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The AAS Program Committee has prepared the following list of 282 panels and roundtables for the 2010 Meeting in Philadelphia. Titles may change slightly, but the hourly schedule will remain constant. Organizers are cited with the panels or roundtables they have assembled.
The printed Annual Meeting Program cites the chairpersons and discussants, along with a listing of participants and their paper titles.
IMPORTANT NOTE: To be listed in the Annual Meeting Program, you must have preregistered by DECEMBER 3, 2009.
Thursday, March 25, 2010: Panels 7:30 p.m.–9:30 p.m.
Friday: Panels 8:30 a.m.–10:30 a.m.; 10:45 a.m.–12:45 p.m.; 1:00 p.m.–3:00 p.m.; 3:15 p.m.–5:15 p.m.
Presidential Address and Awards Ceremony, Friday 5:30 p.m.
Saturday: Panels 8:30 a.m.–10:30 a.m.; 10:45 a.m.–12:45 p.m.; 2:45 p.m.–4:45 p.m.; 5:00 p.m.–7:00 p.m.
Sunday: Panels 8:30 a.m.–10:30 a.m.; 10:45 a.m.–12:45 p.m.
The exhibit hall will be open 9:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. on Friday and Saturday and until noon on Sunday.
“Border Crossing” and special Social Science panels are highlighted in bold.
1. Living Islam across Asia (A.B. Shamsul, National University of Malaysia)
2. Conquest by Administration: Chinese State Expansion and Contraction in the Southern Borderlands (Kathlene Baldanza, University of Pennsylvania)
3. Reading Buddhist Poetry: Histories, Uses, Genres (Stephen C Berkwitz, Missouri State University)
4. Banishing Acts: Exile, Identity and Connectivity across Colonial South and Southeast Asia (Penny Edwards, University of California, Berkeley)
5. Life and Death Patterns in Pre-Early Modern Japan and Korea (Sangkuk Lee, Hong Kong University of Science & Technology)
6. Individual Papers: Comparisons and Regional Norms in East Asia (Allen D. Hicken, University of Michigan)
7. Goddess Traditions in Early Modern South Asia: Historicizing and Contextualizing Religious Cultures (Kumkum Chatterjee, Pennsylvania State University)
8. Technologies of Governance in Neoliberal India and the Crafting of Citizenship (Dolly Daftary, Washington University, St. Louis)
9. National Culture and Belonging in Pakistan (A. Sean Pue, Michigan State University)
10. Roundtable: Some Effective Approaches to Teaching and Analyzing Poetry - Sponsored by the Committee on Teaching Southeast Asian Languages (Robert J. Bickner, University of Wisconsin, Madison)
11. Red, White, and Green? Islam in Indonesian National Politics and Political Culture (James B. Hoesterey, Stanford University)
12. Mainland Southeast Asia at the Crossroads: Reflections on the Work of F. K. Lehman (U Chit Hlaing) (Juliane Schober, Arizona State University)
13. Representing and Re-Imagining North Korea: Accounts of Cultural Visuality (Sohl Lee, University of Rochester)
14. Streets of Sadness: Emotional Geographies and Histories of Urban Japan (Alisa Freedman, University of Oregon)
15. Telling Lives: The Role of the Individual in Modern Japanese Religions - Sponsored by the Society for the Study of Japanese Religions (Levi McLaughlin, Wofford College)
16. Japan’s ‘Lost Decade’: Varied Interpretations of Business Failure and Transformative Change (Peter von Staden, University of the West of England)
17. Roundtable: Against Amnesia: History, Memory, and the Role of the Public Intellectual in 21st-Century China (Jian Guo, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater)
18. The Productive Uses of Gossip and Rumor in Imperial China (Paize Keulemans, Yale University)
19. Continuity, Disruption, and Subjectivity in the Culture of Urban Change in Contemporary China (Samuel Yunxiang Liang, University of Manchester)
20. Ruptured Childhoods: Children in Wartime East Asia (Aaron William Moore, University of Oxford)
21. Moving Beyond the Great Firewall of China: Internet Politics in Constructing a “Harmonious Society” (Vincent Wei-Feng Ni, University of Oxford)
22. Rethinking Underground Ritual Sites in Tang-Song China (Yun-Chiahn C. Sena, University of Texas, Austin)
23. Chinese Money in the World: The Domestic and International Implications of China’s Foreign Exchange Reserve (Victor Shih, Northwestern University)
24. Roundtable: Politics and Thought in China: A Dialogue with Wang Hui (David Der-wei Wang, Harvard University)
25. Perceptions of Chinese Peasant Bodies in the PRC (Felix Wemheuer, University of Vienna)
26. Individual Papers: Being Chinese (James H. Carter, Saint Josephs University)
27. Interfaces, Interstices, and Enclaves: A Decade of Korean Debordering (1998–2008) (Valerie Gelezeau, Ecole des Hautes Etude)
28. Conversion, Collaboration, and Conflict: Interactions Between Religion and Colonialism in Asian Societies (Kalzang D. Bhutia, University of Alabama)
