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Deutsches Institut für Japanstudien

ドイツ日本研究所

ドイツ日本研究所は東京に拠点を持つドイツの研究機関である。現代日本をグローバル化する世界というコンテキストにおいて研究することがDIJの研究課題である。

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イベント&アクティビティ

Event Series
イベント
2025年6月25日

Onsite Study Group on Imperial Press Policy in Northeast China

From the late Meiji era, the development of a China-based press network functional to the national interest became an integral part of Japan’s imperial agenda. After the defeat of Russia in the 1904-05 war, the Northeast, compared to other regions, offered to Japanese initiative more favorable conditions to achieve a dominant position in the media landscape. One of the most successful enterprises was the government-sponsored Shengjing Shibao, which became the largest newspaper in Fengtian (Shenyang). As a tool of foreign policy, however, press management suffered from the lack of unified decision-making among different agencies. This talk will present a case study to analyse Japanese imperial press policy as representative of the polycentric character of strategic planning in imperial Japan. Details and registration here

Speaker: Andrea Revelant, Ca’ Foscari University of Venice
Event Series
イベント
2025年6月19日

Online Study Group on Mediation of Deaf and Hearing Sign Language Interpreters in Japan

Sign language interpreting plays a crucial role in ensuring effective communication between Deaf and hearing individuals, particularly in highly specialized settings such as court hearings and psychotherapy sessions. However, interpreting in these fields presents unique challenges, as it requires not only linguistic skills but also the ability to navigate cultural nuances, emotional contexts, and diverse communication needs. This research project examines the practices of Deaf and hearing sign language interpreters in Japan, focusing on how they handle demands, interpret nuances, and adapt their interpreting strategies to individual Deaf sign language users. Key areas of investigation include the strategies employed by interpreters in the courtroom, psychotherapy sessions, conferences, and media, and how these strategies vary according to context and audience, as well as their adaptation to the linguistically and culturally diverse needs of Deaf sign language users. This presentation will outline the research project and offer a critical overview of the research methodology employed in the study. Details and registration here

Speaker: Junko Lévay, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Event Series
イベント
2025年6月20日

International Workshop on the Aging Challenge in Europe and Japan

Economies in Europe and Asia are facing a “slow crisis” with a dual demographic shift: their population is expected to start contracting by 2050; the proportion of older adults is expected to surpass 30% by the same date. Japan is at the forefront of this change, having experienced already a decade of population decline while the share of the elderly is projected to reach 40%.  Particularly challenging is the situation of the “oldest old” who are losing autonomy. The French-Japanese INNOVCARE consortium has introduced “care-led innovation” as a novel approach to reconcile social needs and technological dynamics. The one-day workshop Addressing the Aging Challenge in Europe and Japan – Insights from the INNOVCARE Project , organised by the European Institute of Sophia University, the EHESS, and the DIJ, brings together fifteen international scholars to discuss different perspectives on the aging challenge in Japan. The afternoon part of the workshop will be interpreted into Japanese and is open to the public. Details here

主要著作
2025年4月21日

Open access article by Sébastien Lechevalier introduces French–Japanese research project on innovation led by care

© Policy Press

As societies age, eldercare faces mounting challenges that technology alone cannot solve. The article “Care-led innovation: the case of eldercare in France and in Japan”, co-authored by DIJ researcher Sébastien Lechevalier, Yuko Tamaki Welply, Christophe Humbert, Katsunori Shimohara, and Jean-Marie Robine, introduces the French–Japanese research project INNOVCARE, whose aim is to develop fundamental research on the heterogeneous and evolving needs of older adults and to incorporate it into the conception and development of these technologies, with the aim of promoting a form of innovation led by care. Comparing France and Japan and emphasizing dignity, relational autonomy, and quality of life, the study highlights how an ethics of care approach can bridge the gap between social needs and technological innovation, aiming to empower both those receiving care and their caregivers. The article is published open access in the International Journal of Care and Caring (April 2025, early view).

