ACAS 2023: 17TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE ON ASIAN STUDIES: INTERPRETATION AND MISINTERPRETATION
PROGRAM

Days: Friday, November 24th Saturday, November 25th

Friday, November 24th

View this program: with abstractssession overviewtalk overview

08:30-09:00 Registration

Registration desk will remain open for the duration of the conference

Location: 2.40
09:00-09:20 Welcoming Remarks

Welcoming remarks

Location: Room A | 2.56
09:30-11:30 Session 1A: Texts and Their Interpretation
Location: Room A | 2.56
09:30
The Complexity of Textual Research: A Case Study of Guo Pu and Hao Yixing’s Commentaries on Shanhaijing (on-site) (abstract)
10:00
Perceiving and Enlightenment: An Interpretation of the Chapter "Zunshouzhang" from Shitao's Art Theoretical Treatise "Huayulu" (on-site) (abstract)
10:30
A Discussion of Problems in Interpreting Ci 詞 Poetry in the Qing Era (online) (abstract)
11:00
Evidential learning without objects? Revisiting the Epistemological Perspectives of Wang Fuzhi and Fang Yizhi (on-site) (abstract)
09:30-11:30 Session 1B: Gender and Feminism
Location: Room B | 2.43
09:30
South Korea's gender conflict and its impact on the 2022 Presidential elections (on-site) (abstract)
10:00
Representation of Feminism in South Korean Popular Culture (online) (abstract)
10:30
Contemporary Japanese Gender-Neutral Names from the Perspective of Their Bearers (on-site) (abstract)
11:00
Rehabilitating femininity: Discourse struggles and linguistic reclamation of stigmatised feminine internet slang (online) (abstract)
09:30-11:30 Session 1C: Transfer of Knowledge
Location: Room C | 2.44
09:30
A Primary Source Based Study on the Relationship between China’s Reviving Nationalism and Mao-era Young People’s War-Preparing Experiences (online) (abstract)
10:00
To what extent does the evolution of civil service recruitment requirements in the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs represent a change in China’s foreign policy after 2019? (online) (abstract)
10:30
The dissemination of the 64-hexagram diagram of Yijing in Europe and the world map "Kunyu wanguo quantu" in China in the 17th century (on-site) (abstract)
11:00
Misinterpretation of Evidence on the Origin of Cultural Plants: the Case of Brassica rapa in China (on-site) (abstract)
09:30-11:30 Session 1D: Literacy and Literariness in Korea (organized panel)

Zoom link D: https://cesnet.zoom.us/j/97781575366 

Parameters of Literacy and Literariness in Modern Korea: Hermeneutics as Textual Technics

This panel investigates literacy and literariness as broadly constituted by reading, writing, criticism, and machine-mediated analysis while moving between national borders, linguistic/generic modes, and the human and the non-human. Hwang shows how a renowned South Korean critic’s unorthodox interpretation of D.H. Lawrence’s survey of American literature in the 1980s allowed him to advocate for anti-American resistance while critiquing the literature of minjung. Chung explores the aesthetics of recursivity in fabulist postmillennial novels that interpret writing as a form of sociogenetic elaboration overturning the economic reduction of life by neoliberalism. Berthelier compares North and South Korean literary language by leveraging the Large Language Models’ tendency to prefer low perplexity to measure deviations from the generic. Shin develops the idea of elasticity to show how the operations of ChatGPT uncannily mirror the ways humans have already been interpreting and performing in a culture of hyperconnectivity. Taken together, we understand these hermeneutics as relational forms of thinking and embodying language through interpretation and misinterpretation — a textual technics of becoming — while navigating between creation and criticism, fabulism and verisimilitude, the generic and the uncommon, and canon and popular culture.