29. Crossing Borders: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Indian and Thai Attitudes Towards the Supernatural (Kate Brittlebank, University of Tasmania)
30. Strangers Within the Gates: External Influence on Domestic Social, Economic, and Political Development (Ja Ian Chong, Hong Kong University of Science & Technology)
31. Inner Flows and Fusions: Mapping Musical Dynamism in East and Southeast Asia (Eun-Young Jung, University of California, San Diego)
32. Illustrating Reception: Honglou meng, Genji monogatari, and Visual Culture (I-Hsien Wu, New School University)
33. Individual Papers: Perspectives on Japanese Foreign Relations (Gilbert Rozman, Princeton University)
34. Tropologies of Identity in Pakistan: Reading Askesis, Nation, and Publics in a Muslim Society (Venkat Dhulipala, University of North Carolina, Wilmington)
35. Capitalism, Advertising, and the Making of the Middle Class in India, c. 1880–2000 (Douglas E. Haynes, Dartmouth College)
36. Individual Papers: Gender and Sexuality in South Asia (Amita Shastri, San Francisco State University)
37. Democracy and Identity in Southeast Asia (Jacques Bertrand, University of Toronto)
38. Transgendering and Transgressive Meanings in South East Asia (Mark Johnson, University of Hull)
39. Center for Lao Studies’ New Research on Contemporary Laos (Vinya Sysamouth, Center for Lao Studies)
40. Roundtable: The GMA Presidency and Its Legacy (David Timberman, USAID)
41. Corporate Restructuring in South Korea: State Coordination, Financial Regulation, and Labor Market (Joo-Youn Jung, Korea University)
42. Does Japanese have Subjects? New Perspectives on an Old Controversy (Wesley M. Jacobsen, Harvard University)
43. Trajectories of Japanese Law: Transplantation to Transition to Transcendence (Marie S. Kim, St. Cloud State University)
44. Women and Lay Buddhism in Japanese Rites and Art (Elizabeth Lillehoj, DePaul University)
45. Roundtable: The Atomic Bomb at 65: Teaching the Costs of the Bomb in US Classrooms and Communities (Tomomi Yamaguchi, Montana State University)
46. The Politics of Ethnicity in China (Anne-Marie Brady, University of Canterbury)
47. Empire and Space (Siyen Fei, University of Pennsylvania)
48. Media and Mediation: NGOs and Civic Associations in 21st-Century China (Thomas B. Gold, University of California, Berkeley)
49. Sonic Nationalism and Collective Memory in China (Joshua Howard, University of Mississippi)
50. Historicizing “Philosophy” in China: Transmission, Reception, and Uses of a Borrowed Category (Michael J. Hunter, Princeton University)
51. Exploring New Pilgrimages in China and Taiwan (Wei-ping Lin, National Taiwan University)
52. Forgotten Arts of the Ming Dynasty (Aida Yuen Wong, Brandeis University)
53. Roundtable: North Korea as a Challenge to Security and Stability in Northeast Asia (Evans J. R. Revere, Korea Society)
54. Roundtable: The Living Legacy of G. William Skinner - Sponsored by the China and Inner Asia Council (Peter K. Bol, Harvard University)
55. TOUCH: New Research Methods for Encounters with Youth Cultures in Asia (Ian Condry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
56. Cultural Expressions of National Identity in Contemporary Asian Literature, Film, and Television (Rachel DiNitto, College of William & Mary)
57. Liao and Heian: Renegotiating the Northeast Asian Cultural Matrix (Mimi Yiengpruksawan, Yale University)
58. Imperialism and Local Social Practices in Western India (Matthew A. Cook, North Carolina Central University)
59. From Medieval to Modern: Mediating Past and Present in the Visual Cultures of South Asia, 15th–18th Centuries (Yael Rice, Philadelphia Museum of Art)
60. Citizenship as Conceptual Flow: The Case of India in a Comparative Perspective (Jivanta Schoettli, University of Heidelberg)
61. Local and National in Contemporary Policymaking in Southeast Asia: Environment and Energy Policy, Natural Resources Husbandry, Journalistic Norms, and Economic Management (Alasdair Bowie, George Washington University)
62. Who’s Who? Rethinking Marginal Intellectuals in Late Colonial Vietnam (Martina T. Nguyen, University of California, Berkeley)
63. Buddhist Approaches to Violence: Narratives, Texts, and Doctrine (Jeffrey Samuels, Western Kentucky University)
64. Center for Lao Studies’ New Research on Contemporary Laos II (Vinya Sysamouth, Center for Lao Studies)
65. Cinematic Representations of Historical Traumas in Korea and Japan (Young Eun Chae, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill)
66. Buddhism and the Politics of Power in Medieval Korea: A Reexamination (Jongmyung Kim, The Academy of Korean Studies)
