to the Constitutiones regales (1231-1296)
– Francesco Bonini (University LUMSA – Rome):
How
long should last Legislatures. Choices and Models at the Origin of Modern
Constitutional Models (1716-1814)
– Mario Di Napoli (Italian Chamber of
Deputies):
The
Parliamentary Language between Tradition and Innovation
–
SHEN-Han (University of Nanjing):
Influences
of Western Parliamentary and Constitutional ideas from 19th to early 20th
centuries in China
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Jinan Hall, Shandong Hotel
Chair: Alan Forrest (President of the ICHFR, University of York)
– Francesco Benigno (Università degli studi di
Teramo):
Through the Broken Past: Historical Repetition in Western
Revolutionary Experience
– Simon Burrows (University of West Sydney):
Forgotten Bestsellers of Pre-revolutionary France
– Antonio Lerra (Università degli studi della
Basilicata, Potenza):
Revolutionary Constitutions in France and Italy
– Fergus Robson (Trinity College, Dublin):
The Soldiers of the Revolution as Travellers, Tourists and
Transmitters of Tropes: the campaigns of Italy and Egypt as Sites of cultural
encounters
Chair: Pierre Serna (Vice-President of the ICHFR, University
of Paris-1 Panthéon-Sorbonne)
– Tim Tackett (University of California,
Irvine):
The Role of Emotions in the French Revolution
– Amy Milka (University of Adelaide):
Federative Feeling: Emotion, Festival and the Language of
Unity in the Early 1790s
– Peter McPhee (University of Melbourne):
Old Wine in New Bottles? Understanding the Terror of the
Year II
(continuation
of the Specialised Theme
24/suite du Thème Spécialisé
24)
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Linyi Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer:Bertram M. Gordon (Mills
College, Oakland, California)
Discussant:
Laurent Tissot (University of Neuchâtel)
– Tammy S. Gordon (University of North Carolina Wilmington):
“Wandering Among
the Crumbling Wonders”: American Tourists, Photography, and the Usable Past in the Late Nineteenth Century
– Brian J Griffith (University of California, Santa Barbara):
Bringing Bacchus to
the People: Viticulture, Autarky, and Domestic Tourism in Fascist Italy
– Richa Malhotra (University of Delhi):
Mobilizing History: Tourism in Bhopal 1947-2013
– Marxiano MELOTTI (“Niccolò Cusano” University of Human
Sciences, Rome and Bicocca University, Maldives):
History
and Tourism. The Emergence of a New Paradigm
– Stefanie Ohnesorg (University of Tennessee):
From Wild Imaginations to Unleashed (Female) Desires: Tracing Western
Projections of the ‘Bedouin’ from 19th Century Travel-Writing into Modern Tourist Practices
– Sune Bechmann Pedersen (Lund University):
Tourist Guidebooks “Examined
and Approved”:
Communist Censorship and the Uses of History in West European Cold War Guidebooks to Eastern Europe
– Philip Whalen(Coastal Carolina University):
Gastronomic Tourism and Heritage in Modern Burgundy
IAO 7 International Society of History Didactics
(ISHD)
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Rizhao Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer: Susanne Popp (University of Augsburg)
Chair: Joanna Wojdon (University of Wrocław and Institute of National
Remembrance)
Oldimar Cardoso (Anima
Media Rua Sucuriú, São Paulo)
– Joanna Wojdon (University of Wrocław and Institute of National Remembrance):
Introduction. What is new in
‘new media’ in history teaching?
– Oldimar Cardoso (Anima Media Rua Sucuriú, São Paulo):
The
project “This is history” as an example of scientific accountability
– Terry Haydn (University of East Anglia):
The
impact of the internet, social media and Web 2.0 applications on history
education in schools
– Jutta Schumann (University of Augsburg):
“Bringing
history to life?” Digital multimedia solutions and the presentation of history
in museums
– Przemysław
Wiszewski (University of Wroclaw):
Digital
or cultural challenge? E-textbook of history written by old for young. Polish
case
– Alois Ecker (University of Vienna):
History
teaching with the Council of Europe-e-book. « Shared histories for a
Europe without dividing lines »
– Mare Oja (University of Tartu):
IT
in history teaching in Estonia: challenges for the teachers
IAO 8 International Commission for Historical Demography/
Commission Internationale de
Démographie Historique
1:45 PM-6:15 PM/13 h 45 -18
h15
Plenary Session, Session 1(2 PM-4
PM) and Session 4(4:15 PM-6:15 PM) at Liaocheng Hall,
Session 2(2 PM-4 PM), Session
5(4:15 PM-6:15 PM) at Binzhou Hall,
Session 3(2 PM-4 PM), Business
Meeting at Yantai Hall; Shandong Hotel
Organizer: The Board of the ICHD/CIDH
Plenary Session
Welcome
Address: Kees Mandemakers(President of ICHD)
Organizers: Enriqueta Camps (Universitat Pompeu Fabra)
Claudia Contente (Universitat Pompeu Fabra)
Chair: Claudia Contente (Universitat Pompeu Fabra)
Discussant: Peter Teibenbacher (Karl-Franzens-Universität)
– Nynke Van Den Boomen, Maaike Messelink and Angélique Janssens (Radboud University
of Nijmegen):
Suffer the little girls. Excess female mortality in
the Netherlands between birth and age 20, 1850-1930
– Helena Haage, Lotta Vikström and
Erling Häggström Lundevaller (Umeå University):
Gendered death
differentials reflect the labeling impact of disabilities on people’s life
expectancies: A study of past population in Sweden
– Adébiyi Germain Boco (University of
Lethbridge, Canada):
Patterns of Sex
Differentials in Under-five Mortality in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Cross National
Meta-Analysis of 30 Demographic and Health Surveys
– Zhongwei Zhao et
al. (Australian National University):
Historical changes
in sex differentials of mortality in East Asia
– Sylvia Schraut (Universität
der Bundeswehr, München):
Gender
and Mortality: Widowhood as Mortality Hazard (19th / 20th Centuries)
Organizers:
Antoinette Fauve-Chamoux (EHESS, Paris)
Ioan Bolovan (Romanian Academy, Center of Transylvanian
Studies, Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca)
Chair: Ioan Bolovan (Romanian Academy, Center of Transylvanian Studies, University of
Babes-Bolyai, Cluj-Napoca)
Discussant: Antoinette Fauve-Chamoux (EHESS, Paris)
– Kawaguchi Hiroshi (Tezukayama University):
Death before life:
Impact of the legal obligation to report miscarriage and stillbirth on Buddhist
funeral service after 1880 in Japan
– Yasui Manami (Tenri University):
From the Temple to
the Internet: Changing Practices of Abortion and Memorial Services for Aborted
Fetuses in Japan
– Wang Ruijing (Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology):
Cosmological classification: Tsawrpaeq infanticide in Akha
society of China
– Nancy Stiegler (University of
the Western Cape, South Africa):
Abortion
in Africa: from the twenty to the twenty-first century, any changes?
Organizer: Murayama Satoshi (Kagawa University)
Chair: Mikolaj Szoltysek (Max Planck
Institute for Social Anthropology in Halle)
Discussant: Isabelle Seguy (INED-CNRS)
– Tsunetoshi Mizoguchi (Nagoya University):
Disasters guessed
from Buddhist temple death registers in Japan
– Watanabe Kazuyuki (Ristumeikan University):
Who evacuate and
why remain here? Decisions about nuclear accident among some families of
Fukushima Prefecture, Japan
– Murayama Satoshi (Kagawa University), Higashi Noboru (Kyoto Prefectural University) and
Yamamoto Taro (Nagasaki University):
Geographic
expansions and demographic changes by smallpox disasters in 18th and 19th
century Amakusa islands, Kyushu, Japan
– Mingfang Xia(Remin University, China):
The Disintegration
and Revival of Families: The Great TangShan Earthquake in a Historical
Perspective
– Mi Hong (Zhejiang
University, China), Yang Mingxu (Zhejiang
University, China):
A study of population change led by China’s great
famine (1958-1961)
Organizer: Mikolaj Szoltysek (Max Planck
Institute for Social Anthropology in Halle)
Chair: Kees Mandemakers (International
Institute of Social History, Amsterdam)
Discussant: Mary Louise Nagata (History Department, Francis Marion University)
– Chuan-Kang Shih (University of
Florida):
A Comparative Study of Domestic Organizations of
the Moso and Han in Yongning, China
– Zhu Mei and Son Byung-giu (Sungkyunkwan
University, Korea):
The character of
Korean family in 17-19th century by household headship
– Mikolaj Szoltysek (Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology in Halle) and Siegfried Gruber (Max Planck
Institute for Demographic Research):
Are all Joint
Family Societies the Same? Measuring patriarchy in eastern European complex
family systems
– Filipa Ribeiro da Silva (University
of Macau, China):
Extended
family patterns in Urban Mozambique, c. 1800: Determining household composition
and complex residency
Organizers: Antoinette Fauve-Chamoux (EHESS, Paris)
Ioan Bolovan (Romanian Academy, Center of Transylvanian
Studies, Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca)
Chair: Antoinette Fauve-Chamoux (EHESS, Paris)
Discussant: DaliaLeinarte (Vilnius University)
– Marius Eppel (Babes-Bolyai
University, Cluj-Napoca):
State
intervention on the control of midwifes (19th-20th centuries)
– J. David Hacker (University of
Minnesota, Minneapolis):
The campaign
against induced abortion in the nineteenth-century United States and its impact
on fertility
– Luminița Dumănescu,
Traian Rotariu and Ioan Bolovan (Centre for
Population Studies, Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca):
New
data and interpretations on abortion in communist Romania
– Isabelle Seguy (INED-CNRS) and Isabelle Rodet-Belarbi (INRAP-CNRS):
Babies in the well:Witnesses of abortions
and infanticides in Gallo-roman and Medieval France
Business Meeting:
Electoral Commission
1 PM-4 PM,5PM/13 h-16 h, 17h
Keynote Speech(1 PM-2 PM),
Session 1(2:30 PM-4 PM), General Assembly and Reception(5 PM) at VIP Room Mu Dan, Shandong Hotel
– Ilaria Porciani (University of
Bologna)
What
can Museums do for Public History? What can Public History do for Museums?
