vendredi 08 avril 2016 / 18h30 – 20h30 | |
Salle 601 | |
Luc BOURGEOIS (univ. de Caen Normandie), ONO Masatoshi (National Institute for Humanities) |
* À l'exception des séminaires fermés de recherche ou des événements exceptionnels requérant une inscription payante, l'accès aux manifestations de la MFJ est libre et gratuit. Prière de vous inscrire.
samedi 09 avril 2016 / 10h00 – 16h00 | |
salle 601 |
* À l'exception des séminaires fermés de recherche ou des événements exceptionnels requérant une inscription payante, l'accès aux manifestations de la MFJ est libre et gratuit. Prière de vous inscrire.
lundi 18 avril 2016 / 18h30 – 20h30 | |
Auditorium | |
Bruno CLÉMENT (COMUE Paris Lumières/univ. Paris 8, IUF) |
* À l'exception des séminaires fermés de recherche ou des événements exceptionnels requérant une inscription payante, l'accès aux manifestations de la MFJ est libre et gratuit. Prière de vous inscrire.
mardi 19 avril 2016 / 18 h - 20 h | |
salle 601 |
Maison franco-japonaise Institut français de recherche sur le Japon UMIFRE 19 Séminaire doctoral Ce séminaire mensuel s'adresse principalement aux doctorants francophones en sciences humaines et sociales, mais demeure également ouvert aux étudiants de Master ou autres jeunes chercheurs. Organisé par des étudiants et pour des étudiants, encadré par le directeur et les chercheurs de la Maison franco-japonaise, il s'agit d'un espace dédié à la présentation de travaux de recherche, quel que soit leur stade d'avancement, et de discuter collectivement des problèmes méthodologiques rencontrés tout au long du processus d'élaboration de la thèse. Se déroulant sous la forme d'exposés suivis d'un échange avec la salle, le séminaire constitue un entraînement à la prise de parole en public, à la présentation claire et adaptée de son sujet, à la maîtrise des outils logiciels de projection. Les participants de l'auditoire bénéficient quant à eux de l'expérience de leurs collègues et sont conviés à s'interroger sur des questions de méthode qui leur sont propres. Ils profitent, en outre, de connaissances et résultats souvent encore inédits de la recherche sur le Japon. Le séminaire doctoral est consacré chaque mois à deux intervenants qui disposent chacun de 30 minutes maximum de présentation orale, puis 30 minutes sont dédiées à la discussion collective. La séance aura lieu le mardi 19 avril 2016 de 18h00 à 20h00 en salle 601 de la MFJ (3-9-25, Ebisu, Shibuya-ku, Tôkyô, 150-0013 ; 6e étage). Les personnes intéressées par le séminaire sont priées de bien vouloir contacter les coordinateurs du séminaire (contact : doctorantsmfj [ajouter at] gmail.com) Nous aurons le plaisir d’écouter : Omar N’DIAYE, étudiant en Master 2 en géographie (université Paris 7 - Paris Diderot, Ens-Ulm, Essec), sous la direction de Natacha Aveline-Dubach et de Renaud Le Goix
Logiques des investissements immobiliers dans les systèmes de gestion énergétique : État développeur et financiarisation immobilière L’intégration d’infrastructures informatisées à l’environnement bâti a été appréhendée par diverses notions : cyber city, digital city, plus récemment, smart city. Jusqu'à présent, les discours et les imaginaires accompagnant ces transformations ont beaucoup retenu l'attention. Ce projet de mémoire examine les logiques économiques qui sont à l’œuvre, particulièrement dans le domaine immobilier. Mon étude se restreint à l’introduction d’un type d’équipement, les systèmes de gestion énergétique (EMS), dans un type de production immobilière, les complexes d’appartements (manshon). Il s’agirait d’éclairer les motifs de ces investissements dans les EMS et les modalités de leur mise en œuvre. Les systèmes de gestion énergétique (en anglais et en japonais, EMS) recouvrent un ensemble de dispositifs techniques qui permettent de visualiser, contrôler et optimiser la consommation d’électricité. On distingue entre autres les HEMS (H pour Home), les MEMS (Manshon) et les BEMS (Building). L’installation et les services d’EMS sont la tâche de l’agrégateur (アグレゲータ), entreprise qui fait l’interface entre le fournisseur d’électricité et l’immeuble. Avec la perspective de la libéralisation du marché de l’électricité, le METI (Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry) a soutenu le développement de ce nouveau secteur d’activité, investi par de grandes entreprises issues de secteurs variés. L’introduction des HEMS/MEMS dans l’immobilier est d’abord le fait des principaux développeurs, dans le cadre des projets de démonstration de Smart City impulsés par le METI (2010-2015) dans plusieurs villes japonaises. En 