Location: Room D | 2.64
09:30
Literary Praxis Against Identity Politics: Paik Nak-chung’s Reading of D.H. Lawrence in 1980s’ South Korea (online) (abstract)
10:00
Recursivity as Sociogenetic Elaboration: Hermeneutics of Repetition in Hwang Jung-eun’s Novels of Neoliberal Ennui (on-site) (abstract)
10:30
Generative Writing Degree Zero: Exploring Differences in Literary Values between North and South Korea through Large Language Models (on-site) (abstract)
11:00
Elastic Literacy and Compression Culture: Meaning Making in the Wake of chatGPT (online) (abstract)
09:30-11:30 Session 1E: Japanese Literature
Chair:
Location: Room E | 2.65
09:30
Interpreting Ichijō Kaneyoshi's Shōdanchiyō (on-site) (abstract)
10:00
Regional Tales in the Mōsōbiwa Tradition of Kyushu - Facts and Fiction in Kikuchi Kuzure and Miyako Gassen Chikushi Kudari (on-site) (abstract)
10:30
A Map of Misreading from Fin-de-Siècle Japan: Ōgai and "Literature" (online) (abstract)
11:00
Interpreting the Sokushinbutsu in Rumiko Takahashi’s Inuyasha (online) (abstract)
11:30-13:00Lunch Break
13:00-14:30 Session 2A: China and the Media
Location: Room A | 2.56
13:00
Rivalry on Human Rights: How do the U.S. and China Portray Each Other in Annual Human Rights Reports? (on-site) (abstract)
13:30
Interpretation and Misinterpretation: A Comparative Analysis of Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics' Framing in Chinese and Czech Online News Outlets (online) (abstract)
14:00
CANCELLED! Interpreting Media Guidelines: Unraveling the Linguistic Aspects of Censorship in Mainland China (on-site) (abstract)
13:00-14:30 Session 2B: Art and Its Interpretation
Location: Room B | 2.43
13:00
New Art for the People: the “Sociological Turn” in Contemporary Chinese Art as a Threefold Interpretative Milestone (on-site) (abstract)
13:30
CANCELLED! Contemporary Blue-green landscape painting: Various modes of reinterpretation (on-site) (abstract)
14:00
Diasporic artisans in 17th Century Japan: Exploring the stylistic impacts of mainland Asian metalsmiths on Japanese arms and armor (online) (abstract)
13:00-14:30 Session 2C: Churches and Missionaries
Location: Room C | 2.44
13:00
Skulls and idols: Interpretations of the Asian religions in the Early 20th Century Missionary collections in Slovenia (online) (abstract)
13:30
CANCELLED! "Far away from home". Selected aspects of the activities of the Polish Mission to the Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission on the Korean Peninsula from 1953 to 1990 (on-site) (abstract)
14:00
The pros and cons of the legal status of Vietnamese Protestant churches (on-site) (abstract)
13:00-14:30 Session 2D: Language and Society
Location: Room D | 2.64
13:00
Aboriginal Languages in Taiwan – victims of modernization? (on-site) (abstract)
13:30
Inference and inter-cultural awareness in Italian-Chinese healthcare interpreting (on-site) (abstract)
14:00
Publications of the North Korea’s Foreign Language Press in Arabic in the 1980s (online) (abstract)
13:00-14:30 Session 2E: Linguistics
Chair:
Location: Room E | 2.65
13:00
When personal pronouns behave like interactional particles in Japanese conversational interaction (on-site) (abstract)
13:30
Tokenization and part-of-speech tagging in written Cantonese data (on-site) (abstract)
14:00
CANCELLED! The Part of the Axiosphere of Ancient Chinese Dictionary “Shuo wen jie zi”: A Matter of Hermeneutic Semiotics (online) (abstract)
14:30-15:00Coffee Break
15:00-16:30 Session 3A: Japanese Cultural Texts (organized panel)

Zoom link A: https://cesnet.zoom.us/j/95127605829

The Pitfalls of Universalism: Japanese Cultural Texts Interpreted and Misinterpreted Under the Western Eye

Any cultural text is destined to be brought out of the milieu of its origin to be received by the alien recipients. Naturally, it is highly prone to misinterpretation as the receiver may very well lack the knowledge of linguistic/cultural paradigm that the text has sprung from. The Japanese cultural texts which have been quite favorably received by foreign readers have also been interpreted and badly misinterpreted. While this is a common reality of any socio-cultural encounter, the problem arises when the interpretation is done on the basis of (false) universalism which domesticates the alien cultural phenomena as expressions of the universal, thus common, human sentiments and cultural practice. Such universalism is a gesture to contain the other to one's own familiar paradigm. This panel attempts to explore the function of universalist conceptions that has standardized misinterpretation as (true) interpretation in a few cases of the kind in the history of the dissemination of Japanese cultural texts in the West.