Chair: Andreas
Etges (Amerika-Institute,Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich)
– Constance B. Schulz (University of South Carolina):
Comparative
Public History in the United States and the United Kingdom
–David Dean (Carleton University, Ottawa), George H. O. Abungu (Okello Abungu Heritage Associates, Nairobi) and Indira Chowdhury (Srishti School of Art, Design
and Technology,Centre for Public History, Bangalore):
Teaching International. Introduction to Public History
IAO 9 Commission
Internationale des Etudes Historiques Slaves (CIEHS)
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Dongying
Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizers:
Ulf Brunnbauer (University of Regensburg)
Krzysztof Makowski (Adam Mickiewicz University Poznań)
Frank Hadler (GWZO Leipzig)
Opening by Dušan Kováč (President of the
CIEHS, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava)
Introduction by Frank Hadler (General Secretary of the CIEHS, GWZO Leipzig):
Looking on the transnational side of Slavic history
thru the manifold “Portals of Globalisation”
Chair: Ulf Brunnbauer (University of
Regensburg)
Comment: Konstantin V. Nikiforov (Russian
Academy of Sciences, Moscow)
– Zdenko Zlatar (University of Sydney):
Moscow as the Center for Information on and
Interaction with the Slavic World in Late Imperial Russia, 1857-1917
– Frank Grüner (University of Heidelberg):
A City on the Crossroads: Harbin and Russia’s Entanglements with Asia and
Europe in Times of Globalization
- Aldo Ferrari (University of Venice), Giulia Lami (University of Milano):
Odessa – The Russian Portal to the Black Sea in the pre-revolutionary period
General Assembly
of CIEHS/Assemblée
générale du CIEHS
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h-17 h 15
Zibo Hall, Shandong Hotel
Chair: Hugues Tertrais (Université
Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne)
Discussant: Flávio S. Saraiva (University
of Brasília)
– Tullo Vigevani (São
Paulo State University):
The emergence of a new South: theory and history
– Miguel Vecino (Spanish
Diplomatic Services):
The
Congresses System and the new international scenario
– Kumiko Haba (Aoyama Gakuin University, Tokyo):
Global Power Shift,
Territorial Dispute, and Reconciliation comparing European Case -The Role of
the United States – early 20th Century
– Laurence Badel (Université Paris 1
Panthéon-Sorbonne):
European Union’s Business Round Tables: building a new
paradigm of the international system ?
– Vasile Puscas (University
of Cluj-Napoca):
Strategic
Region and the Reconstructing of International System
Chair: Duanmu Mei (Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences)
Discussant: Dumitru Preda (Romanian
Diplomatic Services)
–
María Dolores Elizalde (Consejo
Superior de Investigaciones Científicas – CSIC, Madrid):
Empire and International
Relations
– Alfredo Canavero (University of Milan):
An
International Actor without Territory: the Holy See from 1870 to 1929
– Elisabeth Du Réau (Université de la Sorbonne
Nouvelle Paris 3):
L’Union européenne, nouvel acteur des relations internationales, une
question controversée
–
Pierre Journoud (Centre d’études
d’histoire de la Défense):
The United Nations and regional security in the
Indochina Peninsula since the Vietrnam War
2 PM-7 PM/14 h-19 h
Welcome and Opening Remarks(2
PM-2:30 PM), Round Table(2:30 PM-4:30 PM) at Auditorium;Nanjiao Hotel
Main Theme Panel 1(2:30 PM-3:30
PM), Sub-Theme A Panel 1 (3:30 PM-5 PM) at Room 3012,
Main Theme Panel 2(2:30 PM-4:30
PM) at Room 3013,
Main Theme Panel 3(2:30 PM-4 PM)
and 4(4 PM-5 PM) at Room 3015,
Main Theme Panel 5(2:30 PM-4 PM)
at Room 3018;Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Reception(5 PM-7 PM) at Room Ju
Xian, Blue Hall, Nanjiao Hotel
Organizer: Uma Chakravarti(University of Delhi [Retired])
Clare Midgley (Sheffield Hallam University)
Clare Midgley (President) and Uma Chakravarti (Vice-President)
Organizers: Karen Offen (Clayman Institute for Gender Research, Stanford University, USA and
CISH Bureau)
Yan Chen (Fudan University, China)
– Joanna De Groot(University of York)
– Catherine Carstairs with Nancy Janovicek (University of Guelph;
University of Calgary)
– Maria Bucur-Deckard (Indiana University)
– Marianna Muravyeva ( Oxford Brookes University)
Chair and Discussant: Ian Tyrrell (University of
New South Wales)
– Ellen DuBois and Vinay
Lal (UCLA):
Indian Nationalist Feminism 1935-1945 and the Reversal of
the International gaze: The Case of Kamaladevi Chattopadhyaya
– Glenda Sluga (University of Sydney):
From the league to the UN: Transnational Feminism and the
dilemmas of Modernity
Chair: Rumi Yasutake
– Sarah Paddle (Deakin University, Victoria):
Eleanor Hinder and the rights of the ‘Chinese woman’ at
work: against an emerging political voice of ‘the women of China’
– Sophie Loy-Wilson (Deakin University, Victoria):
The ‘Save China’ campaign: Eleanor Hinder’s response to
Japanese Imperialism in China
– Fiona Paisley (Griffith University,
Queensland):
Debating the Machine Age: Eleanor Hinder at Institute of
Pacific Relations in Kyoto, Japan, 1929
Chair: Uma Chakravarti
– Misako Kunihara (Tokyo Women’s Christian
University):
Woman in East Asian International relations in the 15th and 16th centuries
– Ayse Ebru Akcasu (SOAS, University of London):
Transcending Borders, Negotiating Identities: The experience
of the emigré woman in Hamidian Istanbul., 1876-1909
– Alexander Petrov and Dawn Lea Black (Russian Academy of Sciences;
University of Alaska):
Natalia Shelikova: An early
modern woman, de facto governor of Russian Alaska 1795-1797
– Carolyn Eichner (University of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee):
Amending Tales and Abating Inequities: French
feminist reworkings of traditional Kanak legends in late 19th century
Chair: Kathryn Kish Sklar(State University of New York,
Binghamton)
– Francisca de Haan (Central European University, Budapest):
The WIDF and Soviet women as global models of modern
liberated womanhood, 1940s through 1960s
– Katharine McGregor (Melbourne University):
Rethinking the History of Indonesian Women: Gerwani and the
articulation of alternative socialist modernities from the 1940s through 1960s
– Wang Zheng (University of Michigan):
The All China Women’s Federation in 1964: socialist state
feminists’ dilemmas in the context of the Sino-Soviet Break-up
Chair: Glenda Sluga (University of Sydney)
Discussant: Jocelyn Olcott (Duke University)
– Kathryn Kish Sklar (State University of New York, Binghamton):
“Women’s human rights”: A history of the concept in American
Feminism1830-1995
– Temma Kaplan (Rutgers University):
Water rights and women’s social movements, globally
considered 1970-2015
Chair: Nupur Chaudhuri
– Clare Midgley (Sheffield Hallam University):
Liberal religion, cosmopolitanism and the making of modern
feminisms
– Jane Haggis (Flinders University, Adelaide):
Women’s web of cosmopolitan amity: Interfaith, cross
cultural, and transnational friendship networks on the cusp of empire: three
case studies
– Margaret Allen (University of Adelaide):
The meeting of so many nationalities with such earnestness
of purpose
Reading, Writing
and the Book: New Histories /
La Lecture, l’Écriture et le
livre: nouvelles perspectives
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h- 17 h 15
Conference Room on the 4th Floor, Southern Building, Nanjiao Hotel
Organizer: Sydney Shep (Victoria University
Wellington)
– Monica Romano (Sapienza University, Rome):
Linguistic and cultural issues in
translating the Bible into Chinese: from Western to Chinese translators and
from formal to functional translations
– Lisa Kuitert (University of Amsterdam):
Chinese printers in the Dutch East Indies
– Liangyu Fu (University of Michigan):
Remaking “Usefulness” for New Audience: The Translation,
