学部後期課程
HOME 学部後期課程 国際日本研究演習XIXa
過去(2019年度)の授業の情報です
学内のオンライン授業の情報漏洩防止のため,URLやアカウント、教室の記載は削除しております。
最終更新日:2024年3月15日

授業計画や教室は変更となる可能性があるため、必ずUTASで最新の情報を確認して下さい。
UTASにアクセスできない方は、担当教員または部局教務へお問い合わせ下さい。

国際日本研究演習XIXa

Colonial legacies in Modern Southeast Asia
This discussion/ seminar class will explore the legacies of colonialism and its influences in modern Southeast Asian countries. Via the readings on various topics regarding many countries in the region, the class will discuss the traces of colonial modernity that remain and still have impacts on the livelihood of those countries in the following aspects: the creation of the modern states, their politics, rule of law, ethnic or racial relations and conflicts, higher education, and history.
MIMA Search
時間割/共通科目コード
コース名
教員
学期
時限
08C403419
FAS-CA4V35S3
国際日本研究演習XIXa
ウィニッチャクン トンチャイ
A1
水曜5限
マイリストに追加
マイリストから削除
講義使用言語
英語
単位
1
実務経験のある教員による授業科目
NO
他学部履修
開講所属
教養学部
授業計画
Note: * Provided and must read – if there are more than one, please choose one. @ Additional readings, if interested Week 1) Introduction A: Please read this article any time during the class, preferably at the beginning of the class. No summary needed. * Craig Lockard, Southeast Asia in World History, Oxford University Press, 2009, pp.93-151 (chapter 6-8) B. Please read these two articles on colonial modernity any time before the end of the class. No summary needed. * Barbara Andaya, “Historicizing "Modernity" in Southeast Asia”, Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, 40: 4 (1997), pp.391-409 * Pattana Kitiarsa, “An Ambiguous Intimacy: ‘Farang’ as Siamese Occidentalism” in The Ambiguous Allure of the West, ed. Rachel Harrison and Peter A Jackson, 2010, pp. 57-74 Week 2) Dictatorship and Democracy * John Sidel, “Social Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy Revisited: Colonial States and Chinese Immigrants in the Making of Modern Southeast Asia” Comparative Politics, vol.40, no. 2 (Jan., 2008), pp. 127-147 @ Michael Vatikiotis, Blood and Silk: Power and Conflict in Modern Southeast Asia, 2018 Week 3) Rule of Law (or rule by law) * Nick Cheesman, “Rule-of-law Lineages in Colonial and Early Post-colonial Burma”, Modern Asian Studies, 50:2 (2016) pp. 564–601. @ Jothie Rajah, “Rule of Law Lineages: Heroes, Coffins, and Custom”, Law Culture and the Humanities, May 2015, pp. 1-14 Week 4) Modern territorial state * David Henley, “Ethnographic Integration and Exclusion of the Anti-colonial Nationalism: Indonesia and Indochina”, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 37: 2 (Apr 1995), pp.286-324 @ Thongchai, “Maps and the Formation of the Geo-body of Siam”, in Asian Forms of the Nations, ed. Hans Antlov and Stein Tonesson, NIAS and Curzon Press, 1996, pp. 67-91 Week 5) Ethnic Constructions * Daniel Goh, “Colonial Pluralism to Postcolonial Multiculturalism: Race, State Formation and the Question of Cultural Diversity in Malaya and Singapore”, Sociology Compass, 2:1 (2008), pp.232-252 * Stockwell, “The White Man’s Burden and Brown Humanity: Colonialism and Ethnicity in British Malaya”, Southeast Asian Journal of Social Science, 10:1 (1982), pp.44-68 * R.E. Elson, Constructing the Nation: Ethnicity, Race, Modernity and Citizenship in Early Indonesia Thought”, Asian Ethnologist, 6:3 (2005), pp. 145-160 @ Thongchai Winichakul, “The Others Within: Travel and Ethno-spatial Differentiation of Siamese Subjects, 1885-1910,” lead article in Civility and Savagery: the Differentiation of Peoples within the Tai Speaking Polities, ed. Andrew Turton, London: Curzon Press, 2000, pp.38-62. Week 6) History * Maitrii Aung-Thwin, “Remembering Kings: Archives, Resistance and Memory in Colonial and Postcolonial Burma”, Contestations of memory in Southeast Asia, ed. Roxana Waterson and Kwok Kian-Won, NUS Press, 2012, pp.53-82 * Hong and Huang, “The Scripting of Singapore’s National Heroes” in New Terrains in Southeast Asian History, ed. Abu Talib Ahmad and Tan Liok Ee, Singapore University Press, 2003, pp. 219-246 @ Thongchai Winichakul, “Siam’s Colonial Conditions and the Birth of Thai History,” in Unraveling Myths in Southeast Asian Historiography, ed. Volker Grabowsky, Bangkok: Rivers Books, 2011, pp. 23-45 Week 7) Education * Altbach, P. G., “Twisted Roots: The Western Impact on Asian Higher Education”, Higher Education, 18:1, (1989), pp. 9–29. * Molly N. N. Lee, “Higher Education in Southeast
授業の方法
Students MUST do the weekly readings of 20-30 pages (in English) as provided. Additional readings are also provided each week in case any students may be interested. Each class will begin with a summary of the readings. Every student must write up the summary of article(s) they read in 200-250 words (no more than one page) and prepare to report the summary (not reading it) in class.. The discussion will proceed to 1) the criticism and questioning of the readings, and 2) further questions and implications that the readings generate.
成績評価方法
Summaries of the readings and class participation
教科書
None but reading materials will be provided at each session.
参考書
None
履修上の注意
Substantively, the class tries to understand the transformation to modernity in Southeast Asia under the colonial environment that has left many legacies in Southeast Asian countries to this day, not only as ideas but also as social institutions in everyday life. For critical thinking, the comprehension and conceptualization of the assigned readings should lead students to criticism and questioning, and to see the implications beyond the particular cases.
その他
This class is reading intensive. I have prepared the reading package. If you are sure about taking this class, it is advisable that you receive the reading package before the start of the semester. In that case, please write to Taihei OKADA <okada@ask.c.u-tokyo.ac.jp> Taihei Okada