2013, le METI a également lancé un programme de subventions aux EMS, ainsi qu’un système de notation à destination des promoteurs immobiliers, le Smart Mansion Assessment System (5 étoiles). Dans tout le pays, environ 200 immeubles, la plupart à construire, s’étaient vus octroyés des subventions. J’essaie de croiser deux hypothèses : (a) à travers l’action du METI, celle du rôle clé de l’État développeur dans la production immobilière « smart » ; (b) celle d'un impact déterminant de la financiarisation de l'immobilier sur les investissements dans les EMS. Dans cette seconde hypothèse, il s’agirait d’établir, dans la mesure des données disponibles, un lien entre stratégie des acteurs immobiliers (développeurs, fonds, banques) et géographie de ces investissements. La méthodologie de l’ensemble mobiliserait d’une part des outils d’analyse spatiale et d’autre part, des méthodes pour tenter d’évaluer la contribution des EMS aux valeurs immobilières (avec peut-être l’idée d’essayer des alternatives à l’approche hédonique). et de Laurent JAUBERT (université Lyon 2 et université de Tokyo) La domination spatiale: logique de valeurs urbaines tôkyôites |
* À l'exception des séminaires fermés de recherche ou des événements exceptionnels requérant une inscription payante, l'accès aux manifestations de la MFJ est libre et gratuit. Prière de vous inscrire.
vendredi 22 avril 2016 / 18h00 – 19h30 | |
Auditorium | |
YI Sŏngshi (univ. Waseda) |
Cliquer sur l'image pour plus d'informations Studying the ancient past of the Korean peninsula became a central objective in the studies and surveys conducted by the Japanese colonial administration in Korea from the protectorate era (1905-1910) through to the end of colonial rule. These academic investigations were also part of the colonial government's political agenda to control Korea. It established the Commission for the Investigation of Korean Antiquities (1915), which aimed to investigate and protect the past, and the Commission for the Compilation of Korean History (created in 1922 and renamed a Society in 1925) in order to write the history of the peninsula up to the period of Japanese rule. These projects occupied a critical position among the tasks conducted by Imperial Japan. Conférencier : YI Sŏngshi (univ. Waseda) Modérateur : Arnaud NANTA (UMIFRE 19 - MFJ) April 23, 2016 at Waseda University, Ōkuma Memorial Tower (building 26) Basement Hall (516-1 Waseda Tsurumaki-chō, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo / Subway Tōzai line, Waseda Station) Cliquer pour avoir les résumés des interventions 10:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m., panel 1: Archaeological Research in Colonial Korea Chair : Arnaud NANTA (Maison Franco-Japonaise) CH'OE Sŏg'yŏng (Director of the Korean National Theatre Museum) : The Archaeological Excavations and Museum Established in Korea by the Japanese Government-General SAOTOME Masahiro (Tokyo University) : Archaeological Research and Heritage Site Protection in Colonial Korea: Towards which Image of Korea's Past? YOSHII Hideo (Kyoto University) : The Position of Kyoto Imperial University's Archaeological Department vis-à-vis the Archaeological Investigations Conducted by the Government-General of Korea 2:30 p.m. - 6:00 p.m., panel 2: Historiography and Archaeology as Colonial Representations Chair : LI Sŏngshi (Waseda University) HAKOISHI Hiroshi (Historiographical Institute, Tokyo University) : The Gathering and Compilation of Historical Materials by the Government-General of Korea PAI Hyung Il (University of California, Santa Barbara) : Visualizing Imperial Destinations: Travel Media Art and the Photographic Classification of Chōsen's Ruins FUJIHARA Sadao (Ibaraki University) : Colonial Archaeology in East Asia: A Comparison between Objectives and Practices Speakers Li Sŏngshi is a professor at Waseda University, director of the Institute for Korean Studies, and the first director of the Ryusaku Tsunoda Center of Japanese Culture. He specialises in ancient Korean history and the historiography of colonial Korea. His current research focuses on the wooden tablets found in Korea. He has published several books, including Peoples and States in Ancient East Asia (Tokyo: Iwanami, 1998), The Invented Past (Seoul: Samin, 2000), Archaeology and the History of Ancient Korea (co-authored with Saotome Masahiro, Tokyo: Yūzankaku, 2002), Colonialism and History (Tokyo: Tōsuisha, 2004), and Iwanami Koza Japanese History (co-editor, Tokyo, 2015). Arnaud Nanta is an assistant professor at the French National Center for Scientific Research (Umifre 