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Deutsches Institut für Japanstudien

ドイツ日本研究所

ドイツ日本研究所は東京に拠点を持つドイツの研究機関である。現代日本をグローバル化する世界というコンテキストにおいて研究することがDIJの研究課題である。

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イベント&アクティビティ

Event Series
イベント
2026年6月9日

Hybrid Study Group on Social Welfare Work in Colonial Taiwan and Korea

Among the many women’s organisations emerging in late 19th- and early 20th-century Japan, the Aikoku Fujinkai was one of the most prominent. Founded in 1901 by Okumura Ioko to support the Imperial Army through donations and aid supplies, it soon expanded into colonised Taiwan and Korea, where it recruited not only Japanese but also Taiwanese and Korean women as members. While the Aikoku Fujinkai actively promoted imperialist and militarist agendas, it pursued distinctly gendered objectives through large-scale social welfare projects focused on women and children. This presentation will share insights from recent archival fieldwork in Tokyo to discuss how the Aikoku Fujinkai’s social welfare work in interwar Taiwan and Korea can be interpreted within the political and social context of Japanese colonialism. Details and registration here

Speaker: Merle Kartscher, Harvard University/DIJ Tokyo
Event Series
イベント
2026年5月28日

Hybrid Study Group on Human Rights Narratives in Japan

© Tokyo Metropolitan Human Rights Plaza (photo by Johanna Fritzi Momm)

Are human rights a shield to protect victims of human rights violations or are they a sword wielded by human rights lawyers to attack everyone disagreeing with their opinions? Do people in Japan care about human rights or are they just window-dressing for the international community? Language connected to human rights is essentially contested. This talk presents human rights narratives collected from various human rights actors in Japanese society. These narratives form the basis of human rights discourse in Japanese civil society, media, the legal landscape, academia, and politics. The study uses mixed methods to map the political discourse quantitatively and qualitatively to then trace back how discursive shifts occurred. An interdisciplinary approach helps understanding human rights in contemporary Japanese society within in a world which increasingly puts pressure on liberal norms. Details and registration here

Speaker: Johanna Fritzi Momm, FU Berlin/DIJ Tokyo
イベント
2026年5月29日

Book Launch ‘Unleashing Innovation the East Asian Way’

The book Unleashing Innovation the East Asian Way. Startup Ecosystems in Japan, South Korea and China (Springer Singapore 2026) provides new perspectives on startup ecosystems in East Asia – a region which has over decades shaped innovation and global competition. Focusing on Japan, South Korea, and Mainland China, the chapters sketch the dynamic and diverse development of East Asian startup ecosystems considering their wider historical and national contexts. The authors Ying Cheng, Adam Cross, Martin Hemmert, Agata Kapturkiewicz, Masahiro Kotosaka, and DIJ director Franz Waldenberger systematically analyze and compare startup ecosystems. Published open access, this book aims to make these findings, which have so far only been presented in academic journals, accessible to a wider readership. At this book launch you can meet authors of this volume and discuss its findings with them. The event will be followed by a networking reception. Details and registration here

その他

Barbara Holthus quoted in AP and DLF media reports

For a report published by Associated Press, DIJ sociologist Barbara Holthus explained how socialization, collectivism, and the concept of meiwaku, or not wanting to pose an inconvenience to others, contribute to the phenomenon of Japanese soccer fans cleaning up after sports games. “If you grew up with a certain way of how things are being done, you apply that to even cleaning up a stadium afterwards.” Barbara was also interviewed by German radio station Deutschlandfunk Kultur for a feature on Japanese women’s fights against stereotypes (in German). Commenting on changes and continuities in Japanese society regarding gender equality and equal opportunities, she explained that “men in Japan still tend to marry below their social class”. The radio feature also quotes insights on traditional gender roles and recent political developments in Japan from DIJ alumnus Vincent B. Lesch.

主要著作
2026年5月18日

New blog posts on sustainability at Aichi Triennale and knowledge production in Korea

DIJ researchers Carolin Fleischer-Heininger and Dolf-Alexander Neuhaus have contributed articles to the DIJ’s Sustainability in Japan and Beyond blog and the TRAFO Blog for Transregional Research, respectively. Carolin’s article “Tracing Sustainability at the Aichi Triennale 2025 in Japan” reports on her experience as a visitor of the Aichi Triennale 2025, a well-established art festival mainly held in the city of Nagoya, from the perspective of someone who is visually impaired. “Addressing cultural, social and ecological dimensions of sustainability and often also gaining inspiration and authority from personal experience”, she writes, the Triennale “validates sustainability as a matter of responsibility and of justice to give voice to the perspectives that are less prominent in most debates on eco-social sustainability.” Dolf’s article “Beyond Binaries: Decentring Foreign Knowledge in 20th Century Korea”, part of the blog series “De-centering Academia: InterAsian Perspectives”, draws on the history of education in 20th century (South) Korea to examine the historical development and adaption of foreign epistemologies and knowledge systems in Korea. 