67. Continuity and Transformation in Japanese Houses and Families: “Ie” in Contemporary Japan (Allison Alexy, Lafayette College)
68. Disciplinary Communities: Gender and Literary Pedagogy in Modern Japan (Young-ah Chung, Princeton University)
69. Roundtable: The Japan Knowledge Industry Outside the Academy - Sponsored by the Northeast Asia Council (Laura Miller, Loyola University Chicago)
70. Japan’s France: Imagery of France in Japanese Painting and Fiction, 1900 to 1950 (Doug Slaymaker, University of Kentucky)
71. Master-ing Tradition: Continuity and Transformation in Japan’s Iemoto System (Nancy K. Stalker, University of Texas, Austin)
72. China’s Long March towards Musical Modernity in the 20th Century: Network, Ideologies, and Changes (Joys H. Cheung, City University of Hong Kong)
73. Private Business and the Revolutionary State in China’s Transition to Socialism (Robert K. Cliver, Humboldt State University)
74. State-Sponsorship in Modern Chinese Literature (Daniel A. Fried, University of Alberta)
75. Jingdezhen’s China: New Approaches to the Material Culture of Ceramics (Anne T. Gerritsen, University of Warwick)
76. Local/Global Encounters: Transnational Social Movements in China (Leslie K. Wang, University of California, Berkeley)
77. Chinese Foreign Policy: Changes and Continuities (Zhiqun Zhu, Bucknell University)
78. Individual Papers: Contemporary Chinese Politics and Society I (Vivienne Shue, University of Oxford)
79. Is Rule Change Real Change? Political Reforms in Southeast Asian Democracies (Dan Slater, University of Chicago)
80. Globalization of Marriage and Family in Asia (Rebecca Forgash, Metropolitan State College of Denver)
81. Roundtable: Trends in Academic Publishing: The Impact of Information Technology on Research and Publication in Asian Studies (Paul H. Kratoska, National University of Singapore)
82. “Zomia” and the Southeast Asian Massif: Takes on a Highland Transnational Space (Jean Michaud, University Laval)
83. Roundtable: G. William Skinner’s Data and New Quantitative Approaches - Sponsored by the China and Inner Asia Council (Ruth Mostern, University of California, Merced)
84. National Identities and East Asian International Relations (Ming Wan, George Mason University)
85. The Social Life of Kanthas: Re-presenting Bengali Women’s Embroidered Quilts (Katherine Hacker, University of British Columbia)
86. Media in India: Practice, Theory, and Political Economy (Robin Jeffrey, Australia National University)
87. Genre, Canon, and Authority in Second-Millennium Sanskrit Literature (Adheesh Sathaye, University of British Columbia)
88. New Perspectives on Southeast Asian Islam and the Middle East (Francis R. Bradley, University of Wisconsin, Madison)
89. Perspectives on Catholic Culture in Viet Nam, 1600–2009 (Nhung Tuyet Tran, University of Toronto)
90. Global Circuits of Korean Music and Culture: Crossing Borders in Recording, Television and Education (Sun Hee Koo, University of Hawaii, Manoa)
91. Roundtable: Dealing with North Korea (C. Kenneth Quinones, Akita International University)
92. Roundtable: Remembering Eleanor Jorden: Voices from Japanese Language and Japanese Studies - Sponsored by Association of Teachers of Japanese (Mari Noda, Ohio State University)
93. Japanese Visual and Material Culture in Transnational Contexts: Shifting Ideas of “China” in Edo and Meiji Japan - Sponsored by Japan Art History Forum (Keiko Suzuki, Ritsumeikan University)
94. Putting the Provinces at the Center: Representing the Countryside in Modern Japan (Timothy J. Van Compernolle, Amherst College)
95. Rethinking Internationalism in 1930s Japan: Ideas and Institutions (Urs M. Zachmann, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich)
96. Art History is Not a Dinner Party: Aesthetics and Artistic Practice in Late Imperial and 20th-Century China (A Panel in Honor of Professor Emerita Ellen Johnston Laing) (Katharine Burnett, University of California, Davis)
97. Zhai: The Meanings of Periodic Abstinence in Early Medieval China - Sponsored by the Society for Study of Chinese Religions (Robert F. Campany, University of Southern California)
98. Legalizing Ethnicity in Late Imperial China (Yonglin Jiang, Bryn Mawr College)
99. The Spatiality of Sympathy: Theatricality of Gender, Religion, and the State in Seventeenth to Twentieth-Century China (Ling Hon Lam, Vanderbilt University)
100. Worrying about Workers and Peasants: China’s New Left Literature (Jie Lu, University of the Pacific)
101. Out of a Double Blind Spot: Studies in Chinese Buddhist Historiography (Elizabeth Morrison, Middlebury College)
102. ‘Reconstructing’ Religion: Modernization and Tibetan Buddhism in Sino-Tibetan Areas During the Republican Period (Andres Rodriguez, University of Southampton)