Location: Room A | 2.56
15:00
Music as an Instance of Postcoloniality: Rethinking the Relationship between Music and Literature as a Point of Resistance (on-site) (abstract)
15:30
The Lineage of the "Little Japanese Woman": Do Stereotype Parodies Resonate with Audiences? (on-site) (abstract)
16:00
Laughter as Collective Mis/interpretation: Ariyoshi Sawako’s Furu Amerika ni Sode wa Nurasaji in Kabuki Format (online) (abstract)
15:00-16:30 Session 3B: Interpreting the Past
Chair:
Location: Room B | 2.43
15:00
Discourse on the location of Wanggŏm-sŏng in North Korea (online) (abstract)
15:30
Interpretation vs. Misinterpretation of History: The Evolution of the Idea of India in K.M. Panikkar (online) (abstract)
16:00
Interpreting the Khmer Republic (1970-1975): A question of sources and archives? (online) (abstract)
15:00-16:30 Session 3C: Society and Politics
Location: Room C | 2.44
15:00
Scandal Made in Japan: An Anthropological Interpretation (on-site) (abstract)
15:30
Consumer motivations for buycotting national brands: A case study of the “wild consumption” of ERKE products in China (online) (abstract)
16:00
Interpretation and Misinterpretation: The Assimilation and Erroneous Approaches of the Concept of Civil Society in Japan (online) (abstract)
15:00-16:30 Session 3D: Digital Humanities (organized panel)

Zoom link D: https://cesnet.zoom.us/j/97781575366 

Digital Humanities in Asia: A Phenomenological Approach

This panel aims at highlighting the practical dimensions of digitalization in Asia by observing three socio-cultural phenomena: the employment of artificial intelligence in assessing readers’ preferences and changing relationships to literature (Raluca Nicolae), the users’ rejection of artificial intelligence on creative platforms (Zhao Xinyi) and the tension between what artificial intelligence and the enhancement of the human organism as body and mind was imagined to be in works of visual arts and the development towards current events (Maria Grajdian). The three presenters confront theoretical ideas with real-life phenomena and construct their discourses as architectures grounded in quotidian experiences, compassionately avoiding the traps of academic absolutism: the habit of vicariously extracting facts originating in the everyday texture and emptying them of their existential vitality so that they fit the abstract purpose of yet another ingenious but sadly useless theory. 

Location: Room D | 2.64
15:00
Conversational Narration in Japanese Cell Phone Novels (online) (abstract)
15:30
Enhanced Humanness, Artificial Intelligence and Sensitive Cyborgs in “Ghost in the Shell” (online) (abstract)
16:00
Artificial Stroke and Real Outrage: A Study into User Responses to AI-Generated Art on NetEase Lofter (online) (abstract)
15:00-16:30 Session 3E: Education and Values
Chair:
Location: Room E | 2.65
15:00
A study of the changes regarding 'understanding' in Japanese language education policy (on-site) (abstract)
15:30
Stakeholders’ perspectives on international large-scale assessments: interpreting high-school teachers’ perspectives on PISA in Taiwan (online) (abstract)
16:00
Changing Roles on Different Stages (on-site) (abstract)
17:00-18:00 Guided Walking Tour of Olomouc

free, register at Registration Desk

Saturday, November 25th

View this program: with abstractssession overviewtalk overview

08:30-10:30 Session 4A: Buddhism
Location: Room A | 2.56
08:30
Theravada Buddhism in Sri Lankan karate practitioners’ life: Interpretations and practice of Buddhist virtues (on-site) (abstract)
09:00
Alexandre de Rhodes and his (mis)interpretation of the origin of Buddhism (on-site) (abstract)
09:30
Reception of Ketsubon-kyō (Bloody Pond Sutra) in Japanese Zen Sōtō School: Insights from a Newly Discovered Manuscript (online) (abstract)
10:00
Modern western reinterpretations of early Buddhist female literary characters (on-site) (abstract)
08:30-10:30 Session 4B: Narratives and Discourses
Location: Room B | 2.43
08:30
Ours is the Past. The Indus Valley Civilization in South Asian nationalist discourses (on-site) (abstract)
09:00
CANCELLED! Locating the victim: Coverage of Russia’s War Against Ukraine in Indian Printed Media (online) (abstract)
09:30
CANCELLED! Shame, Honour and Gender: Tamil women in the Tamil Refugee Camps. (online) (abstract)
10:00
CANCELLED! Telling A Leftist Story: Narratives of Communist Women from Bombay (online) (abstract)
08:30-10:00 Session 4C: Vietnamese Diaspora and Migration (organized panel)

