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Deutsches Institut für Japanstudien

German Institute for Japanese Studies

Research focused on modern Japan, in global and regional perspectives. Located in one of the important economic and political hubs of East Asia, Tokyo.

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Events and Activities

Events
October 6, 2024

Celia Spoden to give keynote at Japan-Germany science and technology cooperation anniversary event

© Jonathan Webb

Upon invitation by the Federal Minister of Education and Research, DIJ principal researcher Celia Spoden will give a keynote speech at the anniversary event to celebrate 50 years of science and technology cooperation between Japan and Germany. Drawing on her research project on Cyber-physical spaces and avatar technologies: new opportunities for an inclusive society? she will explain ‘Why Technology Development Needs the Social Sciences: Opportunities and Risks of Avatar Robots’. The event takes place in Kyoto on October 6 and will be attended by leading representatives from both countries’ ministries, research and funding organisations. The two other keynotes will be given by the president of the German Research Foundation (DFG), Katja Becker, and by Ishiguro Hiroshi (Intelligent Robotics Laboratory, Osaka University), a leading Japanese roboticist and engineer.

Event Series
Events
October 7, 2024

Hybrid Study Group on Industrial Policy and Technology Transfer in Postwar Japan

Factory buildings in Yokkaichi at night (Wikimedia CC BY 2.0)

Was the postwar economic miracle a result of the Japanese government’s industrial policy, or did it occur despite it? Numerous studies on the effects of government policy on industrial growth have produced contradictory or inconclusive findings. In this talk, Krautter argues that one of the main instruments of industrial policy toward growth industries was the licensing system for technology imports.  Focusing on technology policy, he finds that the licensing system positively influenced the terms and conditions of technology imports. Krautter contends that the government’s role in postwar industrial development was more that of a coordinator rather than of a “leader” or “guide.” This view is reflected in the description of the Japanese state as a coordination state, contrasting with the well-known concept of the developmental state. Details and registration here

Speaker: Jonathan Krautter, HU Berlin
 
Publications
August 30, 2024

Open access book by Nicole M. Mueller studies Japanese Thomas Mann translations

© SpringerLink

In her new book Japanische Thomas Mann-Übersetzung zwischen Kulturheteronomie und Emanzipation: Tonio Kröger-Retranslations im digitalen Topic Modeling (Japanese Thomas Mann translation between Cultural Heteronomy and Emancipation: Digital Topic Modeling of Tonio Kröger Retranslations), DIJ researcher Nicole Marion Mueller uses innovative digital methods to study Japanese translation pluralism in the 20th century. Focusing on Japanese translations of Mann’s novel Tonio Kröger, she retraces the intensive reception of Mann’s literary works in Japan while paying special attention to the interrelations between translation and a variety of historical contexts and actors – most prominently the elitist kyoyoshugi movement rooted in Japan’s prewar education system. Nicole combines this extensive research work with a topic modeling-based mixed methods approach, which enables her to reveal the previously hidden interactions between the re-translated texts as well as patterns of influence and distinction spanning decades of translation history. The book is published by J.B. Metzler in the Digital Literary Studies series and available open access.

Event Series
Events
October 9, 2024

International Workshop ‘Imagined Futures in Japan & Beyond’ at DIJ

The future begins with imagination. One example are the Sci-Fi prototyping initiatives of Japanese tech giants like Sony and NTT, which intentionally utilize storytelling to foster public acceptance of emerging technologies. Focusing on the connection between narratives, culture, technological innovation, and marketing, this interdisciplinary workshop delves into both fictional and non-fictional portrayals of Japan’s technological future. Twenty international scholars and practitioners from Japan’s tech industry will join us to analyze visions of emerging technologies, of their environmental and societal impact, and of Japan as a “futuristic” nation through the lens of “narrative” and “sociotechnical imaginary” theoretical frameworks. The workshop is organised by DIJ researcher Nicole M. Mueller and supported by the German Center for Research and Innovation (DWIH) Tokyo. It will open with a public DIJ Forum with keynotes by Fritz Breithaupt (Indiana University Bloomington) and Hirotaka Osawa (Keio University). Details and registration here

Publications
August 24, 2024

Barbara Holthus explains Germany’s fertility rate development in Japanese journal article

Unlike Japan, Germany’s total fertility rate has shown a slow but steady increase since its lowest point in the early 1990s. What are the factors behind this development? In the article 「ドイツの出生率推移を紐解く」(“Unraveling Germany’s fertility rate development”, in Japanese), DIJ sociologist Barbara Holthus explains how Germany has implemented a mix of family policies targeting time, money, and infrastructure measures for parents. Over the last 20 years, they have had varying influences on the fertility rate. As data shows, migration trends into Germany also play a complex role for its fertility rate, as many migrants are of child-bearing age and first-generation migrants have higher birthrates. In addition, there are significant differences in fertility rates at the sub-national level. Recent macro level influences like war and climate change are also important influences on Germany’s youth, coupled with rising rates in mental health problems. The article is published in a special section on countries facing a rapidly declining birthrate in the summer issue of the Japanese journal Pension and the Economy (『年金と経済』).