103. Writing China’s Modern History in Contemporary Greater China (Chaoguang Wang, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences)
104. Complexities of Global Civil Society-NGO-State Relations in China (Scott Wilson, University of the South)
105. Roundtable: China’s Rise in Historical Perspective (Lowell Dittmer, University of California, Berkeley)
106. National Borders and Memory Borders: The Prewar Japanese Diaspora and Postwar Memories of the “Homeland” (Martin Dusinberre, Newcastle University)
107. Ethnic Politics on the Northern Borderlands in Imperial China (Hsueh-Yi Lin, Princeton University)
108. Internationalizing South and Southeast Asian Colonial History (Michele Louro, Temple University)
109. How are International Health Policies Set and Why are They Contested? New Work on the Politics of Framing Infectious Diseases Boundaries in the Present and the Past (Kavita Sivaramakrishnan, Harvard University)
110. Roundtable: Crisis and Reconciliation in Swat - Sponsored by the American Institute of Pakistan Studies (Jonathan M. Kenoyer, University of Wisconsin, Madison)
111. Ancient, Medieval, or Something Else? The 7th-8th Centuries in South Asia (Alka Patel, University of California, Irvine)
112. The Popular Voice in India: The Influence of Party Positions on Religion, Economics, and Foreign Policy on Electoral Outcomes (Karthika Sasikumar, San Jose State University)
113. Citizenship and Identity Issues in Contemporary Singapore: Political, Educational, Spatial, and Societal Perspectives (Yeow Tong Chia, University of Toronto)
114. Bringing Literature into the Study of Twentieth-Century Thai History (Michael J. Montesano, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies)
115. From Peace to Justice in Cambodia: Reconciliation and the Khmer Rouge Trials - Sponsored by the Southeast Asia Council (Caitlin N. Reiger, International Center for Transitional Justice)
116. Transnational Subjectivity and Multicultural Sensitivity in Korean Literature and Visual Media (Jinim Park, Pyeong-Taek University)
117. Individual Papers: Representation and Identity in Korea, Past and Present (Kyung Moon Hwang, University of Southern California)
118. Inside Asian Innovation: Manufacturing, Digital Media and National Innovation Strategies in East Asia (Ken Coates, University of Waterloo)
119. Towards a Social History of Empire: Negotiating Norms in Imperial Japan (Miriam L. Kingsberg, University of Colorado, Boulder)
120. “Bukkyo Bungaku” in the Body (Stephen D. Miller, University of Massachusetts, Amherst)
121. Filth in Modern Japan (Eiko Maruko Siniawer, Williams College)
122. New Perspectives on Food in Wartime Japan (Samuel Yamashita, Pomona College)
123. Individual Papers: Gender, Sex and Self (Joshua Mostow, University of British Columbia)
124. Disease Control and National (Re)construction: Tuberculosis, Schistosomiasis, and Malaria in Maoist China (Rachel S. Core, Johns Hopkins University)
125. Empire and the Local in Ming China - Sponsored by the Society for Ming Studies (Larry Israel, Macon State College)
126. The “New Woman’s” Other: Poetess, Woman Warrior, Paragon of Virtue, and Maternal Tutoress in Late Qing and Republican China (Li Jin, Oberlin College)
127. States of Marginality: Statehood, Sovereignty, and the Person among Tibetans in the PRC and Beyond (Charlene E. Makley, Reed College)
128. For Modernizations: Reconsidering the Post-Mao Moment in the Arts (Jason McGrath, University of Minnesota)
129. Record Production in Republican Shanghai: Musical Culture between Entertainment and Politics, 1911–1949 (Andreas Steen, Aarhus University)
130. The Social Art of Poetry in Medieval China (Wendy Swartz, Columbia University)
131. Conspiracy, Paranoia, and the Apprehension of Politics in South Asia (Cabeiri D. Robinson, University of Washington)
132. Roundtable: Russia as an Asian Power: How Real Is Russia’s Claim To Be One? (Stephen J. Blank, U. S. Army War College)
133. Japan-Taiwan Relations before Empire (Adam J. Clulow, Monash University)
134. Filling in the Map: Processes of Exchange and the Production of Geographical Knowledge in East Asia and the Middle East (Kaveh Hemmat, University of Chicago)
135. Modernizing Reproduction in Asia (Tina P. Johnson, Saint Vincent College)
136. Reconsidering the Japanese Annexation of Korea in 1910: Sovereignty, Economy, and East Asia (Yumi Moon, Stanford University)
137. Brave New Asia: The Age of Asian Mega-Projects (Sarah Moser, Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
138. Varieties of Muslim-Hindu Relating in Bangladesh (Rachel Fell McDermott, Barnard College, Columbia University)