Zoom link C: https://cesnet.zoom.us/j/99845608827

Networking in Vietnamese Diaspora and Migration

The panel is looking at the Vietnamese internal and external migration and, through the proposed presentations, it will show that the migrants face various forms of migrants precarity, how they resist precarity, and what are the consequences of the resistance/facing precarity. The panel will show that by transplanting the socio-economic model from Vietnam to the host society, the first generation of Vietnamese extends various migrant precarity to the second-generation Vietnamese living in the Czech Republic. Here, the migrant precarity produces a higher degree of psychological burden leading to more frequent development of mental illnesses within the diaspora, compared to the society-at-large. Then, the panel will show that also in internal Vietnamese economic migration, the migrants face similar problems and precarity. To resist those problems, they create various social and religious networks. Finally, the panel will show how the migrant precarity faced by the first-generation migrants leads to inter-generational conflicts that are depicted by a comparative study of how the heterosexual and homosexual members of the 1.5 and second-generation Vietnamese negotiate over their romantic/marital partners from the non-co-ethnic cultural environment.

Location: Room C | 2.44
08:30
The State, Family, and Money: Sources of Migrants' Precarity in Vietnamese Diaspora Living in the Czech Republic (on-site) (abstract)
09:00
Mental Health in Vietnamese Diaspora Living in the Czech Republic (online) (abstract)
09:30
Going Out: Vietnamese Diasporic Subjectivity and Inter-Generational Conflicts over Romantic Partnership of the Second Generation in Vietnamese Diaspora in the Czech Republic (on-site) (abstract)
08:30-10:00 Session 4D: Literature and Environment
Location: Room D | 2.64
08:30
The ‘Species Horizon’ in Mo Yan and Yan Lianke. An Ecocritical Reinterpretation. (online) (abstract)
09:00
Soviet Environmental Exploitation in the Works of Two Central Asian Authors (online) (abstract)
09:30
Looking at the East through the Chinese lens: A Multidisciplinary Study of Ma Huan’s The Overall Survey of the Ocean (online) (abstract)
08:30-10:30 Session 4E: Misinterpretation in Poetry (organized panel)

Zoom link E: https://cesnet.zoom.us/j/91525860214

Translative Affinities. Misinterpretation in Poetry: Theories, Texts and Translation Practise

When it comes to poetry, misinterpretation is a fairly common hazard. The multiplicity of meanings semantically and phonologically conveyed by words, verses and poems through silent readings or oral performances allows several interpretations, which may lead to the distortion of the original texts or, on the contrary, to new understandings able to disclose the full potential of poetry and reveal other perspectives. Through case studies of misinterpretation, re-creation, and mediation in the field of poetic theories, text interpretation and translation, the panel intends to explore the creative potential of misinterpretation and its repercussions in poetry.

