June 25, 2018
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Date/Time | Thursday, June 28, 2018, 11:00 AM–12:30 PM |
Venue |
G-Lab, 6th Floor, East Research Building, Keio University Mita Campus
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Commentator | Professor Naoki Ikegami (Professor Emeritus, Keio University School of Medicine; Project Professor, St. Luke's International University) |
Eligibility | Open to all (No Fee/Pre-registration Required) |
Language | Japanese and English |
As an attempt to bridge the humanities and social sciences and the medical sciences, we will welcome Professor Shigehisa Kuriyama, who has taught the history of medicine at Harvard University for many years.
Professor Kuriyama is a world-renowned authority in the social scientific study of the medical sciences. In his book
The Expressiveness of the Body and the Divergence of Greek and Chinese Medicine, he depicted the fundamentally different views of the body that underlie ancient Greek and ancient Chinese medicine,
and in "Rekishi no Naka no Yamai to Igaku" (Disease and Medicine in History), he elucidated when the Japanese people began to suffer
from stiff shoulders. Furthermore, in his edited volume "Kindai Nihon no Shintai Kankaku" (Bodily Sensibilities in Modern Japan), he analyzed the discontinuities and continuities in bodily sensations brought about by modernity
through the permeation of the discourse on "stress" in modern Japan. In "Chikoku no Tanjō: Kindai Nihon ni
okeru Jikan Ishiki no Keisei" (The Birth of Tardiness: The Formation of Time Consciousness in Modern Japan), he explored the historical origins of Japanese diligence. In recent years, in the age of big data,
he has been developing research using innovative methodologies to explore how history can be questioned and retold
using a databank of images. For this event, he will instruct us on new methods of historical inquiry that connect the body
with images and visuals, and we will have comments from Professor Naoki Ikegami,
a leader in research on the history of medical sciences policy in Japan.
Forwarding, participation, and admission are all free. However, as there are materials (diagrams) to be distributed in advance, those who wish to attend
are requested to contact Junko Kitanaka at kitanaka@flet.keio.ac.jp . The lecture will be given primarily in Japanese, but
English speakers are also welcome to attend.
Kuriyama's bio: Shigehisa Kuriyama received his A.B. degree from Harvard's Department of East Asian Languages and
Civilizations in 1977 and an A.M. degree in 1978. After completing acupuncture studies in Tokyo, he
entered Harvard's Department of the History of Science, which awarded him a Ph.D. in 1986. He joined
the Harvard faculty as Reischauer Professor in 2005 after previously working at the University of New
Hampshire, Emory University, and the International Research Center for Japanese Studies in Kyoto,
Japan. Kuriyama's research explores broad philosophical issues (being and time, representations and
reality, knowing and feeling) through the lens of specific topics in comparative medical history (Japan,
China, and Europe). His book, The Expressiveness of the Body and the Divergence of Greek and
Chinese Medicine (Zone, 1999), received the 2001 William H. Welch Medal of the American Association
for the History of Medicine, and has been translated into Chinese, Greek, Spanish, and Korean. His
recent work includes studies on the history of distraction, the imagination of strings in the experience
of presence, the transformation of money into a palpable humor in Edo Japan, the nature of
hiddenness in traditional Chinese medicine, and the web of connections binding ginseng, opium, tea,
silver, and MSG. Kuriyama has also been actively engaged in expanding the horizons of teaching and
scholarly communication through the creative use of digital technologies both at Harvard and at other
universities in the US and abroad.
This symposium is organized by the Global Research Center of Logic and Sensibility at Keio University
and is funded by JSPS Kakenhi 16KT0123.