Production, and Dissemination of “Useful Knowledge” in China during the
Nineteenth Century
– David Carter (University of Queensland):
Australian
Books in the American Literary Marketplace: The Limits of Transnationalism
– Caroline Campbell (Massey University,
Wellington):
The screened book: From conceptual to digital
2 PM-6:30 PM/ 14 h- 18 h 30
Session 1(2 PM-5 PM), General
Assembly(5 PM-6:30 PM) at Conference Room on the 5th Floor, Nanjiao
Hotel
Organizer: Joan Beaumont (The Australian National University, Canberra)
–
Tanya Penter (Heidelberg
University):
Visual
artists, World War II victims and victimization processes in Belarus
– Bozo Repe (University of Ljubljana):
Impact of the Artistic Production about World War II on Yugoslav Society
and on the Disintegration of the State
– Chantal Kesteloot (Cegesoma, Brussels):
War in fiction and its impact on European collective
memories in the 20th century
– Dieter Pohl (Universität Klagenfurt, Institut für
Geschichte):
World War II in
East European Film 1955-1985
– Martijn Eickhoff
(Radboud University Nijmegen):
The legacies of the ‘Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere’
in archaeology: the
Japanese Borobudur-excavation (Java; Autumn 1943) as a case study
General Assembly : the future of the
Committee
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h- 17 h 15
Conference Room on the 3rd Floor, Southern Building, Nanjiao
Hotel
Organizer:Marcel Van Der Linden (International Institute of Social History,
Amsterdam, and University of Amsterdam)
Chair: Marcel Van Der Linden (International Institute of Social History,
Amsterdam, and University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
– Amarjit Kaur (University of New England,
Armidale):
The ‘globalization’ of social history
– Janaki Nair (Jawaharlal Nehru University,
Delhi):
South Asia
– Ming Zhu (East China Normal University,
Shanghai):
China
– Béla Tomka (University of Szeged):
Europe
IAO 15 Network of World and Global History
Organizations (NOGWHISTO)
2 PM-5:15 PM/14 h- 17 h 15
Room 1018 , Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Chair: Patrick Manning (University of Pittsburgh)
– Mikhail Lipkin (Russian Academy of Sciences,
Moscow):
Comprehension
of the incomprehencible: major trends in the study of World and Global
History in contemporary Russia
–
Dominic Sachsenmaier (Jacob
University Bremen):
World
history writing in Europe, the US, and China compared
–
Jie-Hyun Lim (Critical Global Studies Institute,Sogang University, Seoul):
New trends in transnational history writing
among East Asian historians
– Rokhaya Fall (Université Cheikh Anta Diop,
Dakar):
7:45 PM-9:30 PM/ 19 h
45-21 h 30
Shandong Energy Hall, Shandong
Hotel
Organizer: Gunlög Fur, John Hennessey (Linnaeus
University, Växjö, Sweden)
Stefan Eklöf Amirell (Lund University,
Lund)
The
posters will be discussed by four commentators:
– Rolf Torstendahl (Uppsala
University)
– Patrick Manning (University of Pittsburgh)
– Camilla Brautaset(University of Bergen)
–
Jacqueline Van Gent (University of
Western Australia)
The posters presenters:
– Peter
Bent (University
of Massachusetts,Amherst),
Globalization, Crises and Structural Change at the
turn of the 20th Century
–
Priyanka Dey (University of
Hyderabad,India)
Asia
in the World: Exploring the Global Connections
–
Marcella Festa (University of
Ca’Forscari of Venice,Italy)
Early
Metallurgy in Eurasia: What was the Role of Xinjiang in the Spread of Metal
Technology?
– May Hawas (University of Alexandria,Egypt)
The
Routledge Companion to World History and World Literature
– John
Hennessey (Linnaeus University, Sweden)
Japan
in the Transnational Culture of Imperialism
–
Florence Hodous (Hebrew University
of Jerusalem, Israel)
Mobility,
Empire and Cross Cultural Contacts in the Mongol Eurasia Project
– Nina
Holzschneider (Freie Universität
Berlin)
Modernization and Identity in Late 19th Century Okinawa
–
Concepcion Lagos (University of
the Philippines)
What
after Emancipation? A Comparative Study between the Mabo Case in Australia and
the First Certificate of Ancestral Domain Title (CADT) in the Philippines
– Login
Lok-yin Law (University of Hong Kong)
Changes
of the Joseon Envoys’ Understanding of the West: A Study of their Observations
of Objects in Beijing Catholic Churches
– Olga
Medvedeva (University of Bergen)
Connections
and Mobility: A Prosopographical Study on Norwegians in China’s Maritime
Customs Service in the Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries
–
Verena Muth (Cologne University)
Global
connections and independence: The case of the Caribbean Darién, 1750-1810
–
Torsten Weber (German Institute
for Japanese Studies DIJ Tokyo)
A
Global History of the Pursuit of Happiness
– Lei Zhang (Syracuse University, NY)
Japanese
Well Drilling in Beijing, 1900-1911
General
Poster Session Organized by Shandong University
Categorized Themes of
Posters
I.
Transnational Exchanges and Comparisons
-Marcella Festa,University
of Ca’Forscari of Venice (Italy)
Early Metallurgy in Eurasia:
What was the Role of Xinjiang in the Spread of Metal Technology?
-Gao Jun, Shandong University
The Comparison and Contrast of
Iron Armour between Imperial Rome and Imperial Qin-Han
of China
-Jordi Pérez González,
University of Barcelona (Spain)
Egypt
and the Middle East: Productive and Distributive Centers of Luxury Goods in
Classical Antiquity.
-John Hennessey,
Linnaeus University (Sweden)
Japan
in the Transnational Culture of Imperialism
-Huang Xiaoyu, East China Normal
University
A Temporary Ferry — Tianjin
Jewish Community in the First Half of the 20th Century
-Kim Woo Yeong, Seoul National University (South Korea)
The
Reformation of the School Entrance Examination in the Late 14th Century Korea:
Between China’s Influence and the Existing System.
-Li Qiang,University
of Ioannina(Greece)
Relations
between the Roman Empire and China: On the Image of the Roman Empire in Chinese
Sources (1st-7th Century CE)
-Liao Si, East China Normal University
In
a Mutual Gaze: the Study of the Eighth Earl of Elgin’s Mission
-Olga Medvedeva,
University of Bergen (Norway)
Norwegians
in the Chinese Maritime Customs Service (1861-1949)
-Wang Jiaxin,Northeast Normal University
To Save China, To Claim
America: Inventing Chinese American Identity in the 1930s
-Yu Yusen, University of Heidelberg
(Germany)
Timurid Reception and
Integration of Khitā’i Aesthetic: Material, Technique and Image, ca. 1370-1506
II.
Social Life and Values
-Chai Huifang, Yangzhou University
The Belief of Usnisa Vijaya
Dharani Sutra in 7th-10th Centuries China: Focusing on Dhvaja and its Regional
Distribution.
-Jachong Sonam Tsering , Tibet University
A Survey Report on Bka’ Gdams
Pa Monastery Zhogs’od Gsal at the Upper of Lhasa River
-Li Qiao, Hebei Normal University
The Newly Unearthed Tomb
Contracts in the Song and Yuan Dynasties
-Ren Yi, South China Normal
University
The Journey of Odoric and Gugu
Hat in the Yuan Dynasty
-Sun Lingzhi, China Academy of Chinese
Medical Sciences
History Research of Fragrant
Medicines in Ming and Qing Dynasties
-Yu Denghui, Shandong University
The Snake Image in Greek
Mythology
-Zhang Linan ,Shandong University
Football Hooliganism under
Subculture Pattern: A Case Study of Chinese Football Fans
-Zhang Qilong, Jinan University
The Study on Xudi in Guangzhou
Gaodijie around the First Opium War: Based on Contracts
-Zhong Dezhi, South China Normal
University
On the Cultural Values behind
Animal Acts in the Law of Manu
-Zhong Tingting, Southwest University for
Nationalities
Inauspicious or Auspicious? An
Analysis of the Contradictory Cognitions of Bamboo Flowering
-Zhou Jiandong, Shandong Normal University
On the Causes of the Rise and
Decline of Ancient Chinese Sports: Taking Cuju as an Example
-Zhou Yating and WANG Feng, Soochow
University
The Rise and Decline of
Ancient Chinese Cuju from the Perspective of Cuju Artists
III.
