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Caroline, Sy Hau

Division:Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Associate Professor
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2007 G-COE Research Outcome
 

  • Hau, Caroline “Feilübin ‘Huaren Wenti’: Makesizhuyidejieshi [‘The Chinese Question’ in the Philippines: A Marxist Interpretation],” Shijie zhi Zhongguo: Yuwai Zhongguo Xingxiangyanjiu [China in the World: The Study of Images of China Abroad], edited by Zhou Ning, chapter translated by Li Jingke. Nanjing: Nanjing University Press, October 2007. pp. 382-404.
  • Hau, Caroline “Introduction,” Lagalag sa Nanyang ni Bai Ren [Bai Ren’s Adrift in the Southern Ocean], translated by Joaquin Sy. Quezon City: University of the Philippines Press, July 2007. vii-xxvi.*

 

List of Academic Presentations during 2007:
 

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2008 G-COE Research Outcome:

  • Hau, Caroline Review of Vicente Rafael, The Promise of the Foreign: Nationalism and the Technics of Translation in the Spanish Philippines. Southeast Asian Studies 46.1 (June 2008): 163-65.
  • Hau, Caroline Book review, Patricio Abinales, The Joys of Dislocation: Mindanao, Nation and Region, ABS-CBN News Online. Posted June 11, 2008/06/11
  • Hau, Caroline Book review, Vicente Rafael, The Promise of the Foreign, Tonan Ajia Kenkyu (Southeast Asian Studies), vol. 46, no.1 (June 2008): 163-65.
  • Hau, Caroline Guest Editor, Philippine Studies special issue on “Kyoto’s Emergent Scholarship,” vol. 56 no. 3 (September 2008). “Editor’s Introduction” (pp. 1-2)
  • Hau, Caroline Guest Editor, Philippine Studies special issue on “Kyoto’s Emergent Scholarship,” vol. 56 no. 3 (September 2008). “Editor’s Introduction” (pp. 1-2)
  • Hau, Caroline Co-editor (with Nobuhiro Aizawa), Proceedings of the CSEAS-Netherlands Institute for War Documentation Joint International Workshop on “Chinese Identities and Inter-Ethnic Coexistence and Cooperation in Southeast Asia.” Kyoto: Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University, 2009. Includes my essay “Blood, Land and Conversion: Mestizoness and the Politics of Belonging in Jose Angliongto’s The Sultanate” (pp. 89-138)
  • Hau, Caroline  “The Filipino Novel in English,” Philippine English: Linguistic and Literary Perspectives, edited by Ma. Lourdes S. Bautista and Kingsley Bolton. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2008. 317-36.
  • Hau, Caroline “Blood, Land and Conversion: ‘Chinese’ Mestizoness and the Politics of Belonging in Jose Angliongto’s The Sultanate,” Philippine Studies 57.1 (2009): 3-48.

 

List of Academic Presentations during 2008:
 

  • Hau, Caroline “Blood, Land, and Conversion: The Politics of Belonging in Jose Angliongto’s The Sultanate,” paper read at the CSEAS-Netherlands Institute for War Documentation Joint International Workshop on “Chinese Identities and Inter-Ethnic Coexistence and Cooperation in Southeast Asia,” July 4, 2008, CSEAS, Kyoto University.
  • Hau, Caroline “Blood, Land, Conversion: The Politics of Belonging in Post-Independence Philippines,” 12th Kyoto University International Symposium on “Transforming Racial Images: Analyses of Representations,” Kyoto University, December 5, 2008.
  • Hau, Caroline “Mestizoness and the Politics of Belonging in Post-Independence Philippines,” Seminar, Institute for Research in the Humanities, Kyoto University, November 15, 2008.
  • Hau, Caroline “Family Matters: Kinship, Politics, Business and the “Chinese”/”Mestizo” in the Philippines,” JSPS Core University Symposium on “The Making of East Asia from Both Macro and Micro Perspectives,” CSEAS, Kyoto University, February 23, 2009.
  • Hau, Caroline (co-presenter), “On Asianism as Fantasy and Network,” GRIPS Global COE Program Workshop on “Political Networks in Asia,” Graduate Research Institute of Policy Studies, Tokyo, February 28, 2009.

 

2009 G-COE Research Outcome:

  • Caroline S. Hau “Blood, Land and Conversion: ‘Chinese’ Mestizoness and the Politics of Belonging in Jose Angliongto’s The Sultanate,” Philippine Studies 57.1 (2009): 3-48.*
  • Caroline S. Hau and Takashi Shiraishi, “Daydreaming about Rizal and Tetchō: On Asianism as Network and Fantasy,” Philippine Studies 57.3 (2009): 329-88.
  • Caroline S. Hau and Nobuhiro Aizawa, Proceedings of the CSEAS-Netherlands Institute for War Documentation Joint International Workshop on “Chinese Identities and Inter-Ethnic Coexistence and Cooperation in Southeast Asia.” Kyoto: Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University, 2009.

 

List of Academic Presentations during 2009:

  • Caroline S. Hau  “Family Matters: Kinship, Politics, Business and the “Chinese”/”Mestizo” in the Philippines,” JSPS Core University Symposium on “The Making of East Asia from Both Macro and Micro Perspectives,” CSEAS, Kyoto University, February 23, 2009
  • Caroline S. Hau  (co-author with Takashi Shiraishi), “On Asianism as Fantasy and Network,” GRIPS Global COE Program First Workshop on “Political Networks in Asia,” Graduate Research Institute of Policy Studies, Tokyo, February 28, 2009

 

2010 G-COE Research Outcome:

  • Caroline S. Hau  Takashi Shiraishi and Caroline S. Hau, “Only Yesterday: China, Japan, and the Transformation of East Asia,” The Cold War in Asia: The Battle for Hearts and Minds, ed. Zheng Yangwen, Hong Liu and Michael Szonyi, 25-38. Boston: Brill, 2010.
  • Caroline S. Hau  “Feilübin ‘Huaren Wenti’: Makesi zhuyi de jieshi [‘The Chinese Question’ in the Philippines: A Marxist Interpretation],” Shijie zhi Zhongguo: Yuwai Zhongguo Xingxiangyanjiu [China in the World: The Study of Images of China Abroad] (in Chinese), edited by Zhou Ning, chapter translated by Li Jingke. Nanjing: Nanjing University Press, October 2007. pp. 382-404. Expanded English version published as “’The Chinese Question’: A Marxist Interpretation,” Marxism in the Philippines: Continuing Engagements, edited by Teresa Tadem, 156-87. Manila: Anvil Publishing and University of the Philippines Third World Studies Center, 2010.*
  • Caroline S. Hau  “Du Ai, Lin Bin and Revolutionary Flows,” Traveling Nation-Makers: Transnational Flows and Movements in the Making of Modern Southeast Asia, ed. