Dear colleagues,
The Graduate School of East Asian Studies at FU Berlin is organizing its annual Graduate Conference on the topic “Sovereignty and Institutions in East Asia”. Please
find below the Call for Papers:
-----
The conference aims to provide an interdisciplinary forum to investigate how the concept of sovereignty has been developed and institutionalized
in the modern and contemporary socio-political landscape of the region. More specifically, it wishes to explore the universality and particularity of the conceptual development of sovereignty in East Asia in relation to its European counterpart.
Referring to the divine right of kings, the Bodinean notion of sovereignty originally sought to legitimize monarchical absolutism. The concept was later radically reinterpreted by
liberal and republican theorists who cemented the idea of social contract. The European ideas about sovereignty reached East Asia in the middle of the 19th century when the Imperial Chinese tributary system confronted Western colonialism, and soon spread across
the region. Imperial Japan imported the concept of sovereignty to legitimize its method of nation-building through Western modernization. Between the two regional powers, Korean intellectuals developed the idea of Yangjeolor the half-suzerain half-sovereign
regime. Such localization of the concept of sovereignty proceeded over time and manifested in historical events as well as institutions in East Asia.
The idea of sovereignty gives rise to an important question: whose authority matters? On the one hand, nation-states have been imagined as the only legitimate source of political authority,
which led to the principle of national sovereignty. On the other hand, there has been a growing consensus worldwide that states should reflect the interests of their citizens, which became crystallized as the democratic ideal of popular sovereignty.
To the East Asian states, q
● Institutions
and sovereignty in East Asia
● Concepts
of sovereignty
● East
Asian regional order and sovereignty
● Regional
cooperation and sovereignty
● Popular
sovereignty, citizen movements and marginalized groups in East Asia
Date: Friday, 22ndNovember 2019
Venue: Freie Universität Berlin
Application requirements:
The conference is open to doctoral candidates and recent PhDs in area studies or social science disciplines related to East Asia. We welcome all disciplines, including but not limited
to sociology, economics, political science, anthropology, gender studies, media studies, cultural studies, law, and history. Each participant is asked to prepare a paper and presentation of 15-20 minutes in English, which will be followed by a discussion with
invited scholars and specialists.
Applicants should submit abstracts (max. 250 words), including the author’s name, institutional affiliation, discipline(s), and a short biography (max. 100 words) by Sunday, 18thAugust
2019. The conference committee will confirm the receipt of abstracts via e-mail and will notify the selected participants. Once selected, the presenters will be requested to submit an extended version of their abstracts (2-5 pages).
Please submit all abstracts and questions to grad.conference.geas@gmail.com
The file name should have the following format: “surname_title.pdf”
|
Attachment:
CfP GEAS Graduate Conference 2019.pdf
Description: CfP GEAS Graduate Conference 2019.pdf