Dynastic Institutions and Politics
-Dong Jianmin, Shandong University
A Preliminary Study of the
Distribution of Juren in Jiangxi Province: Focusing on School Registers
-Dong Xiaobo, Northeast Normal University
The Reconstruction of the
Archives of Lugal-iti-dathe Archivist of the Animal Center of Ur III Dynasty in
Drehem
-Huang Lili, Nanjing Normal University
Discussion on the
Yuanwaizhitongzhengyuan in the Early Stage of the Tang Dynasty
-Li Yang, Northwest University for
Nationalities
The Formation of Northern
Ethnic Groups’ Consciousness: From the Time that Ancient Uighur Confirmed its
Name
-Liu Shanshan, Tsinghua University
Case
Study on Architecture by Little Big History Method
-Long Xiao, Shandong University
The Governance of the South by
the Royal Court during the Shang and Early Western Zhou Periods in an Archaeological
Perspective: Focusing on the Middle Tangtze Region
-Ren Songfeng, Qufu Normal University
A Study on the Official
Residences of Han Dynasty
-Wang Meijun, Shandong University
Contributions of Stephen
Langton to Magna Carta
-Yang Xinliang, Sichuan University
The Trend of “Reclaiming
the Military Leadership” in the Late Tang and Five Dynasties as Reflected
in the Changes of Military Discipline
-Zhang Menghan, Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences
A Study of “the Aura of Son of
Heaven in the Southeast” and the Inspection Tour of Emperor Qin Shihuang to the
East
-Zhang Xiaoqing, Nanjing Normal University
Discussion on How “No Empress”
Affected Eunuch Dictatorship in the Middle and Late Tang Dynasty
IV.
Media, Education and Historical Writing
-Li Haojian, The Affiliated Middle School
of the Renmin University of China
The Daoguang Emperor’s
Personality: From the Psychological-Historical Perspective
-Qu Xiaoyan, Shandong Normal University
A Review on Modern Qilu
Culture from the Perspective of Travelogues of Japanese Intellectuals after
Meiji Restoration
-Rania Saleh,Shandong
Normal University
Media
and Political Transitions in Egypt (2005-2014)
-Joseph Tsigbe,
University of Lome (Togo)
Writing
the History of Postcolonial Togo from Caricature: Which Methodological
Approach?
-Zhai Jinfeng, Shandong University
The Standing out of the
Allegory of Liberty During the French Revolution
-Zhang Nan, Shanxi University
Media Dissemination and New
Cultural Area Construction: A Study on the Sunday and the New Culture Movement
in Sichuan
-Zhao Min, Wuhan University
Between the Illusion and
Truth: How West German Youth Comprehended the Third Reich in the 1950s and
Early 1960s
-Zhang Lijuan, Palacky University (Czech
Republic)
Female
Images in History Textbooks of Mainland China
V.
Social Transformation and Construction in Modern Era
-Chen Jinging, Shanghai Normal University
Universal Relief in Asia under
the Background of Nationalism Vs Imperialism: A Case of World Red Swastika
Society
-Hao Xiaowen, The Hong Kong University of
Science and Technology (Hong Kong)
Sharing
Insolvency Risk: Chinese Style Partnership Debt, Proportional Liability, and
Legal Reform in Republican Shanghai
-Lagos, Concepcion
R. University of the Philippines (the Philippines)
Sinews
and Weapons of (the Weak) Shoemakers in the Footwear Capital of the
Philippines: A Social History and Ethnographic Exploration
-Li Nan, Shandong University
Geographical and Spatial
Interpretation of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions in
North China: Taking Missionary Work in Shandong as an Example, 1880-1900
-Liu Yajuan, Fudan University
“Two-faced Men”: Modern Model
Worker between the State and Urban (1949-1963)
-Shen Lingyin, University of Toronto
(Canada)
Esperanto
not as a substitute? Liu Shipei: Voicing for Chinese Agency out of Cultural
Hegemony in an Anarchist landscape Imbued with National Essence
-Ji Linghui , Fudan University
Introduction of Bacteriology
and the Construction of Public Health and Epidemic Prevention Mechanism in Late
Qing Dynasty and Early Period of China
–Yang Songlin, University
of Toronto (Canada)
Compassion
and Compulsivity: The Indirect Violence of Discourse and Unintended
Consequences of James Y.C Yan’s Mass Education Movement in China during
1920s
——From the Perspective of ‘Enlightenment at Large’
-Zhang Xiaoyu, Central China Normal
University
The Research on the Missionary
Case during Late Qing Dynasty from the Perspective of International Law and
Foreign Law, 1860-1912
Friday 28 August morning /Vendredi 28 août matin
Special
Session/Session spéciale
9 AM-12:15 PM/9
h-12 h 15
Room 1013, Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizer
: Jens Boel (UNESCO’s Chief
Archivist)
Discussant:
Jean-François Sirinelli (Sciences Po Paris, Chair of the International
Scientific Committee for the UNESCO History Project)
– Poul Duedahl (University of Aalborg):
The results of the research carried out by
the Danish funded project
– Glenda Sluga (University of Sydney):
The UNESCO’s history in transnational
perspective
– Ibrahima Thioub (Cheikh Anta Diop University in Dakar):
The question of identity in the context of writing and
teaching national and regional histories
– Jens Boel (UNESCO’s Chief Archivist):
The main trends in
the historiography of UNESCO
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Shandong High
Speed Hall, Shandong Hotel
Chair : Yves Krumenacker (Université de Lyon, Member of the Board of CIHEC)
–
John Gascoigne (University of New
South Wales):
Church,
State and the Patronage of Science in the Thought of Francis Bacon
– Etienne Bourdon (Université de Grenoble):
The Religious Discourse Faced with Early Modern Geographical
Discoveries: A “Disenchantment”?
– Noémie Recous (Université de Lyon – Jean Moulin
Lyon 3):
Scientific
passion and religious commitment in the Republic of Letters : Nicolas
Fatio of Duillier (1664-1753)
– Zhou Baowei (East China Normal
University, Shanghai):
Religion and Science in the Scottish Enlightenment
– Peggy Brock (Edith Cowan University, Perth):
Missionaries and Anthropology
– Norman Etherington (University of Western
Australia):
Missionaries and Science versus Superstition in
Nineteenth-Century Southeast Africa
IAO 2
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Lu Xin VIP Hall,
Shandong Hotel
Chair: Mario Di Napoli
– Joseba Agirreazkuenaga (University of the Basque Country, Bilbao):
On Historiographical Progress in
Parliamentary History: Collective Biography and Prosopographic Analysis
– Maria Sofia Corciulo (University « La Sapienza », Rome):
The
“Constitutional” Clergy in the Neapolitan Parliament of 1820-1821
– Mikel Urquijo (University of Basque Country, Bilbao, Spain):
The
Speakership of the Parliament in the Contemporary Spain ( 1810-1939)
– Vittoria Calabrò (University of Messina):
The
Italian Politician Emilio Colombo as President of the European Parliament
(1977-1979)
9 AM-12:15 PM/9
h-12 h 15
Jinan Hall, Shandong Hotel
Chair: Israel Bartal (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
– Mordechai Cogan (The Hebrew University of
Jerusalem):
The
Early Generations of the Babylonian Diaspora as Illuminated by the Cuneiform
Documents from al Yaḫudu
– Doron Mendels (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem):
A Split Jewish Diaspora: A Language Divide and Two Systems of Law and
“communication”
–
Michael Toch (The Hebrew
University of Jerusalem):
Medieval Jewish Diaspora(s): DNA
Studies and the Formation of Medieval Jewries
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Qingdao Hall,
Shandong Hotel
Chair
and Introduction: Eckhardt Fuchs (University of Braunschweig)
– Klaus Dittrich (University of Luxembourg):
European and American Teachers in Korean Government Schools,
1883-1910
–
Narae Seo (Yonsei University,
Seoul):
The Educational Experiences and Identity formation of
Overseas Chinese Students in Korea
– Seongcheol Oh (Seoul National University of Education Athletic Meeting):
Nationalism and
Memory in Modern Korean Education
IAO 5
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Linyi Hall,
Shandong Hotel
Chair: Matthias Middell (Secretary-Treasurer of the ICHFR, University of Leipzig)
– Annie Jourdan ((University of Amsterdam):
Les journées de prairial an II : un tournant de la
Révolution ?
