Schedule
1. April 24, Guidance “Japanese and World history in high school education”
HANEDA Masashi, professor of Institute of Oriental Culture , The University of Tokyo
2. April 21 Lecture 1: HANEDA Masashi, Professor of Institute of Oriental Culture, The University of Tokyo “the formation of modern historical science in 19th Europe and world dissemination”
3. April 28, Lecture 2: YOSHIZAWA Seiichiro, Associate professor of Graduate School of Humanities and Sociology, The University of Tokyo “Modern Japan and study of Oriental researches”
4. May 12, Lecture 3: YOSHIZAWA Seiichiro, associate Professor of graduate school; of Humanities and Sociology, The University of Tokyo “New-historical studies in modern China”
5. May 19 Lecture 4: Hiroshi Mitani, Professor of Graduate school of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo “Pre-modernization and modernization in East Asia and Japan
6. June 2, Lecture 5: Jayeeta SHAMA, Assistant Professor of Department of History, Carnegie Mellon University “History Writing in Pre-Colonial Regions and Empires of South Asia”
7. June 9, Lecture 6: Jayeeta SHAMA, Assistant Professor of Department of History, Carnegie Mellon University, “History Writing by South Asian Intellectuals in an Age of Colonial Modernity”
8. June 15, Lecture 7: Mansur SEFATGOL, Assistant Professor of Department of History, University of Tehran “Perception of history world history in Iran”
9. June 23, Lecture 8: SHIRAISHI Saya, Professor of Graduate School of Education, The University of Tokyo “Historical perception in 17th Southeast Asia”
10. June 30, Lecture 9: Rudolf Mrázek, Professor of Department of History, University of Michigan “Historian and History Writing: Case of Modern Southeast Asia”
11. July 7, Lecture 10: Philip YAMPOLSKY, The Ford Foundation Jakarta “Indonesian Regional Music in New Medium”
12. July 11, Lecture 11: SHIRAISHI Saya, Professor of Graduate School of Education, The University of Tokyo “Colonial rule and perceptions of history in Southeast Asia”
13. July 14, Summation and discussion
HANEDA Masashi, Professor of Institute of Oriental Culture, The University of Tokyo “How should be write about World History”