139. Changing Cultural Patterns and the ‘Public’ in the Braj Region (Ian Wilson, Syracuse University)
140. Islam, Culture and Politics in Southeast Asia - Sponsored by the Indonesian and East Timor Studies Committee and the Malaysia/Singapore/Brunei Group (Timothy P. Daniels, Hofstra University)
141. Dangerous Histories in Southeast Asia: Disquieting Past - Sponsored by the Southeast Asia Council (Thongchai Winichakul, University of Wisconsin, Madison)
142. Crossing the Divide: Migration and Disruptions of Identity Among North Koreans and South Koreans (Yoon Young Kim, Hanyang University)
143. The Dynamics of the Korean Peninsula During the Vietnam War and the Détente. (Tae Gyun Park, Seoul National University)
144. The Metabolism of Nature in Modern Japanese Nation-(re)Building (Toshihiro Higuchi, Georgetown University)
145. Changing Modes of Governance: The Impact of Demographic Change on Local Governance in Contemporary Japan (Yoshiko Konishi, University of California, Berkeley)
146. Upstaging Morality: Didacticism and “Kabuki-esque” Theatricality in Edo Yomihon - Sponsored by Early Modern Japan Network (Dylan McGee, State University of New York, New Paltz)
147. The Past and Future of Futuristic Japan (Shigeru (CJ) Suzuki, University of Colorado, Boulder)
148. Individual Papers: Japanese Social Science (Robin M. LeBlanc, Washington & Lee University)
149. Culture, Memory, and Politics in East Asia (William A. Callahan, University of Manchester)
150. Emerging Welfare State in China: Global, National, and Local Connections (Aiqun Hu, Arkansas State University)
151. Roundtable: Gender and Cultural Production: A New Approach to Chinese Women’s Journals in the Early 20th Century (Joan Judge, York University)
152. Reevaluating the 1940s: Myth and Memory of the Nationalist-Communist Transition - Sponsored by the Chinese Military History Society (Christopher Lew, George Washington University)
153. Political Fragmentation in the Chinese State (Sida Liu, University of Wisconsin, Madison)
154. Reconfiguring Sovereignty: The Significance of the Qianlong-Jiaqing Transition in Qing History (Matthew W. Mosca, University of Hong Kong)
155. Reframing Rurality in Contemporary China (Eileen Rose Walsh, University of Oxford)
156. Individual Papers: Modern Chinese Literature and Culture (Xiaobing Tang, University of Michigan)
157. Class and Democracy in Asia (Erik M. Kuhonta, McGill University)
158. The Economic-Security Nexus in Northeast Asia (T. J. Pempel, University of California, Berkeley)
159. Administrative Law and Political Transformation in Asian States (Neysun Mahboubi, University of Connecticut)
160. China and Japan in War and Peace (Chieko Nakajima, Assumption College)
161. Roundtable: Media in Teaching Asia – Present Realities and Future Possibilities - Sponsored by the Committee on Teaching About Asia (Anne Prescott, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign)
162. Urban Governance in Colonial and Contemporary Asian Cities: The Intersection of History and Planning (Howard Spodek, Temple University)
163. Unearthing Asian STM Historical Research Materials: Images and Texts (Tomoko Y. Steen, Library of Congress)
164. Direction of India’s Regional Policy: Realist Calculations or Democratic Values? (Jalal Alamgir, University of Massachusetts, Boston)
165. Translation in South Asian History (John E. Cort, Denison University)
166. Religion and the Concept of the People in Modern India (Rupa Viswanath, University of Pennsylvania)
167. Dangerous Histories in Southeast Asia: Discomforting Narratives (Thongchai Winichakul, University of Wisconsin, Madison)
168. Differences in Memories and Conditions of Communications (Byoung-joo Hwang, National Institute of Korean History)
169. The Japanese Seizure of Korea: A Centennial Retrospective - Sponsored by the Committee on Korean Studies (Wayne Patterson, St. Norbert College)
170. Queer and Gender Crossing: Gender Negotiation Through Linguistic Practices (Hideko Nornes Abe, Colby College)
171. Society, Genre, and the Translation of Heian Culture in Medieval and Early Modern Japan (Tomoko Sakomura, Swarthmore College)
172. Material Things: Objects in 1950s and 1960s Japanese Film and Fiction (Helen F. Weetman, University of Denver)
173. Art and War in Twentieth-Century Japan and the Koreas (Dafna Zur, University of British Columbia)
174. A Marginality Debate: Regional Formation and Transhistorical Perspectives on South China and the Pearl River Delta (Carolyn L. Cartier, University of Technology, Sydney)
175. Old Classics, New Women: Three Rewritten Tales of Female Empowerment in Modern China (Jin Feng, Grinnell College)