– Pang Guanqun (Beijing Normal University):
Fabricating Madame Roland in China: Transnational
Imagination of a French Revolutionary Heroine
General Assembly
of the ICHFR and election of the Board/Assemblée générale de la
CIHRF et élection du bureau
IAO 6
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Zaozhuang Hall,
Shandong Hotel
Discussant:Bertram M. Gordon (Mills
College, Oakland, California)
– Elena Belova (Sholokhov Moscow State University for Humanities):
The Small
Historic Town of Uglich as a Tourist Brand of the Golden Ring of Russia Route
– Aditya Kiran Kakati (The Graduate Institute of International and
Development
Studies Geneva):
From Periphery to Paradise: Re-imagining the Eastern ‘Frontier’ Borderlands of India in the Contemporary
Context of Emerging Alternative Narratives
Manifested in Liminal Tourist Enclaves
– Ilaria Porciani (University of Bologna):
Recent History Museums and Tourism: a Comparative Approach
– Jun Shang (University Institute of Lisbon)
and Weiqun Lu (Shanghai University of Finance and
Economics, ZheJiang College):
Red Tourism in China: A
Special Type of Heritage Tourism
– Julien Tassel and Hécate
Vergopoulos (University
Paris-Sorbonne):
Portrait of the Tourist as an
Historian: How the Contemporary Tourist Mediation of
Paris Turns the Practice of Space into a Search for
Historical Clues
– Rachel A. Varghese (Jawaharlal Nehru University):
The Muziris Assemblage: A Dialogue between History and Heritage
– Pim Verweij(University of Amsterdam):
Homestay Tourism and Its Impact on the Local Villager in Vietnam
9
AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Rizhao Hall,
Shandong Hotel
Chair: Terry Haydn (University of East Anglia)
– Terry Haydn (University of East Anglia):
Veracity: a neglected facet of history education in
schools?
– Elisabeth Erdmann (University of Erlangen-Nuremberg):
History – but what is correct
now?
– Arja Virta(University of Turku):
Approaches
to Historical Truth in History Education
– Elize van Eeden (South
Africa):
Assessing
the historiography of fact and fiction in understanding and teaching History in
South Africa
– Susanne Popp (University of Augsburg):
Counterfactual
History – an appropriate means to develop historical thinking skills in the
classroom?
– Victor Nemchinov (Russian Academy of Sciences,
Moscow):
Shaping Truth through
Dialoguing in the World without a Paradigm
–Pieter Warnich (North-West University, Republic of South Africa):
Assessing multi-perspectives
and the historical ‘truth’ in the post-apartheid history school curriculum and
textbooks
IAO 8
8:30 AM-12:45 PM/8
h 30-12 h45
Session 6(8:30
AM-10:30 AM), Session 8(10:45 AM-12:45 PM) at Liaocheng Hall,
Session 7(8:30
AM-10:30 AM), Session 9(10:45 AM-12:45 PM) at Binzhou Hall,
Business
Meeting(8:30AM-10:30 AM), Session 10(10:45 AM-12:45 PM) at Yantai Hall;
Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Marie-Pierre Arrizabalaga (Université de Cergy-Pontoise)
Claudia Contente (Universitat Pompeu Fabra)
Chair: Antoinette Fauve-Chamoux (EHESS, Paris)
Discussant: Mikolaj Szoltysek (Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology in
Halle)
– Marie-Pierre Arrizabalaga (University of
Cergy-Pontoise):
Gender and Marriage
among the French in California in the late nineteenth century and the first
half of the twentieth century
– Carmen Alveal and Dayane Dias (Universidades Federal do Rio
Grande del Norte):
National and
international immigrants settlement in Goianinha village (Brazil) in the
nineteenth century: analysis of social relationships through parish records
Organizers: Antoinette Fauve-Chamoux (EHESS, Paris)
Ioan Bolovan (Romanian Academy, Center of Transylvanian
Studies, Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca)
Chair: Antoinette Fauve-Chamoux (EHESS, Paris)
Discussant: Kawaguchi Hiroshi (Tezukayama University)
– Gregory Hanlon (Dalhousie
University):
Infanticide « à la
chinoise » in early modern Europe in comparative perspective
– Dalia Leinarte (Vilnius
University):
Unwanted Children.
Infanticide in Lithuania in a Historical Perspective
– Paulo Teodoro de Matos (Universidade
Nova de Lisboa):
Infanticide in Goa (Portuguese India) through sex
ratios (1776-1900)
– Evelien Walhout (Radboud University Nijmegen):
Female infanticide: exploring evidence in the Netherlands
Business Meeting : Board meeting
Organizers: Claudia Contente (Universitat Pompeu Fabra)
Cristina Cacopardo(Universidad Nacional de Luján)
Chair: Ioan Bolovan (Romanian Academy, Center of Transylvanian Studies, Babes-Bolyai
University, Cluj-Napoca)
Discussant: Marie-Pierre Arrizabalaga (Université de Cergy-Pontoise)
– Veronica Villarespe and Carlos Quintanilla Yerena (UNAM):
Women and Poor
Laws: England (16th-18th centuries)
– Corneliu Sigmirean (University Tirgu
Mures):
Migration and its
Impact upon the Family. A Case Study: the Romanians from Spain
– Dana-Maria Rus (Babes-Bolyai
University, Cluj-Napoca):
La migration des
femmes Roumaines en France contemporaine. Etude de cas : devenir gardiennes
d’immeuble à Paris
Organizer: Peter Teibenbacher (Karl-Franzens-Universität)
Chair: Peter Teibenbacher (Karl-Franzens-Universität)
Discussant: Antoinette Fauve-Chamoux (EHESS, Paris)
– Catherine Dol(EHESS, Paris):
Adoption as a means of
legitimizing illegitimate children in 19th century France
– Ólöf Garđarsdóttir (University of
Iceland):
An Icelandic
marriage pattern
– Peter Teibenbacher (Karl-Franzens-Universität):
Illegitimacy and
marriage hindrances in 18th century Styria. Anticipating preventive check policy
– Ioan Bolovan (Romanian Academy,
Center of Transylvanian Studies, Babes-Bolyai
University, Cluj-Napoca):
Illegitimacy
in Transylvania before World War I
– Ana
Victoria Sima (Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca):
The
Church and the Phenomenon of Illegitimacy in Transylvania during World War I
Session 10 : Round
Table discussion (to be determined)
IC 1
Dongying Hall,
Shandong Hotel
Chair: Michael Devine (Truman Library, National Archives and
Records Administration)
– Anna Adamek (Canada Science and Technology
Museums Corporation):
Collecting and Preserving Contemporary Technologies at the
Canada Science and Technology Museums Corporation as Historical Evidence for
Future research
– Andreas Etges (Amerika-Institute,Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität,
Munich):
Hot Debate over the Cold War – Checkpoint Charlie
– Annarita Gori (Instituto de Ciências Sociais, Universidade de Lisboa):
Story
of a Monument Never Built: The Infante dom Henrique’s Monuments and Museums and
the Estado Novo Public Use of the Past
– Kathleen Franz (American University, Washington DC) and Nancy Davis (National Museum of American History, Washington DC):
Making Business History Public: Material Culture, Museums
and Histories of Capitalism
– Anastasia Remes (Weltkulturen
Museum Frankfurt):
Memory, Identity and the Supranational History Museum:the
House of European History
Song Mingchang (General
Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Television, P. R. C.)
Chinese
Publishing: Inheriting and Promoting Chinese Civilization
Zibo Hall,
Shandong Hotel
Chair: Giulia Lami (University Milano)
Comments:
Martin Schulze Wessel (President of the Verband der Historiker und Historikerinnen Deutschlands)
JonathanBull (University of Hokkaido)
- Marco Dogo (University of Trieste):
The Slavonic dimension of Trieste as an imperial port-city, 1751-1914
–
Ulf Brunnbauer (University of
Regensburg):
Fiume/Rijeka:
Emigrants and the National State
–
Andreas Renner (University of
Tübingen):
Lüshun/Port
Arthur 1905/45. A Russian and Soviet site of memory
–
Ulrike von Hirschhausen (University of Rostock):
Russian Riga in the early 20th century – local
products as a global commodity?
Dezhou Hall,
Shandong Hotel
Chair: Robert MacMahon (Ohio
State University)
Discussant:
David Lowe (Deakin University)
– Chiara Chiapponi (University of Roma ” la
Sapienza”):
le Japon à la recherche
d’un nouveau rôle: la «diversification » et les relations avec le
Vietnam du Nord
– Valdo Ferretti (University of Roma ” la
Sapienza”):
China and the
international system of alliances at the beginning in the XXth century
– Hirotaka Watanabe (Tokio University of Foreign Studies):
The path ahead for Japanese diplomacy: need for
consciousness of being a global player
– Jae Yeong Han (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne):
Old and new players in
the evolution of South Korea
– Mauro Elli(Università di Padova):
New actors in a
long-standing relationship: Indo-British dealings in the aviation industry
Chair:
María Dolores Elizalde (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas –
CSIC, Madrid)
Discussant:
Alfredo Canavero (University of Milan)
– Bohumila
Ferenčuhová (Slovenskej akadémie
vied Historicky ustav SAV):
La
Petite Entente – nouvel acteur dans les relations internationales dans
l´entre-deux-guerres : un échec de l´Europe démocratique ?
– Houda Ben Hamouda (Université Paris 1
Panthéon-Sorbonne):
From independence to the
“Jasmine Revolution”, the genesis and the movement counter-power in
Tunisia
– José Flávio S. Saraiva (University
of Brasília):
Brazil: An emergent power and the sense of autonomy
and history
– Hortense Faivre D’Arcier-Flores (Université
Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne):
La CELAC : une avancée dans la construction d’un monde
multipolaire ?
