1. Hybrid – ‘Negotiating Asian Modernity: Educational Reform, Hyderabad, and Japan, 1868–1926.’ 19.9.25
Dear colleagues,
A glitch was found in the link to the registration form for online participation in the version of this announcement that was circulated earlier. Please use and share this corrected version.
My apologies for the additional traffic.
Best regards,
Kazuo Morimoto
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The Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, University of Tokyo (Tobunken), together with the Japan Regional Office of the Association for the Study of Persianate Societies, is pleased to co-host a lecture by Professor Mimi Hanaoka (University of Richmond) entitled “Negotiating Asian Modernity: Educational Reform, Hyderabad, and Japan, 1868–1926.”
The lecture is open to the public. Please note that advance registration is required for online participation. The co-organizers look forward to your participation.
Lecture Title:
Negotiating Asian Modernity: Educational Reform, Hyderabad, and Japan, 1868-1926.
Speaker:
Professor Mimi Hanaoka (Associate Professor of Religious Studies and Special Assistant to the Provost at the University of Richmond).
Chair:
Professor Kazuo Morimoto (Professor in Islamic and Iranian History, Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, University of Tokyo).
Date and Time:
19 September (Fri) 2025, at 18:00-19:30 (JST).
Venue:
Room 303, Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, Hongo Campus, University of Tokyo (東京大学東洋文化研究所3階、大会議室303), and online via Zoom.
Abstract:
This project explores two sites geographically located on the peripheries of European empires and revolving like an increasingly tighter double-helix around them: the Muslim-ruled princely state of Hyderabad in British colonial India and early modern Japan during the years 1868-1926. As the global world order transitioned from an era of empire to nation over the 19th century, whether and how a nation might be modern without being western became a vexed question. I argue that Masood envisioned a particular type of Muslim imperial nationalism and Muslim modernism that was possible during the politically liminal period in India during the 1920s and 1930s but which became incompatible with political and social realities after Partition in 1947.
Anchoring the narrative in the biography and peregrinations of Syed Ross Masood and his official report on Japan’s educational system, Negotiating Asian Modernity explores how the Indian Muslim educator Syed Ross Masood looked to Japan as a model of imperial Asian modernity. Masood served as a bureaucrat for the Muslim ruler of the Indian princely state of Hyderabad for whom he wrote a report, titled Japan and its Educational System (1923), about Japan’s educational system and how and why it should serve as a model for Hyderabad’s educational system.
Speaker’s Bio:
Mimi Hanaoka is the author of Authority and Identity in Medieval Islamic Historiography: Persian Histories from the Peripheries (Cambridge University Press, 2016), which explains themes and literary strategies that “centered” texts from “peripheral” regions in medieval Persia. She has published numerous articles on Islam, identity, and trans-regional linkages, and her work has appeared in such journals as History of Education Quarterly, Mizan, Journal of Persianate Studies, and Iranian Studies. Outside of the academy, her work has been published in various outlets with mass reach and appeal, including Grantland, Guernica, Los Angeles Times, GlobalPost, and National Geographic’s Glimpse. For more information, visit https://religiousstudies.richmond.edu/faculty/mhanaoka/ .
How to Participate:
Pre-registration is required for online participation. Please fill in the form at https://forms.gle/s17Gbe88hwo6ii1i6 by 18 September, at 24:00 JST.
In-person attendance does not require advance registration.
Contact Person: Kazuo Morimoto (morikazu@ioc.u-tokyo.ac.jp)
This event is co-organized by the Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, University of Tokyo (organized by the Regular Research Project W-1: Approaches to the “Persianate World” as a Tobunken Seminar) and the Japan Regional Office of the Association for the Study of Persianate Societies (as a Gilas Lecture).
2. Bloomsbury: We are delighted to announce the Bloomsbury Academic Writing Fellowship will run for a third successive year in partnership with Writers & Artists.
If you identify as Black, Asian or Ethnically Diverse (BAED), are based in the UK, and have an idea you would like to develop into an academic book but are unsure where to start, this Fellowship is for you. We’ve expanded the criteria this year to include key thematic topics from across the Humanities and Social Sciences.
The recipient of this Fellowship will receive £1000 of financial support, £250 worth of books from Bloomsbury Academic, editorial support and mentorship for one year, plus event and networking opportunities.
Applications can be submitted between 1st September 2025 and 1st October 2025.
We are delighted to announce the Bloomsbury Academic Writing Fellowship will run for a third successive year in partnership with Writers & Artists.
If you identify as Black, Asian or Ethnically Diverse (BAED), are based in the UK, and have an idea you would like to develop into an academic book but are unsure where to start, this Fellowship is for you. We’ve expanded the criteria this year to include key thematic topics from across the Humanities and Social Sciences.
The recipient of this Fellowship will receive £1000 of financial support, £250 worth of books from Bloomsbury Academic, editorial support and mentorship for one year, plus event and networking opportunities.
Applications can be submitted between 1st September 2025 and 1st October 2025.
3. Workshop Programme and Registration: Beyond Eurocentrism and Arabocentrism, 12–13 September 2025, University of Aberdeen, UK
Please see, via the link below, the full programme of the workshop for your consideration.
You may register for all sessions through the link provided below. For those who are near Aberdeen University, we would be delighted to welcome you in person.
https://www.abdn.ac.uk/dhpa/news/24636/
