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March 27, 2026

【JF-GJS Fellow Talk Series】 "The Flourishing and Decline of the Central Plains": Seventeenth-Century Tokugawa Depictions of 'China' in Time and Space During the Ming-Qing Transition (April 16, 2026)

From: Global Asian Studies (GAS) <gas@ioc.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
Date: 2026/03/24

Dear members of SSJ-Forum, 

 

We cordially invite you to JF-GJS Fellow Talk Series on April 16 (Thu), 2026. This event will be held in person only. Please register for the form below.

JF-GJS Fellow Talk Series 

"The Flourishing and Decline of the Central Plains": Seventeenth-Century Tokugawa Depictions of 'China' in Time and Space During the Ming-Qing Transition  

・Date and Time: April 16 (Thu), 2026, 11:00-12:30 (JST)

・Venue: Conference Room 1 (304), Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, UTokyo

・Title: "The Flourishing and Decline of the Central Plains": Seventeenth-Century Tokugawa Depictions of 'China' in Time and Space During the Ming-Qing Transition  

Presenters: Chui-Joe Tham 

Chui-Joe Tham is the Geiss Hsu Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow in East Asian Studies at the University of British Columbia. She graduated with a DPhil (PhD) in History from the University of Oxford in 2025. Her research interests are in the transnational intellectual history of East Asia, with a focus on early modern non-state-comissioned historical writing.

・Moderator & Discussant: Joel Littler, JF-GJS Fellow, Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, The University of Tokyo

Registration:  https://forms.gle/vkEAP6wepd9hPNS28

Language: English

・Abstract: 

The Ming-Qing transition (1618-1683) was a military upheaval that not only consumed much of Ming China, but also saw two Manchu invasions of Joseon Korea in 1627 and 1636, and an influx of refugees into Tokugawa Japan. Accounts of the transition written by Ming and early Qing subjects made their way by land and sea to Korea and Japan, where more accounts were produced and circulated by private individuals. At the same time, facillitated by socio-economic developments in print and literacy, there emerged an intellectual shift in East Asia towards contemporaneity, or an awareness amongst educated individuals across territorial borders that they inhabited a shared world.  

Narratives of early modern intellectual history in Tokugawa Japan, specifically in the wake of the Ming-Qing transition, centres on a backward and inward shift, towards the ancient past the one hand, and proto-nationalism on the other. While my presentation challenges neither the importance of intellectual trends such as kōgaku and kokugaku, nor the significance of post-Ming arguments for Japan's cultural centrality, it seeks to draw attention to the concurrent existence of a culture of contemporaneity. Producers and consumers of knowledge not only possessed an interest in the distant past or in the notion of 'Japan' as a polity, but also in recent developments in polities other than their own.  

In this presentation, I will begin with a sketch of the seventeenth-century context in which privately-compiled histories of the recent past were produced and circulated in East Asia about the Ming-Qing transition. Following this, I will examine a number of seventeenth-century texts produced in Tokugawa Japan that conveyed information about the transition, with the aim of illustrating how individual literati organised time and space in order to situate 'China' within a regional 'present'.

 

・Organizer: JF-GJS Initiative, Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, The University of Tokyo

Contact: Joel Littler, joel.littler@ioc.u-tokyo.ac.jp

Best Regards,

Global Asian Studies (GAS) 

https://gas.ioc.u-tokyo.ac.jp

Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia (IASA) at the University of Tokyo

https://www.ioc.u-tokyo.ac.jp/en/

https://www.ioc.u-tokyo.ac.jp

Approved by ssjmod at 01:29 PM