主要著作
2025年4月12日

New book by Carolin Fleischer-Heininger studies Terayama Shūji and his influence on Japan’s post-war society

© Projekt Verlag

What can literary and artistic works reveal about their time – and how do they shape it? In her new book Terayama Shūji – Literat, Theatermacher, Filmregisseur. Zur Konstruktion seines Nachkriegsjapan im Zeichen globaler, nationaler und lokaler Verflechtungen, DIJ researcher Carolin Fleischer-Heininger explores the construction of postwar Japan through literary, dramatic, and cinematic works of Terayama Shūji (1935–1983). Her study considers the different spatial frames of reference – Aomori, Japan and the world – that guided Terayama’s views and analyses his works with regard to formal and stylistic characteristics. As she shows, Terayama shaped Japan’s cultural landscape by mirroring Japanese society and its narratives. Consequently, Terayama became one of Japan’s most influential and controversial cultural figures. Drawing on theories of globalization and cultural history, Fleischer-Heininger also examines how Terayama’s works negotiate narratives of national identity and historiography in postwar Japan.

その他
2025年4月7日

Celia Spoden receives AJJ Mark Bookman Prize

© Jonathan Webb

DIJ social scientist Celia Spoden was awarded the Mark Bookman Prize by the Anthropology of Japan in Japan (AJJ) association for her presentation  “Avatar Robots as an Alter Ego: New Opportunities for Work or Technological Fixes?” at the joint Japan Anthropology Workshop (JAWS)/AJJ conference in Kobe. Drawing on fieldwork in Tokyo’s DAWN Avatar Robot Café and on interviews with people with disabilities who remotely control an avatar robot from their homes and serve the guests in the cafe, Celia’s paper explores her interlocutor’s motivations and experiences working through the avatar, their perceptions of social participation, work, and disability, and how these perceptions have changed using the avatar. It shows how the avatar robots open up new opportunities for social participation, lead to a feeling of independence and belonging, and challenge common understandings of “disability.” The prize is named after the late Mark Bookman, who was an emerging scholar and a leading authority on disability issues in Japan, and is designed to boost the career of a gifted young scholar researching people with disabilities or other minority groups in Japan.

イベント
2025年6月11日

DIJ researchers co-organise symposium ‘Loneliness as a Social Phenomenon’

DIJ researchers Carolin Fleischer-Heininger and Celia Spoden will present their research related to loneliness and social isolation at the international symposium Loneliness as a Social Phenomenon: Cross-Cultural Approaches to a Human Condition. The symposium examines loneliness as a social phenomenon that has increased as a result of social transformations and structural changes. It brings together an interdisciplinary group of scholars and practitioners to explore loneliness and social isolation. To investigate both conditions, it takes a holistic and cross-cultural approach, and explores themes that connect theoretical understandings with practical application. Participants will share their expertise on the ambivalent role of digital technologies; civil-society measures to foster social inclusion; literary representations of loneliness; and the ethical implications of social fragmentation. In addition to academic presentations, the symposium includes an ethnographic film screening, a workshop, and a field trip to a local project addressing loneliness. The symposium takes place in Hanover from June 11 to 13 and is part of the theme week “(Tackling) Loneliness”, sponsored by the Volkswagen Foundation. Details here

主要著作
2025年4月3日

DIJ Newsletter Spring 2025

The spring issue of our DIJ Newsletter features updates on our research, publications, and events as well as news from the Institute, our team, and our outreach activities. We hope you will enjoy exploring this new edition of the DIJ Newsletter. If you haven’t done so yet, you can subscribe to receive our Newsletters directly to your inbox. The full issues and subscription form are available here.

最新イベント

2025年06月19日
  • DIJ 研究会
    18:30 ~ 20:00

    Inter- and Transcultural Mediation of Deaf and Hearing Sign Language Interpreters in Japan

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    道案内

    ドイツ-日本研究所
    〒102-0094 東京都千代田区
    紀尾井町7-1 上智紀尾井坂ビル 2F
    道案内

    +81 (0)3 3222-5077
    +81 (0)3 3222-5420
    dijtokyo@dijtokyo.org

     


     

    DIJ-ARI Asian Infrastructures Research Partnership