Location: Room E | 2.65
08:30
Interpretation and Misinterpretation of Poetic Theories: Ji Xian’s Horizontal Transplantation as Case Study (online) (abstract)
09:00
Text, Context, Voice, Interpretation and Re-Creation: The Poetry of Chen Li (online) (abstract)
09:30
Italian Poetry in Taiwan: Interpretations and Misinterpretations within a Selection of the Translated and Circulated Works (online) (abstract)
10:00
The Unbearable Lightness of Punning: Deeds and Misdeeds in Translating Chinese Poetry (online) (abstract)
10:30-11:00Coffee Break
11:00-12:30 Session 5A: Marginalized Voices
Location: Room A | 2.56
11:00
Transnational Grassroots Activism and Historical Revisionism: a Comprehensive Examination of the ‘End Comfort Women Fraud’ demonstration in Berlin (online) (abstract)
11:30
‘We are Original Muslims’: Muslim Barbers and Imagining Egalitarianism in Islam in South India (online) (abstract)
12:00
CANCELLED! The Controversial Behaviour of the CCP Leadership Towards the Rural Masses in Post-Revolutionary China: A Reappraisal Based on Archival Documents from Jiangxi Province (online) (abstract)
11:00-12:30 Session 5B: Southeast Asia
Location: Room B | 2.43
11:00
Southeast Asian middle powers’ approaches to US-China strategic competition and the implications for the East Asian security order: a comparative study of Vietnam and Indonesia (online) (abstract)
11:30
“Japan is a big brother; Thailand is a little brother”: Collaborations, Conflicts, Misunderstandings, and Negotiations between Thailand and Japan during the Second World War, 1941-1945 (online) (abstract)
12:00
Debating the interpretation of April 30th among the young Vietnamese Diaspora (on-site) (abstract)
11:00-12:00 Session 5C: Rites and Artifacts
Location: Room C | 2.44
11:00
Mysterious marks on tea ceremony utensils of the Momoyama period (on-site) (abstract)
11:30
Examining clay figurines of keyhole-shaped tombs in Korea’s South Chŏlla region (online) (abstract)
11:00-12:30 Session 5D: Old Siam (organized panel)

Zoom link D: https://cesnet.zoom.us/j/97781575366

Old Siam: Carrefour of Civilizations

Situated at the crossroads between the Indian Ocean, the Malay archipelago, and the South China Sea, the Kingdom of Siam (present-day Thailand) served, for most of its history, as an important entrepôt for the exchange of goods and ideas. Despite centuries of uninterrupted statehood, only a limited number of indigenous sources is available for the reconstruction of the Siamese kingdom’s premodern history. Changes in mentality and identity as well as shifts in etiquette, thought and worldview, remain particularly elusive. Subliminal, seemingly self-evident or otherwise not noteworthy views, attitudes and (mis)conceptions often rise to the level of consciousness and enter the historical record, only in contexts of – occasionally confrontational – encounters with foreign practices and ideas. Therefore, this panel seeks to harness the potential for enhancing scholarly insight into the historical experience of the Siamese people by examining the written artifacts left behind by interactions between merchants, missionaries, diplomats, and local political and cultural elites.

Location: Room D | 2.64
11:00
Embassies, ritual and cross-cultural encounters between Siam and Europe (c. 1600-1688) (online) (abstract)
11:30
The Interpretation of Christian Cosmology in Siamese Language: The Case Study of Louis Laneau’s Literary Works (online) (abstract)
12:00
On the Perception of the Vedas and Various Indic Arts in Premodern Siam (online) (abstract)
11:00-12:30 Session 5E: Contemporary Literature and Musical Theater
Location: Room E | 2.65
11:00
Female Homosocial Bonds in Wang Anyi’s novella “Brothers” (online) (abstract)
11:30
CANCELLED! Exploring the Interplay of AI and Human Creativity in Chinese Literature: Interpretations, Misinterpretations, and Reinterpretations (online) (abstract)
12:00
“To Love or Not To Love”: The Romeo and Juliet Franchise and Its Global Ramifications (online) (abstract)
12:30-14:00Lunch Break
14:00-15:30 Session 6A: Literary Landscapes
Location: Room F | 1.69
14:00
Baima Nazhen: Translating Tibetan women’s experience into Sinophone literature (on-site) (abstract)
14:30
Creating and interpreting polyphonic landscapes: Translingual Sinophone paradigms in Taiwanese contemporary fiction (online) (abstract)
15:00
Place, Transnation and the Construction of Cultural Identity in Merlinda Bobis' White Turtle and The Long Siesta as a Language Primer (online) (abstract)
14:00-15:30 Session 6B: Chinese Paintings and Photographs (organized panel)

Zoom link B: https://cesnet.zoom.us/j/99903932863

Limits of Interpretation: Clothing on Chinese Paintings and Historical Photographs

