Introduction | p3 |
Opening Remarks | Chiharu Takenaka | p7 |
▼ Politics of Historical Pedagogy: The Indian Predicament | Tanika Sarkar | p11
|
▼ Reason or Reasoning? Clio or Siva? | Sanjay Seth | p25
|
▼ "World History" as Method | Kiyoshi Kojima | p45
|
▼ Commentary | Rajyashree Pandey | p55
|
▼ Discussion | p59
|
▼ Reareading Nationalist Historiography-Expreriences and Reflections from the 1980s |
Reynaldo C. Ileto | p75 |
▼ Colletive Memory in a "Globalized" Society: The debate on the Phillippine Revolution Reconsidered |
Yoshiko Nagano | p99 |
▼ Commentary | Tessa Morris-Suzuki | p123 |
▼ Discussion | p127 |
Session3- Reconstructing the National Narrative (Chair: Hatsue Shinohara)
▼ American Lineages of Filipino Official Nationalism Patricio N. Abinales p139▼ Making Sense of Malaysia Donna J. Amoroso p155▼ Commentary Kiichi Fujiwara p175▼ Discussion p181
<Second Day>
Session4 -Recovering the Memory of Violence (Chair: Shigeki Takeo)
▼ Ghosts, Historians, and Truth about the Past Daqing Yang p195▼ The Politics in a Partition Riot: Calcutta in August 1946 Nariaki Nakazato p221▼ Can the Victims Speak? Gendered Wars in 1990s and 2000s Chiharu Takenaka p259▼ Commentary Tanika Sarkar p287▼ Discussion p295
Session5 - Writing History under the American Hegemony
(Chair:Michael Watson)
▼ Who are to be Remembered? Politics of War Commemoration in Japan
Kiichi Fujiwara p309▼ Teaching of the Atomic Bomb as History: A Challenge to Transnational History
Hatsue Shinohara p327▼ What is to be Filmed? Visual Representation and the Writing of History Tessa Morris-Suzuki p339▼ Commentary Patricio N. Abinales p359▼ Discussion p365
Session6- Discussion and Summary (Chair: Chiharu Takenaka)
▼ Discussion and Summary p377
Closing Remarks Reynaldo C. Ileto p399 Profile p403