
Kyoto Lectures 2019-03
07 MARCH 19
The Japanese Uses of European Renaissance
Regeneration and Reconstruction in the Modern Period
Francesco Campagnola speaker
Thursday, March 7th, 18:00h @EFEO Kyoto
From the late nineteenth century until at least the end of the Second World War and the immediate postwar period—in a period marked by uncertainty and rapid development— East Asia was flooded with a new set of terms, originally belonging to European and North-American historiography. These words described specific, often opposed, conceptions of change in its relationship to time, space and agency, by means of expressions such as “evolution,” “revolution” or “enlightenment.” They were not simply introduced into the local parlances, but where also resignified and appropriated, and in the process Japan often played the role of the revolving door between “East” and “West.”
This talk will explore a relatively late case of this phenomenon: the Japanese discovery of the European Renaissance in relation to local desires for resurgence, regeneration and reconstruction. It will focus in particular on how Japanese intellectuals, mass media and public officers translated and used the Renaissance as well as historically linked concepts—humanism, civism, and so on—in their struggle to come to terms with epochal changes.
Francesco Campagnola (PhD Sorbonne EPHE), is research assistant at Ghent University, and from May 2019 will take up a new position as investigador principal (equivalent to associate professor on research assignment) at Lisbon University. With a previous background of research on early modern European thought, recently he has been exploring how the Renaissance and its political tradition have been symbolically used in Japan. On this he has published “Whose Renaissance? Changing Paradigms of Rebirth in Interwar Japan” (Global Intellectual History I, 3, I, 3, 2017) and “Crisis and Renaissance in Post-war Japan” (Modern Intellectual History, 15, 2, 2018), and is now writing a book on the same subject at Kyoto University with a grant from the Japan Foundation. Most recently, he was also granted a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Individual Fellowship on Machiavelli and Political Realism in Japan (University of Strasbourg - Free University Berlin).
EFEO
ISEAS
Co-hosted by Institute for Research in Humanities, Kyoto University
kyoto lectures
Regeneration and Reconstruction in the Modern Period
Francesco Campagnola speaker
Thursday, March 7th, 18:00h @EFEO Kyoto
From the late nineteenth century until at least the end of the Second World War and the immediate postwar period—in a period marked by uncertainty and rapid development— East Asia was flooded with a new set of terms, originally belonging to European and North-American historiography. These words described specific, often opposed, conceptions of change in its relationship to time, space and agency, by means of expressions such as “evolution,” “revolution” or “enlightenment.” They were not simply introduced into the local parlances, but where also resignified and appropriated, and in the process Japan often played the role of the revolving door between “East” and “West.”
This talk will explore a relatively late case of this phenomenon: the Japanese discovery of the European Renaissance in relation to local desires for resurgence, regeneration and reconstruction. It will focus in particular on how Japanese intellectuals, mass media and public officers translated and used the Renaissance as well as historically linked concepts—humanism, civism, and so on—in their struggle to come to terms with epochal changes.
Francesco Campagnola (PhD Sorbonne EPHE), is research assistant at Ghent University, and from May 2019 will take up a new position as investigador principal (equivalent to associate professor on research assignment) at Lisbon University. With a previous background of research on early modern European thought, recently he has been exploring how the Renaissance and its political tradition have been symbolically used in Japan. On this he has published “Whose Renaissance? Changing Paradigms of Rebirth in Interwar Japan” (Global Intellectual History I, 3, I, 3, 2017) and “Crisis and Renaissance in Post-war Japan” (Modern Intellectual History, 15, 2, 2018), and is now writing a book on the same subject at Kyoto University with a grant from the Japan Foundation. Most recently, he was also granted a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Individual Fellowship on Machiavelli and Political Realism in Japan (University of Strasbourg - Free University Berlin).
EFEO
ISEAS
Co-hosted by Institute for Research in Humanities, Kyoto University
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DECEMBER NOVEMBER OCTOBER SEPTEMBER AUGUST JULY JUNE MAY APRIL MARCH FEBRUARY JANUARY 2018
2017
2016
2015
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
anna seidel memorial lectures
architecture
cahiers d'extrême-asie
competition
conference
conferences
conferences
conferences
conservation and renovation of architecture in japan
construction
inauguration
jotoshiki
kyoto lectures
kyoto lectures
kyoto lectures
lecture series
library
news
nouvelles
parutions
prices and distinctions
publications
researchers
visiting scholars
workshop