This panel deals with the way of depiction of historical clothing in Chinese traditional paintings and historical photographs which date from the 19th century and from the turn of the 19th and the 20th centuries, respectively. Given the fact that clothing usually defines an individual's position in a structured society, the panelists eventually entreat whether clothing in traditional painting can be perceived as real, or exagerated; whether portraits depict the clothing of the period faithfully. Drawing on the vast collection at Náprstek museum, Prague, the panelists studied a number of paintings of both living and deceased persons (so-called ancestral portraits), juxtaposing them with extant Chinese clothing from the same collection, e.g., the dragon robes with rank insignia, also depicted in many portraits of the Qing dynasty scholar-officials. Historical photographs of high-ranking Manchu families, taken by Enrique Stanko Vráz in Beijing in Spring 1901, were examined, too. Although the photographs would appear to capture realistically the period clothing, its array and the historical context (the Boxer Uprising) must be considered. An interesting, albeit in many ways complicated and ambiguous visual source for the study of Chinese historical clothing, and clothing accessories, is the figurative genre of “paintings of gentlewomen” or “paintings of beautiful women”. In general, these works depict a figure of an anonymous palace beauty, but more broadly they also include scenes with the characters of famous and talented women from Chinese history and literature. This characterization also underlies the tradition of depicting women's clothing within this painting genre, which is often subject to considerable idealization and iconographic conventions. The depicted clothing mostly does not correspond to the contemporary fashion or the national composition of the society, but it does reflect some fundamental cultural and socio-political themes of the time. 

Location: Room B | 2.43
14:00
The meaning and interpretation of clothing in ancestral portraits (on-site) (abstract)
14:30
The authority of the imperial official: dragon robes, portraits and photopictures in the Náprstek Museum (on-site) (abstract)
15:00
Women's Clothing and the theme of 'Beautiful Women' in Chinese Figure Painting (on-site) (abstract)
14:00-15:00 Session 6C: Japanese Thought
Location: Room C | 2.44
14:00
Benefits and pitfalls of interpreting the other, re-interpreting the self (online) (abstract)
14:30
Brain Bread or Brain Dead?: “Rice Makes You Stupid” and the Curious Case of Nutrition as Stigmatized Knowledge in Postwar Japan (online) (abstract)
14:00-15:30 Session 6D: "Telling China's Story Well"
Chair:
Location: Room D | 2.64
14:00
Female Comrades, Come Together to Build Socialism: Whether and How Understandings of Socialism Entwined with Understandings of Gender Topics in China (online) (abstract)
14:30
Shaping Chinese culture: Yue Fei’s story of inspiration (online) (abstract)
15:00
Another Reading of the People’s Republic of China’s History: Fang Fang’s The Scenery (online) (abstract)
14:00-15:30 Session 6E: Europe-Asia Relations and the Indo-Pacific (1/2) (organized panel)

Zoom link E: https://cesnet.zoom.us/j/91525860214

Europe-Asia relations and regional stakeholders’ policies amid Sino-US “extreme competition” in the Indo-Pacific (1/2)  

The economic and geostrategic competition between China and the United States has strong implications for the strategies and policies of the Indo-Pacific nations, but also the European Union’s (EU) relations with the region. Moreover, since Xi Jinping became President, China’s relations with most Western, but also many Indo-Pacific nations deteriorated. Dialogue and cooperation in many policy areas are stalled, increasing the risk of costly misinterpretation, which could ultimately lead to military conflict. This panel will explore the policies of great, middle, and small powers in the Indo-Pacific from the perspectives of Area Studies, International Relations, and Comparative Politics. Europe’s tilt to the Indo-Pacific, exemplified by the EU’s support for buttressing the rules-based order in the South China Sea and its closer cooperation with ASEAN states, as well as China’s perception of European strategic intentions will be examined. A specific case study illustrating the complexity of Europe-China ties deals with China’s relations with Beijing-friendly Hungary. In order to strengthen their strategic autonomy, most small ASEAN members, including Singapore, follow a hedging strategy. Their aim is to avoid becoming too dependent on either China or the US. Middle powers such as Australia, Indonesia, Japan, and South Korea have bigger strategic leeway. By cooperating with each other, they can establish communities of practice and contribute to maintaining the rules-based order in the Indo-Pacific. All in all, this panel, consisting of two sessions, will provide new insights into the emerging policies in the Indo-Pacific. In part, it will build on the preliminary results of the EU-funded Twinning project “The EU in the volatile Indo-Pacific region” (EUVIP).  