19, Maison Franco-Japonaise). He studies the history of humanities and social sciences in modern and contemporary Japan, with a special interest in colonial scholarship and knowledge in colonial Korea. He recently published "L'organisation de l'archéologie antique en Corée coloniale (1902-1940): du terrain aux musées coloniaux" (Ebisu 52, 2015; http://ebisu.revues.org/1635), and "Ethnic Shows and Racial Hierarchies in Modern Japan" (Journal of Taipei Fine Arts Museum, 2015, 30). Ch'oe Sŏg'yŏng received a Ph.D. from Hiroshima University. He subsequently worked at the National Folk Museum of Korea. Since 2010 he has been the director of the Museum of Performing Arts at the National Theater of Korea. He studies the Japanese production of knowledge on Korea under colonial rule, beginning with the history of the "research into ancient customs" conducted by Japan, and has published several books and academic papers in Korean. Recent publications include Japan's colonial process of knowledge-making on Joseon (Seoul: Minsokwŏn, 2012), The Colonial Archaeology of Korea During and After Japanese Rule (Seoul: Sŏgang University Press, 2015). Saotome Masahiro is a professor at Tokyo University. An archaeologist specialising in ancient Korean history, he also studies the history of archaeology within the Korean peninsula and has published several books and academic papers on the subject. These include The Archaeology of the Korean Peninsula (Tokyo: Dōseisha, 2000), The Archaeology and History of Ancient Korea (with Li Sŏngshi, Tokyo: Yūzankaku, 2002), The Fieldwork Conducted in Asia by Sekino Tadashi (coedited, Tokyo University Press, 2005), and Archaeological Studies on Silla (Tokyo: Dōseisha, 2010). Yoshii Hideo is an archaeologist and professor at Kyoto University. In addition to specialising in the Korean peninsula, he takes an interest in the history of archaeological activities in Korea. He has developed several initiatives aimed at strengthening academic relations between Japan and Korea. Recent publications include Ancient Korea: State Formation as Seen through Tumuli (Kyoto University Press, 2010). Hakoishi Hiroshi is an assistant professor at the Historiographical Institute, Tokyo University. He works on compiling Japanese historical materials dating from the end of the Shogunate and the Meiji Restoration. As part of an academic agreement between the Historiographical Institute and the Korean Commission for the Compilation of National History, he previously conducted research on Japanese documents relating to the compilation of Korean history during the colonial era. This has enabled him to clarify the role of the Historiographical Institute and the colonial government. He is the author of Modern Japanese Historical Studies and the Compilation of Korean History by the Government-General of Korea (Japan and Korea during the Premodern Era, Tokyo: Yamakawa, 2007). Hyung Il Pai is a professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She has published monographs, articles, and book chapters, and given lectures on the history of archaeology, anthropology, heritage management, tourism, and visual culture. Her research focuses on imperialist and nationalist discourses viewed from a post-colonial comparative perspective between Japan and South Korea. Her books include Constructing "Korean" Origins. A Critical Review of Archaeology, Historiography, and Racial Myth in Korean State-Formation Theories (Harvard University Press, 2000), and Heritage Management in Korea and Japan: The Politics of Antiquity and Identity (University of Washington Press, 2013). Fujihara Sadao is a professor at Ibaraki University. His work focuses on the history of archaeological research in French Indochina, in particular the studies conducted by the Ecole Française d'Extrême-Orient. He also examines the status of "Colonial Archaeology" in East Asian modern history. He has published several academic papers and is the author of The Melancholy of the Orientalists: French Orientalists during the Colonial Era and the Archaeological Studies of Angkor (Tokyo: Mekon, 2008). Supervised by : YI Sŏngshi (Waseda university), Arnaud NANTA (UMIFRE 19 - MFJ) Org. : Bureau français de la MFJ, Ryûsaku Tsunoda Center of Japanese Culture (univ. Waseda), Global Japanese Studies Program - Top Global University (TGU) Project (unv.Waseda) En Japonais sans traduction |
* À l'exception des séminaires fermés de recherche ou des événements exceptionnels requérant une inscription payante, l'accès aux manifestations de la MFJ est libre et gratuit. Prière de vous inscrire.