176. The Return of the Repressed: Aspects of the Confucian Revival in Contemporary Chinese Society (Kenneth J. Hammond, New Mexico State University)
177. Roundtable: “Memory of the Past, Capital of the Present”: Red Legacy in China (Carma Hinton, George Mason University)
178. Reassessing the Chinese Corporatist State: Sixty Years Onwards (Jennifer Hsu, University of Cambridge)
179. Mutual Adaptations of the State and Religion in China (Andre Laliberte, University of Ottawa)
180. Labor Flexibility and Regulation in Chinese Industries (Mingwei Liu, Rutgers University)
181. “All in the Family”: Hereditary Power in the Qing Government (Lawrence L. Zhang, Bowdoin College)
182. Individual Papers: Contemporary Chinese Politics and Society II (Elizabeth J. Remick, Tufts University)
183. Presidential Roundtable: After Reformasi: Trends in Southeast Asian Muslim Politics and Culture (Robert W. Hefner, Boston University)
184. Chairman Mao’s Invisible Hand: Revolutionary Legacies and Adaptive Authoritarianism (Elizabeth J. Perry, Harvard University)
185. Queer Asian Subjects: Transgressive Sexualities and Heteronormative Meanings (Evelyn Blackwood, Purdue University)
186. Borders Crossed: The Liaodong Frontier in Qing-Choson Relations (Seonmin Kim, Keimyung University)
187. Buddhist Art and Its Functions for Temples, Local Communities, and the State (Jessica L. Patterson, Reed College)
188. The Impact of Japanese 2009 Elections on Foreign Policy (Kazuhiko Togo, Kyoto Sangyo University)
189. Laboring in the Region: Workers, Youth, and the Making of Modern Subjects in Asia (Woonkyung Yeo, University of Washington)
190. The Task(s) of Translation from South Asia (Linda Hess, Stanford University)
191. Nation as Process: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Formation of National Identities in South Asia (Nita Verma Prasad, Quinnipiac University)
192. Roundtable: New Directions in the Study of Intellectual History and Political Culture in South Asia - Sponsored by the South Asia Council (Anupama Rao, Barnard College, Columbia University)
193. The Colonial City in a War of Decolonization: Socio-Cultural Approaches for a History of Saigon and Hanoi during the Indochina Conflict (1945–54) (Christopher E. Goscha, University of Quebec at Montreal)
194. Gendered Narratives of Islam in Indonesia: Performing Piety, Aurality, and Representation - Sponsored by the Indonesia and East Timor Studies Committee (Laurie M. Ross, University of California, Berkeley)
195. Collaboration, Cooperation, and Co-Production in South Korea’s East Asian Cinema (Youngmin Choe, University of Southern California)
196. Reflecting Heaven, Ritualizing Below: Early Choson Rituals and Politics (Se-Woong Koo, Stanford University)
197. Exegetical Circumscriptions: Medieval and Early Modern Approaches to Tales of Ise (Jamie L. Newhard, Washington University, St. Louis)
198. Family and House in Premodern Japan: An Exploration of the Uesugi (David Spafford, University of Washington)
199. Edifying the Japanese Masses Through National History: A Transwar Perspective (Kiyoshi Ueda, Independent Scholar)
200. Workshop: Funding Opportunities Through the Japan-US Friendship Commission and the National Endowment for the Humanities (Russell M. Wyland, National Endowment for the Humanities)
201. Exploring the Boundaries of Japaneseness Through Minority Populations (Jane H. Yamashiro, Loyola Marymount University)
202. The Local Power Nexus (Hans Hendrischke, University of New South Wales)
203. Democratizing Democracy: Politics of Social Movements in Contemporary Taiwan (Ming-sho Ho, National Taiwan University)
204. Desire and Anxiety: The Portrayal of Women in Chinese Literature and Culture (Qiulei Hu, Harvard University)
205. From Old Mission to New Enterprise: Cultural and Religious Positioning of Christian Missionaries in China (Ya-pei Kuo, International Institute for Asian Studies)
206. Boundary Reconstruction in China’s Expanding Urban Spaces: Comparative Perspectives on Governance, Citizenship, and Social Stratification (Sally Sargeson, Australian National University)
207. “Moving Beyond Disciplinary Boundaries: New Options for Advanced Learners of Chinese” - Sponsored by Chinese Language Teachers (Madeline K. Spring, Arizona State University)
208. Tradition and Renewal in Chinese Medical History (Daniel M. Trambaiolo, Princeton University)
209. Enough Said? The Persistence of Orientalism in a Post-Orientalist World (Thomas Shawn Mullaney, Stanford University)
210. Who Owns the Past? Views on the Koguryo History Dispute in East Asia (Mark E. Byington, Harvard University)
211. Science and Total War in Twentieth-Century East Asia, 1931–1967 (Seung-joon Lee, National University of Singapore)