主要著作
2026年3月4日

New issue of Contemporary Japan published

Contemporary Japan Volume 38 Issue 1 is out! The six original research articles include “Rainbows and Ratings: Assessing indices of LGBTQ+ inclusivity in the Japanese workplace” (Clasen & Conrad) on Japanese companies attempts at improving diversity, “Perks or burdens? Being ‘nearly (Im)mobile’ as IT foreign professionals during the COVID-19 pandemic in Japan” (Muranaka) on Vietnamese IT professionals, “Leadership in crisis: Comparing Prime Minister Abe’s and Chancellor Merkel’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic” (Gaunder & Wiliarty) on leadership style, institutional coordination, and policy narratives, “Portraying the refugee crisis: The framing of Afghan, Burmese, and Ukrainian asylum seekers in Japanese print media” (Mitsui & Green) on media portrayals of refugees/asylum seekers, “The Bibliography of Post-War Documentary Literature: Processing war and defeat in post-World War II Japan” (Jeong) on subjective narratives in postwar literature, and “Workers’ uprising: Japanese factories and labor movement in Thailand during the Pacific War” (Takahashi) on anti-colonial labor activism during the Pacific War. The articles are complemented by Wolfram Manzenreiter’s review of Kate Sylvester’s book Women and Martial Art in Japan.

主要著作
2026年3月19日

DIJ Newsletter Spring 2026

Digital capitalism and science, disability and inclusion, recruitment strategies, and ‘akiya’ problem: the spring issue of our DIJ Newsletter features updates on our research, publications, and events as well as news from the Institute, our team, and our outreach activities. We hope you will enjoy exploring this new edition of the DIJ Newsletter. If you haven’t done so yet, you can subscribe to receive our Newsletters directly to your inbox. The full issues and subscription form are available here.

Event Series
イベント
2026年6月2日

Hybrid DIJ Forum on Japanese Labor Imaginaries

Popular imaginations of Japanese society are deeply intertwined with work, often oscillating between stereotypes of the exhausted salary man and idealized concepts of optimization (kaizen) or life purpose (ikigai). While work has been a celebrated pillar of Japan’s postwar identity, it has also faced scrutiny for fostering inequality and precarity. Beyond the familiar tropes, our keynote speakers unpack the complexities of Japanese labor history and corporate culture. Chelsea S. Schieder will present her research on the 1971 Mitsui Miike coal mine lawsuit following Japan’s largest postwar industrial accident. Shifting the focus to the everyday intersection of corporate life and culture, Hiromichi Hasebe explores how Hitachi corporation shaped organizational identity through its in-house magazine. Together, these presentations provide a re-evaluation of how Japan’s labor landscape from postwar factories to today’s AI-powered workplaces, continuously negotiates the meaning of work. Details and registration here

Speakers: 
Chelsea Szendi Schieder, Aoyama Gakuin University
Hiromichi Hasebe, Nihon University

最新イベント

2026年05月28日
  • DIJ Study Group
    18:30 ~ 20:00

    Human Rights Narratives in Japan

2026年05月29日
  • Book Launch
    17:00 ~ 20:00

    Unleashing Innovation the East Asian Way. Startup Ecosystems in Japan, South Korea and China

2026年06月02日
  • DIJ Forum
    18:30 ~ 20:00

    Japanese Labor Imaginaries: From Postwar Working Class Womanhood to Cultural Mediation of Corporate Identity

2026年06月03日
  • Contemporary Tokyo Seminar Series
    18:30 ~ 20:00

    Tokyo - how can this possibly turn out well?

2026年06月09日
  • DIJ Study Group
    18:30 ~ 20:00

    The Aikoku Fujinkai and Social Welfare Work in Colonial Taiwan and Korea

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    研究所の詳細は、DIJパンフレット(バージョン4/2025)をご覧ください。

    Call for Submissions

    Contemporary Japan
    current issue Vol. 38, No.1
    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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    道案内

    ドイツ-日本研究所
    〒102-0094 東京都千代田区
    紀尾井町7-1 上智紀尾井坂ビル 2F
    道案内

    +81 (0)3 3222-5077
    +81 (0)3 3222-5420
    dijtokyo@dijtokyo.org

     


     

    DIJ-ARI Asian Infrastructures Research Partnership