samedi 23 avril 2016 / 10:00〜18:00 | |
Waseda University, Ōkuma Memorial Tower (building 26) Basement Hall |
Cliquer sur l'image pour plus d'informations Studying the ancient past of the Korean peninsula became a central objective in the studies and surveys conducted by the Japanese colonial administration in Korea from the protectorate era (1905-1910) through to the end of colonial rule. These academic investigations were also part of the colonial government's political agenda to control Korea. It established the Commission for the Investigation of Korean Antiquities (1915), which aimed to investigate and protect the past, and the Commission for the Compilation of Korean History (created in 1922 and renamed a Society in 1925) in order to write the history of the peninsula up to the period of Japanese rule. These projects occupied a critical position among the tasks conducted by Imperial Japan. This international conference will explore Japanese academic practices towards Ancient Korea (history, archaeology, heritage protection policies), while also considering the precedent established by French archaeological practices in colonial Cambodia and the case of continental China. The aim will be to analyze the relationship between archaeology, history, and the "politics of the past" as practiced in colonial situations during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Ultimately, in terms of "reconstructing" the past, the case of French Indochina and the EFEO (French School of Asian Studies, founded in 1900) established an important precedent; in the same manner, Korean colonial archaeology became a model for the archaeology conducted in China during the interwar period, as well as for North and South Korean archaeologies and for post-1945 Japanese archaeological and historical research. April 23, 2016 at Waseda University, Ōkuma Memorial Tower (building 26) Basement Hall (516-1 Waseda Tsurumaki-chō, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo / Subway Tōzai line, Waseda Station) Cliquer pour avoir les résumés des interventions 10:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m., panel 1: Archaeological Research in Colonial Korea Chair : Arnaud NANTA (Maison Franco-Japonaise) CH'OE Sŏg'yŏng (Director of the Korean National Theatre Museum) : The Archaeological Excavations and Museum Established in Korea by the Japanese Government-General SAOTOME Masahiro (Tokyo University) : Archaeological Research and Heritage Site Protection in Colonial Korea: Towards which Image of Korea's Past? YOSHII Hideo (Kyoto University) : The Position of Kyoto Imperial University's Archaeological Department vis-à-vis the Archaeological Investigations Conducted by the Government-General of Korea 2:30 p.m. - 6:00 p.m., panel 2: Historiography and Archaeology as Colonial Representations Chair : LI Sŏngshi (Waseda University) HAKOISHI Hiroshi (Historiographical Institute, Tokyo University) : The Organization and Working Practices of the Society for the Compilation of Korean History PAI Hyung Il (University of California, Santa Barbara) : Visualizing Imperial Destinations: The Photographic Classification of Ruins and the Tourist Industry in Colonial Korea FUJIHARA Sadao (Ibaraki University) : Colonial Archaeology in East Asia: A Comparison between Objectives and Practices Speakers Li Sŏngshi is a professor at Waseda University, director of the Institute for Korean Studies, and the first director of the Ryusaku Tsunoda Center of Japanese Culture. He specialises in ancient Korean history and the historiography of colonial Korea. His current research focuses on the wooden tablets found in Korea. He has published several books, including Peoples and States in Ancient East Asia (Tokyo: Iwanami, 1998), The Invented Past (Seoul: Samin, 2000), Archaeology and the History of Ancient Korea (co-authored with Saotome Masahiro, Tokyo: Yūzankaku, 2002), Colonialism and History (Tokyo: Tōsuisha, 2004), and Iwanami Koza Japanese History (co-editor, Tokyo, 2015). Arnaud Nanta is an assistant professor at the French National Center for Scientific Research (Umifre 19, Maison Franco-Japonaise). He studies the history of humanities and social sciences in modern and contemporary Japan, with a special interest in colonial scholarship and knowledge in colonial Korea. He recently published "L'organisation de l'archéologie antique en Corée coloniale (1902-1940): du terrain aux musées coloniaux" (Ebisu 52, 2015; http://ebisu.revues.org/1635), and "Ethnic Shows and Racial Hierarchies in Modern Japan" (Journal of Taipei Fine Arts