Location: Room E | 2.65
14:00
Why Singaporeans choose the US over China: An analysis of public opinion polling (on-site) (abstract)
14:30
Middle Powers in the Indo-Pacific: stakeholders of stability? (online) (abstract)
15:00
Interpreting and misinterpreting cybertechnologies as a security threat – Japan’s view on China (on-site) (abstract)
15:30-16:00Coffee Break
16:00-17:30 Session 7A: Indian Cinema and Literature
Location: Room F | 1.69
16:00
Breaking Stereotypes on Screen: Subverting Caste Narratives in Contemporary Hindi Cinema (online) (abstract)
16:30
CANCELLED! Cinema and the "Regional" in 'Home Cinemas' of Kerala (on-site) (abstract)
17:00
Writing in the late eighteenth-century Kerala: the case of Varthamanappusthakam (1785) (online) (abstract)
16:00-17:30 Session 7B: Japanese Culture
Location: Room B | 2.43
16:00
Kuniyoshi and the heroes of Suikoden (on-site) (abstract)
16:30
A nikuhitsu-ga by Gion Seitoku conserved in the public collections of Chile (online) (abstract)
17:00
Yūrakuza kodomo no hi 有楽座子供の日 and its role in creating the playground for childlike children in Taishō era (online) (abstract)
16:00-17:30 Session 7C: Sinophone Literature
Location: Room C | 2.44
16:00
Blocking the View: Treacherous Mountains and Rivers in Meng Jiao and Li He’s Poems (online) (abstract)
16:30
The Forgotten Chinese Elegy in Nanyang: A Comparative study on the Writing of Nanyang of Wang Anyi and Ng Kim Chew (online) (abstract)
17:00
The Outcast Hero: Alternative Representations of Liu Yong in Yuan-Ming Drama and Fiction (online) (abstract)
16:00-17:00 Session 7D: Interpretation of Law
Chair:
Location: Room D | 2.64
16:00
The Image and Perception of Roman Law in Late-Qing and Early Republican China (online) (abstract)
16:30
Interpretation of Edo period law in the Meiji era (online) (abstract)
16:00-17:30 Session 7E: Europe-Asia Relations and the Indo-Pacific (2/2) (organized panel)

Zoom link E: https://cesnet.zoom.us/j/91525860214

Europe-Asia relations and regional stakeholders’ policies amid Sino-US “extreme competition” in the Indo-Pacific (2/2)  

The economic and geostrategic competition between China and the United States has strong implications for the strategies and policies of the Indo-Pacific nations, but also the European Union’s (EU) relations with the region. Moreover, since Xi Jinping became President, China’s relations with most Western, but also many Indo-Pacific nations deteriorated. Dialogue and cooperation in many policy areas are stalled, increasing the risk of costly misinterpretation, which could ultimately lead to military conflict. This panel will explore the policies of great, middle, and small powers in the Indo-Pacific from the perspectives of Area Studies, International Relations, and Comparative Politics. Europe’s tilt to the Indo-Pacific, exemplified by the EU’s support for buttressing the rules-based order in the South China Sea and its closer cooperation with ASEAN states, as well as China’s perception of European strategic intentions will be examined. A specific case study illustrating the complexity of Europe-China ties deals with China’s relations with Beijing-friendly Hungary. In order to strengthen their strategic autonomy, most small ASEAN members, including Singapore, follow a hedging strategy. Their aim is to avoid becoming too dependent on either China or the US. Middle powers such as Australia, Indonesia, Japan, and South Korea have bigger strategic leeway. By cooperating with each other, they can establish communities of practice and contribute to maintaining the rules-based order in the Indo-Pacific. All in all, this panel, consisting of two sessions, will provide new insights into the emerging policies in the Indo-Pacific. In part, it will build on the preliminary results of the EU-funded Twinning project “The EU in the volatile Indo-Pacific region” (EUVIP).  

Location: Room E | 2.65
16:00
Beijing eyes Brussels: Chinese perceptions of the European tilt to the Indo-Pacific (on-site) (abstract)
16:30
The role of the EU and ASEAN in managing the dispute in the South China Sea  (on-site) (abstract)
17:00
The CCP’s “elite capture” and China’s soft power in Hungary (on-site) (abstract)