– Lùcia Guimaraes (Universidade
do Estado do Rio de Janeiro):
Portugal and Brazil: a Declining
Empire and Luso-Brazialian Connections early 20th Century
9 AM-12:15 PM/9 h-12 h 15
Main Theme Panel 6 at Auditorium, Nanjiao Hotel
Sub-Theme B Panel 1 at Room 3012,
Sub-Theme A Panel 2 at Room 3013,
Main Theme Panel 7 at Room 3015,
Main Theme Panel 8a at Room 3018; Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Lunch and informal networking(12-2 PM) at Room Ju Xian,
Blue Hall, Nanjiao Hotel
Chair and Discussant: Eileen Boris
– Priyanka Srivastava (University of Massachusetts,
Amherst):
Working-class mothers and medical modernities in colonial
Bombay
– Patricia Ysabel Wong (Ateneo de Manila University):
Educating women, educating nation: the gendering of hygiene
and sanitation education in Manila, 1900s-1930s
– Eloisa Betti (University of Bologna):
Creating a New Modernity for Italian Women: Labour rights
and Welfare Services in the Golden Age (1945-1975): The Role of the Union
of Italian Women (UDI)
– Ute Chamberlin (Western Illinois University):
Testing the Limits of Womens’ Work: Women in the Mining
Industries of the Ruhr during the Great War
Chair
and Discussant: Clare Midgley
– Mahua Sarkar (Binghamton University, SUNY):
The practice of memory as alternate archiving: using oral
histories to capture the everyday
experiences of Hindu-Muslim Women in the context of social reform in late
colonial urban Bengal
– Hemjyoti Medhi (Tezpur University):
Where is the archive? Women’s public performances and the
collective of the Mahila Samiti in Assam
– Yuthika Misra (Vivekananda College, University of
Delhi):
Women’s rights and the archive of the All India Women’s
Conference
– Isobelle Barrett Meyering (University of New South Wales):
Beyond the ‘South Eastern Axis’: retrieving a national
history of Australian women’s and children’s liberation (1969-1979)
– Joszef Borocz (Rutgers University):
An archive thrown away: fragments of a ballet dancer’s
life
Chair: Carolyn Eichner
– Dianne Bartlow (California State University):
Maria
Miller Stewart: African American anti-slavery activism
– Gwen Jordan (University of Illinois):
Building our world: Edith Sampson and the power of
transnational coalitions of Women of Colour during the Cold War
– Kennan Ferguson ( University of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee):
Feminism and freedom
– Choonib Lee (State University of New York at
Stony Brook):
Fashioning revolutionary women: Black Panthers and the Third
World during the late 1960s and early 1970s
Chair and Discussant: Mary O’Dowd
– Maria Ägren, Rosemarie Fiebranz, Jonas Lindström (Uppsala University):
Does modernity eclipse the
history of women’s work? Results from the Gender and Work Project
– Pirjo Markkola and Ann-Cartin Östman (University of Jyväskylä and Aboakademi University):
Intersections
of modernity: rural women in Northern Europe in the 19th century
– Pasi Saarimäki and Pirita Frigen (University of Jyväskylä):
Methodological reflections on women and modernity: the case
of Finland
– Kirsi-Maria Hyotönen and Eerika Koskinen-Koivisto (University of Jyväskylä and University of Helsinki):
Women against modernity?
Chair: June Purvis
– Noriko Ishii
(Sophia University):
Women and mission between the empires
– Kye-hyeong Ki (Hanyang University):
Comparison of the ‘New Woman’ of the 1920s in colonial Korea
and Soviet Russia: quest for modernity
– Sung Eun Kim (Daegu Haany University):
Life of Induk Pahk as New Woman and Korean version of Nora
IAO 12
Conference Room
on the 4th Floor, Southern Building, Nanjiao Hotel
Organizers: Martyn Lyons (University of New
South Wales)
Leslie Howsam (University of Windsor)
– Seokyung Han (State University of New York,
Binghampton):
Writing of the Korean script Han’gŭl by and for Women of Chosŏn Korea (1392‐1910)
– Cynthia Brokaw (Brown University):
What Peasants Read: the Expansion of the Reading Public in
Early Modern China
– Joan Judge (York University):
Everyday Knowledge and the Rise of
the Common Reader in Early-Twentieth-Century China
– Adam J. Kosto (Columbia University):
The Documentary Practices of Laypeople in Early Medieval
Europe
– Lodovica Braida (University of Milan):
Writing for Others:
Renaissance Printed Epistolary Collections: between models for “good writing”
and means of information
– Henning Hansen (University of Tromso):
Modern
Reading: Swedish Book Consumption in the Late 19th Century
Conference Room
on the 5th Floor, Nanjiao Hotel
– Alya Aglan (Université Paris 1
Panthéon-Sorbonne):
Representations of war through the joint reading of two novels: French Suite Irene Nemirovsky (2002)
and The Silence of the Sea Vercors (1942)
– David Ulbrich (Rogers State University), Colin Colbourn (University of S Mississippi) and Earl J. Catagnus Jr (Valley Forge Military College):
Cultural Constructions and Media Representations of the U.S.
Marine Corps during the Pacific War
– Bernd Martin (Albert-Ludwigs-Universität
Freiburg):
From the Pacific War to Good Neighbourliness
– Fumitaka Kurosawa (Tokyo Women’s Christian University):
Reconsideration of Perceptions
of Modern History in Post-war Japan
– Peter Romijn (NIOD, Amsterdam):
The Limits of Military Justice – the failure of persecuting
crimes of war committed by Dutch troops in Indonesia, 1946-1949
Conference Room
on the 3rd Floor, Southern Building, Nanjiao Hotel
Chair: Dirk Hoerder (Arizona State University and University of
Salzburg)
– Peter Winn (Tufts University):
Latin America
– Karin Hofmeester (International Institute of
Social History, Amsterdam and University of Antwerp):
e-Humanities and social history
– Marcel Van Der Linden (International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam):
New themes in social history
– Jürgen Kocka (Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin):
Social History: substantive and methodological prospects
Room 1018, Club
of Nanjiao Hotel
Chair and Discussant: Barry H.
Rodrigue (Russian Academy of
Sciences, Moscow)
– Sun Yue
(Capital Normal University, Beijing):
Big History: History of the Globalization Era and China’s
Contribution
– Qi Tao (Shandong University, Jinan):
Flood Myths v. Historical Realities: A Big History Approach
and a Chinese Case
– Seohyung Kim (Ewha Womans University, Seoul):
A New Paradigm of Convergence Education: Big History, a
History of Everything
– Duan Huichuan
(Shandong Normal University, Jinan): Chinese History in ChronoZoom
IC 2 International Association for the History of
State and Administration/ Association Internationale
de l’Histoire de l’État
Room 1012, Club
of Nanjiao Hotel
Friday 28 August afternoon/Vendredi 28 août après-midi
Shandong High
Speed Hall, Shandong Hotel
Chairs: Raymond Mentzer (University of Iowa,
Member of the Board of CIHEC)
Robert N. Swanson (University of Birmingham, Member of the Board of
CIHEC)
– Li Huacheng (Shaanxi Normal University,
Xian):
Multiple Interpretations of Over-Enthusiasm: A Study
Centering on the Flagellations of Medieval East and West
– Stephen Warren (University of Iowa):
Native American Migrations and the Transformation of
Religious Identities in Early America
– Yudha Thianto (Trinity Christian College,
Illinois):
Singing the Metrical Psalms in the Seventeenth-Century Dutch
East Indies: Migration of Religious Ideas through Hymns
– Peter James Yoder (Berry College, Georgia):
The Transformation of Early Eighteenth-Century Lutheran
Pietist Thought after the Danish-Halle Mission’s Contact with India
– Martin Millerick (National University of
Ireland, Maynooth):
Revising Whelan’s Model of Tridentine Catholicism in
Ireland: The Experience of Cloyne Diocese, County Cork, c.1700-1830
– Catherine Refran Laririt (Polytechnic University of the
Philippines):
Beaterio
de la Compañia de Jesus – In the Service of the Fatherland (1896-1899)
–
Kristy Nabhan-Warren (University of Iowa):
The
Cursillo Movement as Ushering in a New Lay-Focused and Globalized Catholicism
Lu Xin VIP Hall,
Shandong Hotel
Chair: Joseba Agirreazkuenaga
– Claudia Giurintano (University of Palermo):
The “Broglie Commission” and the Anti-slavery
Movement in France
– Cristina Senigaglia (University of Trieste):
Parliament and Public Opinion in Max Weber’s
Analysis
–
Coleman A. Dennehy (University
College Dublin):
Parliament Judicature. Ireland, Britain and
shared judicial authority
Jinan Hall,
Shandong Hotel
Chair: Israel Bartal (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
– Meron Medzini (The Hebrew University of
Jerusalem):
Jewish Communities in South East
Asia – Comparisons and Contrasts
– Zohar Segev (University of Haifa):
Diaspora Nationalism, National Identity and Cultural
Revival: American Jewry and the Challenge of Jewish Diaspora in the Shadow of
the Holocaust
Qingdao Hall,
Shandong Hotel
Chair:
Zheng RuoLing (Xiamen University)
– Mariko Ichimi (National Institute for
Educational Policy Research, Tokyo):
The Study of East Asian Educational History in Modern Japan:
Its Past Development and Future Direction
– Atsuko Shimbo (Waseda University, Tokyo):
Intermixing
Imaginations: The Perception of East Asia by Japan, China, and its Neighboring
Ethnicities
– Kaiyi Li (University of Braunschweig /Beijing
Normal University):
The League of Nations and Educational Reform in
China
–
