Open to Public/Registration Required
Register at https://rutgers.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJIpcemprDkpH9BLzLgPlMtY8yDXdMZTdRy2
For further details see: https://sites.rutgers.edu/rutgers-meets-japan/conference/
Introduction:
In 1867 Taro Kusakabe (1845-70), a young samurai from Fukui, Japan, began studying at Rutgers College. Several years later, his former tutor and Rutgers alumnus William Elliot Griffis (1843-1928) left for Japan to teach, first in Fukui and later in Tokyo. The year 2020 marked the 150th anniversary of two landmark events in the history of the Rutgers-Japan relationship: the untimely death of Kusakabe only months before his graduation and his friend Griffis’s departure to Japan. This conference is held to commemorate and celebrate the special friendship between Rutgers and Japan. It will illuminate the roles of students, teachers, and missionaries, particularly those from Rutgers and the Dutch Reformed Church, in the modernization of Japan in the late nineteenth century. It also aims to shed new light to the nature of early cultural contacts between the United States and Japan and the diverse perspectives through which the encounter was remembered and told. See Conference Program
Welcome Remarks: Prof. Matt Matsuda, Academic Dean of the Honors College, Rutgers University
Opening Remarks: Mr. Kenju Murakami, Director of Japan Information Center, Consulate-General of Japan in New York
The W. E. Griffis Collection at Rutgers University: Dr. Fernanda Perrone, Archivist at Special Collections and University Archives, New Brunswick Libraries
Professor Hamish Ion, Royal Military College of Canada
Topic: “The Rutgers Connection: Missionaries, Christian Oyatoi and Early Meiji Japan”
Discussant: Joseph Henning (Rochester Institute of Technology)
Professor John Van Sant, University of Alabama, Birmingham
Topic: “The Japanese Class of 1870 at Rutgers”
Discussant:Nathan Jérémie-Brink (New Brunswick Theological Seminary)
Professor Rui Kohiyama, Tokyo Woman’s Christian University
Topic: “Were Wives Better Educated, Charms of Geisha Would Wane”: The Dutch Reformed Church and Its Contribution to Women’s Education in Meiji Japan”
Discussant: Satoru Saito (Rutgers University)
Closing Remarks: Prof. Paul Schalow, Chair, Department of Asian Languages and Cultures, Rutgers University
Convener: Prof. Haruko Wakabayashi, Rutgers University
Co-sponsors:
Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission (JUSFC)
Northeast Asia Council for the Association for Asian Studies (NEAC)
School of Arts and Sciences, Rutgers University
Department of Asian Languages and Cultures, Rutgers University
Rutgers Global