5th Tanaka Symposium: Reconfiguring the Concept of Religion in Modern Japan

PAST EVENT | 06 June 2023 09:00 - 06 June 2023 18:00

5th Tanaka symposium: Reconfiguring the Concept of Religion in Modern Japan

6 June 2023 (Tuesday), 9:00–18:00

Harold Lee Room, Pembroke College, University of Oxford

This symposium explores how creative religious knowledge and practices changed and challenged the concept of religion in Japan between the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Japanese responses to religion cannot be reduced to the product of Westernisation and its nativist counter-discourses. More diverse responses emerged from the context of competing Christianities, Buddhisms, and more. Indeed, some Japanese intellectuals have even used Christianity to critique Christianity. Speakers will examine how different Christian scholars reconfigured Christianity, or even God, in modern Japan and the wider world, and will also scrutinise innovative responses by Buddhists, Confucianists, and practitioners of Ainu religious beliefs. Religion was one of the most fundamental problems in relation to the goal and/or question of ‘civilisation’. Particular attention will be given to the ways in which they negated undesirable constructs in modern religion tied to civilisation discourses and reconstructed them. While some of these religions supported imperialist discourse, they were not always reducible to the Christianity of the West and its equivalence that gave legitimacy to white supremacy and male dominance.

Scholars will give presentations on their research concerning various reconfigurations of religions. We invite participants to engage in active discussion. Our hope is that this event will result in the cross-pollination of ideas, resources, and methodologies.

 

To attend the event (in-person only), sign-up here

Programme can be found below & here.
 

9.00 – 9.15 Welcome and Registration
9.15 – 9.30 Opening Remarks – Dr Linda Flores and Dr Chinami Oka (Oxford)
9.30 – 10.00 Key Concept and Contour – Prof Sho Konishi (Oxford)
10.10 – 11.15

Panel 1: Deconstructing National and Civilisational Discourses in Religion

Chair: Dr Yu Sakai (Waseda University)

  • Dr Migiwa Imaishi (Tōbunken)
    Inaw in Japanese Shrines: A Nonstate Oceanic History of Ainu-Japanese Religious Exchange in the Meiji Era 
  • Dr Alexandria Dugal (Tokyo Woman’s Christian University)
    Religion and the 1920s and 1930s Transnational Connections of Japanese Christian Girls’ Schools
11.15 – 11.45 Coffee and Tea Break
11.45 – 12.45

Panel 2: New Perspectives on Race and Christianity in the United States and Japan

Chair: Dr Natalia Doan (Oxford)

  • Prof Stephen Tuck (Oxford)
    Religion, Race and the United States: Toyohiko Kagawa and African American Clergy
  • Dr Emily Anderson (Japanese American National Museum)
    Writing a New Christian History: Japanese Immigrant Churches in Pre-WWII Los Angeles
12.45 – 14.00 Lunch Break
14.00 – 15.00

Panel 3: Reassessing Gender, Sexuality, and Love in Religion

Chair: Alice Baldock (Oxford)

  • Dr Paride Stortini (University of Tokyo)
    Religion, Civilization, and the Science of Love: The Reception of the Kāma Sūtra in 1920s-1930s Japan
  • Dr Chinami Oka (Oxford)
    The Reconfiguration of God as Multi-Gendered in Early Twentieth-Century Japan
15.00 – 15.30 Coffee and Tea Break
15.30 – 16.30

Panel 4: Social Change and Action-Oriented Religion

Chair: Federica Costantino (Oxford)

  • Dr Yu Sakai (Waseda University)
    Inspiring Democratic Dissent: Christianity, Tonghak (Eastern Learning), and the Worship of Nature in Turn-of-the-Twentieth-Century East Asia
  • Joel Littler (Oxford)
    “One Should Provide Bread Before Preaching the Gospel”: Social Activists on Leaving Christianity in the 1890s
16.45 – 17.45

Roundtable Discussion

Dr Emily Anderson, Dr Yu Sakai, and Dr Chinami Oka, followed by Q&A

17.45 – 18.00 Closing Remarks – Dr Linda Flores (Oxford)
18.00 – 19.00 Drinks Reception

 

Organisers: Dr Linda Flores, Dr Chinami Oka

For inquiries, please contact Dr Chinami Oka (chinami.oka@pmb.ox.ac.uk

This symposium is kindly supported by the Tanaka UK Japan Educational Foundation.