Kim Ja-Joong (Korea University):
The
Formation of Higher Education System in Korea under Japanese Colonial Rule
Linyi Hall, Shandong
Hotel
Chair: Koichi Yamazaki (Hitotsubashi University)
– Alexander Tchoudinov (Russian Academy of Sciences,
Moscow):
The ‘New Russian School’ and the image of the other
– Nikolay Promyslov and Evgeniya Prusskaya (Russian Academy of Sciences,
Moscow):
The Image of Russia in French Newspapers during the
Revolution and Empire
– Anna Maria Rao (Università degli studi di Napoli
« Federico II »):
Patriotisme, oubli, micro-histoire : les études
italiennes de la révolution française 25 ans après le bicentenaire
– CHOI Kab
Soo (Seoul National University):
Recherche sur la Révolution Française en Corée du Sud
Chair: Rachida Selaouti Tlili (Université Tunis La Manouba)
– Paul Hanson (Butler University, Indianapolis):
Jacobins and Red Guards: Revolutionary Terror in Comparative
Perspective
– Ian Coller (University of California,
Irvine):
Muslim Jacobins? Radicalization and Islam in the French
Revolution
– Luigi Mascilli Migliorini and Rosa Maria Delli Quadri (Università
degli studi di Napoli « L’Orientale »):
Révolutions d’Italie, d’Espagne et de Grèce: un regard
comparé
– Tami Sarfatti(Tel Aviv University):
The Revolutionary Era in a Global Context: The Advantages of
a Case-Study Approach
VIP Room Mu Dan,
Shandong Hotel
Dezhou Hall,
Shandong Hotel
Chair:
Markus Furrer (University of Teacher Education Luzern/Université
de Fribourg)
– Markus Furrer(University of Teacher Education Luzern/Université de Fribourg):
Introduction
into the topic
– Alfons Kenkmann (University of Leipzig):
Ideologies in the classroom of the GDR
– Daniel Moser (Bern):
China after 1949 in Swiss
history textbooks from 1950-2000
– Joanna Wojdon (University
of Wroclaw and Institute of National Remembrance):
Col. Ryszard Kuklinski (Jack Strong) – a case study in the
Polish debates on the Cold War
– Markus Furrer and Nora Zimmermann (Georg-Eckert-Institut – Leibniz-Institut für
internationale Schulbuchforschung):
Remembering the Cold War in pictures and
imaginations
– Karl Benziger (Rhode Island College):
Propaganda
and Dissent: The American War in Vietnam, Hungary, and the Narrative of Dissent
– Anu Raudsepp (Tartu University):
The image of the Enemy during the Cold Era in Estonia used
history textbooks
Session 11(2 PM-4
PM), Plenary Session(4:15 PM-6:15 PM) at Liaocheng Hall,
Session 12(2 PM-4
PM) at Binzhou Hall,Session 13(2 PM-4 PM) at Yantai Hall; Shandong Hotel
Organizers: Claudia Contente (Universitat Pompeu Fabra)
Cristina Cacopardo (Universidad Nacional de Luján)
Chair: Ioan Bolovan (Romanian Academy, Center of Transylvanian Studies, Babes-Bolyai
University, Cluj-Napoca)
Discussant: Marie-Pierre Arrizabalaga (Université de
Cergy-Pontoise)
– Mary Louise Nagata (Francis
Marion University, Florence, South Carolina):
Women,
Gender, Migration and Mobility in 19th Century Kyoto
Organizer,
Chair and Discussant : Zhongwei Zhao (The Australian National University, Canberra)
– Yang Wenshan (Institute of
Sociology) and Xing-chen C.C. Lin (Institute
of European and American Studies,
Academia Sinica, Taipei):
Household Registration Database and the Social
Configuration of Colonial Taiwan: 1905-1945
– Dong Hao (Hong Kong University of Science and technology) and LeeYoujin (Seoul National University):
From EAP I to EAP
II: Advances in Comparative Population History, 1994-2004
– Cameron Campbell (UCLA) and Kurosu Satomi (Reitaku University):
Historical
demography in Asia
Organizer: Ofelia Rey Castelao (University of
Santiago de Compostela)
Chair: Antoinette Fauve-Chamoux (EHESS, Paris)
Discussant: Murayama Satoshi
– Michel Poulain (Université catholique de Louvain), Anne Herm (Tallinn University), Dany Chambre (Université catholique de Louvain) and Gianni Pes (Università degli Studi
di Sassari):
The role of late marriage alongside the different
phases of the fertility transition in a village of Sardinia: Villagrande
(1800-2012)
– Dora Celton, Mónica Ghirardi, Sonia Colantonio and Andrés Peranovich (Universidad
Nacional de Córdoba):
Two hundred years of
late marital behavior in Argentina
– Llorenç Ferrer-Alòs (Universitat
de Barcelona):
Late
marriage to save dowries. The strategies of the heirs and the second born in
Catalonia (17th – 19th centuries)
– Qiao Xiaochun (Beijing University):
Late marriage and never married in 20th
century China
General
Assembly/Assemblée Générale
Zaozhuang Hall,
Shandong Hotel
Chair: Serge Noiret (European University Institute, Florence)
– Jairo Antonio Melo Florez (AHISAB, Asociación
Historia Abierta, Bucaramanga, Colombia):
Digital Public History of Violence in Columbia
– Jenny Gregory (University of Western
Australia):
Public History and the Use of Social Media
– Patrick Moore (University of West Florida):
The Many Faces of an Historical
APP: Next Exit History,” the Classroom and Community
Dongying Hall,
Shandong Hotel
Chair: Krzysztof Makowski (Adam Mickiewicz
University, Poznań)
Comment:
Makoto Hayasaka (Tokyo Institute of Technology)
– Márta Font (University of Pécs), Jan Hrdina (Prague City Archives), Monika Saczyńska (Polish Academy of Sciences,
Warsaw):
Between East and West. Translation as a Means of
Cross-Cultural Communication in Central Europe in the Middle Ages and Early
Modern Times
– Andrea Trovesi (University of Bergamo):
Slavic Languages in Times of Globalization: Changes
and Challenges
– Joanna Trzeciak (Kent State University, Ohio),
Izabela Kalinowska-Blackwood (Stony Brook University, New York):
What Lurks Beneath: A Comparative
Study of Subtitles of Slavic Films Before and After 1989
– Anna Arustamova (University of Perm):
Russian
Literature and Western Cultures of the Nineteenth- and Twentieth Centuries
Zibo Hall,
Shandong Hotel
Main Theme Panel 9(2
PM-4 PM ), Closing Words and Business Meeting(3:45 PM -5 PM) at Auditorium, Nanjiao
Hotel
Main Theme Panel 8b(2
PM-3:45 PM ) at Room 3012,
Main Theme Panel
10(2 PM-3:45 PM ) at Room 3013,
Main Theme Panel
11(2 PM-3:45 PM ) at Room 3015,
Sub-Theme A Panel
3(2 PM-3:45 PM) at Room 3018; Club of Nanjiao Hotel
Chair and Discussant:
Mary O’Dowd
– Eleanor Gordon (University of Glasgow):
What’s love got to do with it? Working-class courtship in
Scotland, 1880-1939
– Natalia Mitsyuk (Russian Academy of Sciences):
Contraception in the everyday Life of the Russian noblewomen
at the beginning of the 20th century
– Florence Kyomugisha (California State
University-Northridge):
Historical Forces behind the status of women in African
urban society
– Asha Isam Nayeem (Dhakha University):
Did the women of Bengal not have a childhood? A study of
colonialism, education and the evolution of the girl child in Bengal
Chair
and Discussant:
Clare Midgley
– Jennifer Lynn (Montana State University,
Billings):
Defining Modernity:
Constructing the Modern Woman in the German Illustrated Press, 1920-1945
– Nilanjana Bhattacharya (Visva-Bharti University):
Editing modernity: The New Women editors in Bengal and
Argentina
– Mary Vanlalthanpui (Calcutta University):
The changing roles of Church women
– Pippa Virdee (De Montfort University):
Great people to fly with: Pakistan International Airlines,
women, and modern Pakistan
Discussant: Karen Leong (Arizona State University)
– Rumi Yasutake (Konan University, Kobe):
Mothering citizens of democracy in Hawaii: women’s politics
from a transnational perspective
– Brian Hayashi (Kyoto University):
From Mata Hari to Girl Friday: Nisei female agents,
Euro-American female handlers, and the Office of Strategic Services during
World War II
– Judy Wu (Ohio State University):
US Congressional Women’s Tour of China: Patsy Takemotoand
Women’s Cold War Diplomacy
– Dusica Ristivojevic (Academia
Sinica,Taipei):
Gender and Political Modernity in China: Chinese
women and political autonomy in the 1898 reform period
– Nupur Chaudhuri (Texas Southern University):
Some Bengali/Indian women’s concepts of nationalism under
the British Raj
– Barbara Molony (Santa Clara University):
Gender and the Politics of Modernity: From the pre suffrage
interwar years to the post suffrage
1970s [in Japan]
Chair and Discussant:
Uma Chakravarti
– Elaine Farell (Queen’s University, Belfast):
Icorrigible and incurable? Criminal re-offenders in
nineteenth-century Ireland
– Katie Witz (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee):
Not so docile after all: how Native American girls and women
challenged the Indian boarding school
system 1879-1934 with everyday acts of resistance
– Krassimira Daskalova (University of Sofia):
Fragile loyalties: A woman politician’s life in Cold War
Balkans between state socialism and feminism
– Aisha Bawa (Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokokoto):
Islam, Feminism, Identity : A survey of Muslim Organisation
FOMWAN in Nigeria
Closing Words and IFRWH Business Meeting (including election of new
Officers and Board)
Conference Room
on the 4th Floor, Southern Building, Nanjiao Hotel
Introduction and
chair: Jean-Yves Mollier (Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin)
Conclusion: Martyn Lyons (University of New South Wales)
– Pierre Fandio (Université de Buea):
Et si le développement de l’Afrique passait par la
production et la consommation locales du livre ?