212. Roundtable: Asian Studies Versus Security Studies: Culturing Strategy or Strategizing Culture? (Andrew Scobell, Texas A & M University)
213. Rethinking the Chinese World: Beyond National Boundaries, 1840–1970 (Leander Seah, University of Pennsylvania)
214. Roundtable: Is Bangladesh Now/Again a Democracy, or Not? (Harry W. Blair, Yale University)
215. Is there a Religious-Secular Divide in the Indian Traditions? (Jakob De Roover, Ghent University)
216. From the Hindu Kush to the Ganges: Nomads and Traders, Laborers and Poets, Pilgrims and Refugees - Sponsored by the South Asia Council (Alessandro Monsutti, Yale University)
217. The Weave of Death: Funerary Cloths in Art and Ritual in Southeast Asian Buddhism - Sponsored by Thailand, Laos, Cambodia Studies (Erik W. Davis, Macalester College)
218. Political Islam and Electoral Behavior: Indonesia in Comparison (Jennifer L. Epley, University of Michigan)
219. Roundtable: United States Policy Toward Southeast Asia: Opportunities and Obstacles for the Obama Administration (Ann Marie Murphy, Seton Hall University)
220. Domestic Political Conflict in the Democratic Republic of Vietnam During the Late 1950s (Peter Zinoman, University of California, Berkeley)
221. Women, Family, and the State in Korea (Dong-No Kim, Yonsei University)
222. The National and the Transnational in Korean Popular Music (Pil Ho Kim, University of Wisconsin, Madison)
223. Memories of Meiji: 19th Century Nationalism Re-Imagined in Popular Fiction and Film (Stephen Filler, Oakland University)
224. Literary Genres and their Boundaries: A Study of Cross-Genre/Trans-Genre Mechanisms and Genre Hybridity in Edo-Period Literature (Laura Moretti, Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia)
225. Reframing Discourses of Women’s Liberation in 1950s–1970s Japan: Labor, the Family, and Reproduction (James Welker, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign)
226. Institutional Change and Interest Representation in Contemporary China (Bruce Dickson, George Washington University)
227. Reading Between the Fine Lines: Non-Visual Meaning in Song and Ming Paintings: A Panel in Honor of Professor Emerita Ellen Johnston Laing (Susan N. Erickson, University of Michigan, Dearborn)
228. The Cultural Politics of Marriage in the Contemporary PRC and Taiwan: Tradition and Change (Gareth J. Fisher, Syracuse University)
229. The National and Transnational in Chinese Literary Studies (Ning Ma, Tufts University)
230. Roundtable: The Environmental History of the Qing - Sponsored by the Society for Qing Studies (Micah Muscolino, Georgetown University)
231. Reading Feng Menglong’s Sanyan Collections of Vernacular Fiction (Sufeng Xu, Lafayette College)
232. Roundtable: Our Libraries, Our Histories, Ourselves: A Century (and More) of East Asian Collections and East Asian Studies (Mary E. Berry, University of California, Berkeley)
233. Islamic Social and Political Movements in Contemporary Asia (Thomas P. Gibson, University of Rochester)
234. Global Hinduism and Material Expressions of Belonging (Hanna H. Kim, Adelphi University)
235. Globalization and State Power: China, Japan, and Taiwan (Chao-Chi Lin, National Chengchi University)
236. Picturing the Foreign: Images of East and West in Visual and Literary Culture from 1400 to Present (Xiaoling Shi, Rhodes College)
237. Global Shakespeare and East Asia (Robert Tierney, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign)
238. The Intraregional Imperative: East Asian Literatures, Linguistic Allegiances, and Colonial Reevaluations (Jing Tsu, Yale University)
239. Imperial Re-Visions: Architecture and Imagined Communities from Colonial India to the Indian Nation (Alison M. Shah, University of Colorado, Denver)
240. Roundtable: The Political and Social Ecology of the City in India - Sponsored by the Hong Kong Institite for Humanities and Social Sciences (K. Sivaramakrishnan, Yale University)
241. (Re)presentations of 1940s Bengal: The 1943 Famine, 1946 Calcutta/Noakhali Riots and 1947 Partition (Erin E. O’Donnell, East Stroudsburg University)
242. The Material Heritage of the Second World War in Indonesia (William B. Horton, Keio University)
243. Comparing Across Southeast Asia: Regional Patterns of Politics (Mark R. Thompson, University of Erlangen)
244. Roundtable: Ha Noi: A Thousand Years in the Embrace of the Red River - Sponsored by the Vietnam Studies Group (C. Michele Thompson, Southern Connecticut State University)
245. Roundtable: Burma/Myanmar: The 2010 Elections, the Constitution, Law, and Issues of the Distribution of Power and Legitimacy - Sponsored by the Burma Studies Group (David I. Steinberg, Georgetown University)
