Popular nationalism is of growing importance across the globe, including Asia. This interdisciplinary roundtable brings together distinguished scholars of India, China, Japan and Korea to consider the central role of gender in the popular nationalist movements of these countries. How have different religious and cultural traditions shaped tensions between feminism and nationalism? How do such tensions play out differently under different political contexts and social conditions? From Hindu Nationalism in India to the Comfort Women controversy in Japan and Korea to the Me Too Movement in China, panelists will probe the complex connections between popular nationalism and conceptions of gender.
Panelists include Hyaeweol Choi (C. Maxwell and Elizabeth M. Stanley Family and Korea Foundation Chair in Korean Studies, University of Iowa), Iza Ding (Associate Professor of Political Science, Northwestern University), Tanika Sarkar (Retired Professor, Jawaharlal Nehru University; Visiting Professor, Ashoka University), and Chizuko Ueno (Professor Emerita, The University of Tokyo, Ph.D in Sociology).
The event is chaired by Elizabeth J. Perry (Henry Rosovsky Professor of Government, Harvard University; Director, Harvard-Yenching Institute)
The Mittal Institute is co-sponsoring this event.