– Michela Bussotti (École Française d’Extrême
Orient):
Une histoire transnationale du livre asiatique par le biais
du cas chinois ?
– Jacques Michon (Université de Sherbrooke):
Enjeux Transnationaux autour de la propriété littéraire : Le
Canada et le modèle américain
– Gustavo Sorá(Université
de Cordoba):
Modèles nationaux et transnationaux dans l’historiographie
de l’édition en Amérique Latine
– François Vallotton (Université de Lausanne):
Les circulations du livre en Europe : réseaux
commerciaux, acteurs et supports
Conference Room
on the 5th Floor, Nanjiao Hotel
– Hu Dekun (Council of Chinese Association for the WWII):
The Legacy of World War II: An Investigation on the Early
Post War Territorial Polices of Japan and the Cause of the Territorial Disputes
in East Asia
– Kiyofumi Kato (The National Institute of Japanese Literature, Tokyo):
The
Soviet Entry into the Pacific War and the Establishment of a New Order in
Northeast Asia: Japanese Repatriation in International Politics
– Richa Malhotra (University of Delhi):
Rumours in II World War and Individual Satyagrah: A Case
Study
– Tristan Moss (Australian National University):
Papua New Guinean
Anzacs? The PNG Defence Force the legacy and of the Second World War
– Joan Beaumont (Australian National University):
The
politics of burying the dead in Asia after World
Conference Room
on the 3rd Floor, Southern Building, Nanjiao Hotel
Room 1018, Club
of Nanjiao Hotel
Chair: Patrick Manning (University of Pittsburgh)
– Katja Naumann (GZWO Leipzig):
Report
on Activities and Finances from the Headquarters
– Weiwei Zhang (Nankai University, Tianjin):
Reports on Activities
from the Member Organizations
–
Launch of the Publication “A Commented Bibliography on World, Global, and
Big History, 2010-2015”
–
Elections
IAO 16 Commission internationale d’histoire militaire*
Room 1012, Club
of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizer : Erwin
A. Schmidl
*After the
Jinan Congress, the International Commission of Military History organizes its
41st Congress in Bejing, the 30 August-4 September 20015 (see : http://icmh41.ams.ac.cn) /Après le Congrès de Jinan, la Commission
internationale d’histoire militaire organise son 41e Congrès à
Pékin, les 30 août-4 septembre 2015 (voir : http://icmh41.ams.ac.cn)
IAO 17 International Commission for the History and
Theory of Historiography (ICHTH)
Room 1013, Club
of Nanjiao Hotel
Organizer : Antonis Liakos
7:45 PM-9:30 PM/19 h 45-21 h 30
Shandong Energy Hall, Shandong Hotel
Organizer: Jie-Hyun Lim (Critical
Global Studies Institute, Sogang University)
Keynote Speaker: Matthias Middell (University
of Leipzig):
The transnational turn in
historiography – New ethical challenges?
Discussants:
– Patrick Manning (University of Pittsburg)
– Stefan Berger (University of Bochum)
– Edhem Eldem (Boğaziçi University)
– Naoki O’Danaka (Tohoku University)
Saturday
29 August (morning)/Samedi 29 août (matin)
2nd
General Assembly/2nde Assemblée générale
9 AM-11
AM/9 h-11h
Conference Room on the 2nd Floor, Mingde Building, Shandong University
– Opening/ Ouverture: Marjatta Hietala
– Vote
on the Secretary General’s Report/Vote
sur le rapport moral du Secrétaire général
– Vote
on the Treasurer’s report/ Vote sur le
rapport financier du Trésorier
– Election
of the new Board (2015-2020)/ Élection du
nouveau Bureau
– International
Prize of History: vote on the rules/Prix
international de l’histoire : vote sur le règlement
– Venue
of the 23rd International Congress of Historical Sciences in 2020: vote of the
General Assembly/Lieu du 23e Congrès
international des sciences historiques en
2020 : vote de l’Assemblée générale
– Other
matters/Questions diverses: Robert
Frank
– Conclusion :
Marjatta Hietala
ClosingSession/Séance de clôture
11:15 AM-12:45 PM/11 h
15-12 h 45
Sheng Kunlun Music Hall, Shandong
University
– Official speeches/discours officiels:
. Chinese organizers
. Robert Frank, General Secretary
of the CISH (2010-2015): short report on the Congress
. Marjatta Hietala, President of
the CISH (2010-2015)
. New General Secretary of the CISH
(2015-2020)
. New President of the CISH
(2015-2020)
– Music performance/petit concert
Farewell Buffet Lunch/ Déjeuner-Buffet de clôture
1 PM/13h
Qiyuan Cafeteria, Shandong University
Theme: Longshan Culture and Early Civilizations under Comparative Perspectives
Date: August 23-25, 2015
Place: Zhangqiu, Shandong Province
Organizer: ICHS
Hosts: Association
of Chinese Historians
Shandong University
Jinan
People’s Government
Co-hosts: Zhangqiu People’s Government
China
Society of Yin-Shang Civilization
the
Association of Shandogn Historians
Longshan
Culture Research Institute of China
Shun Culture Research
Institute of Shandong
Theme: Urbanization and Internationalization of Qingdao
Date: August
24-26, 2015
Place: Qingdao,
Shandong Province
Organizer: ICHS
Hosts: Association
of Chinese Historians
Shandong University
Qingdao People’s
Government
Theme: Culture of Mount Tai in the
Global Perspective
Date: August 24-27, 2015
Place: Taian, Shandong Province
Organizer: ICHS
Hosts: Association of Chinese
Historians
Shandong University
Taian People’s Government
Co- hosts: Taishan University
MountTai Management Committee
Theme: Cuju and Qi Culture
Date: August 27-29, 2015
Place: Zibo, Shandong Province
Organizer:ICHS
Hosts:
Association of Chinese Historians
Shandong University
Zibo People’s Government
Co-hosts: Center for Students of
Qilu Culture(Shandong Normal University)
Linzi Football Museum,
Linzi People’s Government
Theme: The Confucian civilization and
the contemporary world
Date: August 26-28, 2015
Place: Qufu, Shandong Province
Organizer: ICHS
Hosts: Association of Chinese
Historians
Shandong University
Jining People’s Government
Co-hosts: Confucius Research Institute
Qufu People’s Government
QuFu Normal University
Jining University
Collaborative Innovation
Center of Confucian Civilization
Theme: Canal Culture and World
Heritage Protection and Use
Date: August 22-26, 2015
Place: Liaocheng, Shandong Province
Organizer: ICHS
Hosts: the Association of Chinese
Historians
Shandong University
Liaocheng People’s Government
Theme: Undergraduate teaching of history
and the education of general history under the global perspective of comparison
Date: August 23-24, 2015
Place: Shandong University, Jinan
Organizer: Committee of Teaching Guidance
on History
under
the Ministry of Education, P. R. China
Hosts: School of History and Culture
Shandong
University
Organizing Committee of Shandong
University for ICHS2015
Theme: Historiography and
Contemporary Chinese society
Date: August 22-25, 2015
Place: Xueren Hotel of Shandong
University, Zhixin Building, Jinan
Organizers: National Postdoctoral
Management Office of MOHRSS
China Postdoctoral Science
Foundation(CPSF)
Co-hosts: Bureau of Human Resources and
Social Security of Shandong Province
Human Resource Department of Shandong
University
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