5th Tanaka Symposium: Reconfiguring the Concept of Religion in Modern Japan

PAST EVENT | 06 June 2023 09:00 - 06 June 2023 18:00

5th Tanaka symposium: Reconfiguring the Concept of Religion in Modern Japan

6 June 2023 (Tuesday), 9:00–18:00

Harold Lee Room, Pembroke College, University of Oxford

This symposium explores how creative religious knowledge and practices changed and challenged the concept of religion in Japan between the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Japanese responses to religion cannot be reduced to the product of Westernisation and its nativist counter-discourses. More diverse responses emerged from the context of competing Christianities, Buddhisms, and more. Indeed, some Japanese intellectuals have even used Christianity to critique Christianity. Speakers will examine how different Christian scholars reconfigured Christianity, or even God, in modern Japan and the wider world, and will also scrutinise innovative responses by Buddhists, Confucianists, and practitioners of Ainu religious beliefs. Religion was one of the most fundamental problems in relation to the goal and/or question of ‘civilisation’. Particular attention will be given to the ways in which they negated undesirable constructs in modern religion tied to civilisation discourses and reconstructed them. While some of these religions supported imperialist discourse, they were not always reducible to the Christianity of the West and its equivalence that gave legitimacy to white supremacy and male dominance.

Scholars will give presentations on their research concerning various reconfigurations of religions. We invite participants to engage in active discussion. Our hope is that this event will result in the cross-pollination of ideas, resources, and methodologies.

 

To attend the event (in-person only), sign-up here

Programme can be found below & here.
 

9.00 – 9.15 Welcome and Registration
9.15 – 9.30 Opening Remarks – Dr Linda Flores and Dr Chinami Oka (Oxford)
9.30 – 10.00 Key Concept and Contour – Prof Sho Konishi (Oxford)
10.10 – 11.15

Panel 1: Deconstructing National and Civilisational Discourses in Religion

Chair: Dr Yu Sakai (Waseda University)

  • Dr Migiwa Imaishi (Tōbunken)
    Inaw in Japanese Shrines: A Nonstate Oceanic History of Ainu-Japanese Religious Exchange in the Meiji Era 
  • Dr Alexandria Dugal (Tokyo Woman’s Christian University)
    Religion and the 1920s and 1930s Transnational Connections of Japanese Christian Girls’ Schools
11.15 – 11.45 Coffee and Tea Break
11.45 – 12.45

Panel 2: New Perspectives on Race and Christianity in the United States and Japan

Chair: Dr Natalia Doan (Oxford)

  • Prof Stephen Tuck (Oxford)
    Religion, Race and the United States: Toyohiko Kagawa and African American Clergy
  • Dr Emily Anderson (Japanese American National Museum)
    Writing a New Christian History: Japanese Immigrant Churches in Pre-WWII Los Angeles
12.45 – 14.00 Lunch Break
14.00 – 15.00

Panel 3: Reassessing Gender, Sexuality, and Love in Religion

Chair: Alice Baldock (Oxford)

  • Dr Paride Stortini (University of Tokyo)
    Religion, Civilization, and the Science of Love: The Reception of the Kāma Sūtra in 1920s-1930s Japan
  • Dr Chinami Oka (Oxford)
    The Reconfiguration of God as Multi-Gendered in Early Twentieth-Century Japan
15.00 – 15.30 Coffee and Tea Break
15.30 – 16.30

Panel 4: Social Change and Action-Oriented Religion

Chair: Federica Costantino (Oxford)

  • Dr Yu Sakai (Waseda University)
    Inspiring Democratic Dissent: Christianity, Tonghak (Eastern Learning), and the Worship of Nature in Turn-of-the-Twentieth-Century East Asia
  • Joel Littler (Oxford)
    “One Should Provide Bread Before Preaching the Gospel”: Social Activists on Leaving Christianity in the 1890s
16.45 – 17.45

Roundtable Discussion

Dr Emily Anderson, Dr Yu Sakai, and Dr Chinami Oka, followed by Q&A

17.45 – 18.00 Closing Remarks – Dr Linda Flores (Oxford)
18.00 – 19.00 Drinks Reception

 

Organisers: Dr Linda Flores, Dr Chinami Oka

For inquiries, please contact Dr Chinami Oka (chinami.oka@pmb.ox.ac.uk

This symposium is kindly supported by the Tanaka UK Japan Educational Foundation.