246. History as Progress? Agency and Modernity in Korean History (Eugene Y. Park, University of Pennsylvania)
247. Rethinking “Influences” of Modern Art in Korea: Beyond Colonial Discourses (Jung Ah Woo, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology)
248. The New International History and Japan (Frederick R. Dickinson, University of Pennsylvania)
249. Naming Places/Placing Names: A Genealogy of Meisho in Japanese History (1500–1955) (Gyewon Kim, McGill University)
250. New Voices in Asian Studies: Selected Graduate Student Papers from AAS Regional Conferences: Sponsored by the Council of Conferences (Mark E. Lincicome, College of the Holy Cross)
251. New Light on Old Ideas: Bamboo Slip Manuscripts from the Warring States Period - Sponsored by the Study of Early China (Sarah Allan, Dartmouth College)
252. The Rules of Attraction: Explorations in the Cultural and Erotic Dimensions of Chinese Identity (Robert L. Cagle, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign)
253. Speaking of Sex: Issues of Sexuality in Intellectual Debate, Government Regulations, and Popular Storytelling from Song to Contemporary China (Hsiao-wen Cheng, University of Washington)
254. Agricultural Expansion and Ecological Crisis in the Late Qing (Peter Lavelle, Cornell University)
255. Christian Activism and Resistance Strategies in Maoist China (Joseph Tse-Hei Lee, Pace University)
256. State-Society Relations and Public Opinion in China (Daniela Stockmann, Leiden University)
257. Neoliberal Globalization and China’s New Left (Ban Wang, Stanford University)
258. China and the Gulf: The Economic, Strategic, Political, and Cultural Implications of a Revival of the Silk Road (Jacqueline Armijo, Zayed University)
259. Lieux de Mémoire in Asian Art (Melia R. Belli, Washington University, St. Louis)
260. Regionalism in Asia (Marshall A. Clark, Deakin University)
261. “Reading” Mathematics: The Acceptance of Mathematical Knowledge in East Asia (Wann-Sheng Horng, National Taiwan Normal University)
262. A Millennium of Medicine and Empire in East Asia (Hilary A. Smith, Meredith College)
263. Experiencing the Illustrated Book in East Asia (Roberta Wue, University of California, Irvine)
264. Muslim Identity in India: From 19th-Century Qasbati Education to 21st-Century Secularism - Sponsored by the South Asia Muslim Studies Association (Roger D. Long, Eastern Michigan University)
265. Medical Modernities: Medicine, Health, and Hygiene in Colonial South Asia (Rahul Nair)
266. Individual Papers: Empire, Revolt, and Identities in South Asia (Amita Shastri, San Francisco State University)
267. Dissecting Law, Sovereignty, and Citizenship in the Thai Polity (Eli A. Elinoff, University of California, San Diego)
268. Hidden Histories and Submerged Stories from Northwest Vietnam (Christian C. Lentz, Cornell University)
269. Individual Papers: Reflections on Contemporary Indonesian Studies (Justin T. McDaniel, University of Pennsylvania)
270. Fractured Nation, Fractured Identity: A Comparative Look at the Construction of Minjok and Citizens in Postcolonial Korea(s) and Other Divided Countries (Elli S. Kim, University of California, Los Angeles)
271. Building Resilience: The Role of Social and Human Capital in Disaster Recovery in Japan (Daniel P. Aldrich, Purdue University)
272. Negotiating Censorship in Modern Japan (Rachael Hutchinson, University of Delaware)
273. Globalization and the Reconfiguration of Women’s Movements in Japan (Ki-young Shin, Ochanomizu University, Japan)
274. Mr. Science and the Mass Line: Reassessing Science and Policy of the Cultural Revolution (Darryl E. Brock, Fordham University)
275. Perspectives on Contemporary Spirit-Money Offering Rituals (Elana Chipman, State University of New York, Binghamton)
276. Roundtable: China’s New Arrival in World Politics: A Reappraisal (Yong Deng, U. S. Naval Academy)
277. Knowledge, Institutions, and Representations: Indigeneity on China’s Frontiers (Magnus Fiskesjo, Cornell University)
278. China’s New Regulatory State: Social and Economic Regulation Considered (Roselyn Y. Hsueh, Temple University)
279. Love in Tibetan Literature (Sarah H. Jacoby, Northwestern University)
280. Bringing Health Care Services to Vulnerable and Marginalized Groups in China: Perspectives and Evidence from Minorities in Xinjiang, Women and Elderly People (Sascha Klotzbuecher, University of Vienna)
281. Weathering the European Wind and the American Rain: New Perspectives on the Modern Chinese Response to Western Learning (Xi Lian, Hanover College)
282. Functioning of Baojuan Texts in Chinese Popular Religion (David Neil Schmid, North Carolina State University)
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