Publications
September 5, 2024

Book chapter by Nicole M. Mueller on the historical and institutional contexts that shaped Japanese retranslation

Since ancient times, translation into Japanese has facilitated innovation across a variety of disciplines. Translators functioned as mediators of a foreign culture that was commonly perceived as superior. This tradition became all the more essential after Japan’s forced reopening in the late 19th century after 200 years of self-imposed cultural isolation. In this context, retranslations of Thomas Mann’s classic novel Tonio Kröger form a crucial interface between Japan’s academic, educational, and literary history shaped by the elitist kyōyōshugi movement and its idealisation of 19th century European culture. Based on the digitally augmented analysis of 15 such retranslations, DIJ researcher Nicole M. Mueller retraces how 20th and 21st century Japanese retranslation can be understood as the result of an ongoing negotiation between heteronomy and autonomy toward the West that shaped Japan’s cultural self-image. “Japanese Retranslations in the Twentieth and Twenty-first Centuries: Between Heteronomy and Autonomy toward the West” is published in the Routledge Handbook of East Asian Translation.

Publications
August 23, 2024

Working Paper by Harald Kümmerle on Japanʼs COVID-19 response, surveillance capitalism and cyber civilization

© KGRI

A new working paper by DIJ researcher Harald Kümmerle examines Japan’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic in comparison to other East Asian countries. Drawing on Shoshana Zuboffʼs perspective of surveillance capitalism and Jiro Kokuryoʼs theory of cyber civilization, it argues that Japanʼs aerosol and droplet simulations on the supercomputer Fugaku helped devise efficient countermeasures that did not aim for the complete elimination of the virus. The paper also demonstrates the importance of understanding how the measures in Japan related to the idea of trust and successfully relied on self-restraint (jishuku). Calibrating Social Theories of Digital Technology based on Japan’s COVID-19 Response: Surveillance Capitalism and Cyber Civilization is published open access as Working Paper No. 3 by Keio University’s Global Research Institute.

Publications
June 26, 2024

Open access article by Celia Spoden on end-of-life decision-making in ALS

How do people with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) deal with their diagnosis and engage in end-of-life decision-making? This new study, co-authored by DIJ researcher Celia Spoden, Olga Wenzel, Anke Erdmann, Gerald Neitzke, and Irene Hirschberg, addresses these and related questions based on qualitative interviews with 13 people with ALS. Data collection and analysis followed a grounded theory-based approach and revealed close relationships between coping, informational needs, and the preparedness for decision-making. The authors identified the coping strategies ‘avoid thinking about end-of-life’ and its counterpart, ‘planning ahead to be well-prepared,’ and differentiated the latter into the patterns ‘withdrawing from life and taking precautions against life-prolongation’ and ‘searching for a new meaning in life and preparing for life-sustaining treatment’. The study recommends healthcare professionals to be sensitive to illness experiences beyond medical aspects and foster coping as a biographical process to better support people with ALS. The article is available open access here

Upcoming Events

07/10/2024
  • DIJ Study Group
    18:30 ~ 20:00

    The Coordination State: Industrial Policy and Technology Transfer During Japan’s Postwar Economic Boom, 1950-76

09/10/2024
  • DIJ Forum
    18:00 ~ 21:00

    Why Futuristic Imaginations Matter

10/10/2024
  • International Workshop
    10:00 ~ 17:00

    Imagined Futures in Japan and Beyond

11/10/2024
  • International Workshop
    10:00 ~ 18:00

    Imagined Futures in Japan and Beyond

14/10/2024
  • DIJ-UTCP Kaffeekränzchen
    15:30 ~ 17:30

    Kaffeekränzchen „Philosophie-Jause“

15/10/2024
  • Panel Discussion
    17:30 ~ 19:00

    Knowledge Born in Global Transit? Revisiting Migrants' Histories

17/10/2024
  • DIJ Forum
    18:30 ~ 21:00

    Opening to Omnilateralism in an Interpopular World

06/11/2024
  • DIJ Study Group
    17:30 ~ 19:00

    "Just Like Defeated Soldiers": The Imperial Japanese Military and the Looting of Post-Surrender Japan

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    Call for Submissions

    Contemporary Japan
    current issue Vol. 36, No.2
    Contemporary Japan is open year-round for rolling submissions, with accepted publications published immediately online. Please see the instructions for submission here.

    DIJ Monograph Series

    Our monograph series is Open Access Open Access after a one-year embargo period. Downloads are available on our
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    DIJ Tokyo
    Jochi Kioizaka Bldg. 2F
    7-1 Kioicho Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo
    102-0094 Japan
    Where to find us

    +81 (0)3 3222-5077
    +81 (0)3 3222-5420
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