Museum, 2015, 30). Ch'oe Sŏg'yŏng received a Ph.D. from Hiroshima University. He subsequently worked at the National Folk Museum of Korea. Since 2010 he has been the director of the Museum of Performing Arts at the National Theater of Korea. He studies the Japanese production of knowledge on Korea under colonial rule, beginning with the history of the "research into ancient customs" conducted by Japan, and has published several books and academic papers in Korean. Recent publications include Japan's colonial process of knowledge-making on Joseon (Seoul: Minsokwŏn, 2012), The Colonial Archaeology of Korea During and After Japanese Rule (Seoul: Sŏgang University Press, 2015). Saotome Masahiro is a professor at Tokyo University. An archaeologist specialising in ancient Korean history, he also studies the history of archaeology within the Korean peninsula and has published several books and academic papers on the subject. These include The Archaeology of the Korean Peninsula (Tokyo: Dōseisha, 2000), The Archaeology and History of Ancient Korea (with Li Sŏngshi, Tokyo: Yūzankaku, 2002), The Fieldwork Conducted in Asia by Sekino Tadashi (coedited, Tokyo University Press, 2005), and Archaeological Studies on Silla (Tokyo: Dōseisha, 2010). Yoshii Hideo is an archaeologist and professor at Kyoto University. In addition to specialising in the Korean peninsula, he takes an interest in the history of archaeological activities in Korea. He has developed several initiatives aimed at strengthening academic relations between Japan and Korea. Recent publications include Ancient Korea: State Formation as Seen through Tumuli (Kyoto University Press, 2010). Hakoishi Hiroshi is an assistant professor at the Historiographical Institute, Tokyo University. He works on compiling Japanese historical materials dating from the end of the Shogunate and the Meiji Restoration. As part of an academic agreement between the Historiographical Institute and the Korean Commission for the Compilation of National History, he previously conducted research on Japanese documents relating to the compilation of Korean history during the colonial era. This has enabled him to clarify the role of the Historiographical Institute and the colonial government. He is the author of Modern Japanese Historical Studies and the Compilation of Korean History by the Government-General of Korea (Japan and Korea during the Premodern Era, Tokyo: Yamakawa, 2007). Hyung Il Pai is a professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She has published monographs, articles, and book chapters, and given lectures on the history of archaeology, anthropology, heritage management, tourism, and visual culture. Her research focuses on imperialist and nationalist discourses viewed from a post-colonial comparative perspective between Japan and South Korea. Her books include Constructing "Korean" Origins. A Critical Review of Archaeology, Historiography, and Racial Myth in Korean State-Formation Theories (Harvard University Press, 2000), and Heritage Management in Korea and Japan: The Politics of Antiquity and Identity (University of Washington Press, 2013). Fujihara Sadao is a professor at Ibaraki University. His work focuses on the history of archaeological research in French Indochina, in particular the studies conducted by the Ecole Française d'Extrême-Orient. He also examines the status of "Colonial Archaeology" in East Asian modern history. He has published several academic papers and is the author of The Melancholy of the Orientalists: French Orientalists during the Colonial Era and the Archaeological Studies of Angkor (Tokyo: Mekon, 2008). Supervised by : YI Sŏngsi (Waseda university), Arnaud NANTA (UMIFRE 19 - MFJ) Org. : Ryusaku Tsunoda Center of Japanese Culture (Waseda university), Global Japanese Studies Program - Top Global University (TGU) Project (Waseda university), Bureau français de la MFJ |
* À l'exception des séminaires fermés de recherche ou des événements exceptionnels requérant une inscription payante, l'accès aux manifestations de la MFJ est libre et gratuit. Prière de vous inscrire.
samedi 23 avril 2016 / 13h30 – 17h | |
Auditorium | |
Didier DAVIN (National Institute of Japanese Literature), KOMINE Kazuaki (pr. émérite univ. Rikkyô), Matthias HAYEK (univ. Paris VII), HIRANO Tae (univ. Seikei) |
* À l'exception des séminaires fermés de recherche ou des événements exceptionnels requérant une inscription payante, l'accès aux manifestations de la MFJ est libre et gratuit. Prière de vous inscrire.
Agenda du Bureau Français > avril 2016