Dear colleagues, we would like to cordially invite you to our extended GEAS Digital Lecture Series: East Asian Responses To Crisis!
In our digital summer term 2021, once each month, scholars from GEAS and FUB colleagues continue discussing responses to the current Covid-19 pandemic by people in East Asia as well as in Germany.
Next lectures in our series: 29.04.2021 at 12:00-14:00 PM (CEST) Indian cooks in Japan at the mercy of their bosses and the state? – Impacts of COVID-19 Megha Wadhwa (Sophia University/Freie Universität Berlin) The salary of a cook working in an Indian restaurant in Tokyo averages between
¥50,000 and
¥150,000 per month depending on their experience and the owner of the restaurant. The average Indian cook’s life revolves around the restaurant as they spend most of their
waking hours at the restaurant and most of them share accommodation with the other cooks they work with. The presentation would reflect on the impact of COVID-19 on the cooks who are in a challenging position, having lost work hours and income and with hardly
any opportunities outside of Indian restaurant industry due to their limited education and language skills. On the other hand, the owners are struggling with the financial and occupational risks. Through the voices of both the owners and the cooks, Megha would
document the experiences within a single ethnic community, and even a single enterprise, that has been tested by the virus. She would also show a 7-minute documentary in which the cooks share their work experiences in India and Japan. Megha Wadhwa is a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Institute of Comparative Culture, Sophia University. Her research focuses since 2013 has focused on the Indian Diaspora in Japan. She has
written several articles on the Indian Community for The Japan Times and is also the author of
Indian Migrants in Tokyo: A Study of Socio-Cultural, Religious and Working Worlds.
(Routledge 2021). She has been conducting research about Indian migrant restaurateurs and cooks since 2017 as part of the Sophia Research Project on Priority Areas ‘Refugees and new migrant support: the role of the Church, other religious groups, and Civil
Society Organizations (CSOs) in the sustainable social integration of the displaced population into Japan’. Megha will be presenting her recently published paper:
“In the Age of COVID-19 – Indian restaurants and the Indian cooks in Japan” in the Asia
Pacific Journal: Japan Focus. The next lecture will take place 18 May 2021: Kimiko Suda will talk about anti-Asian discrimination.
Graduate School of East Asian Studies |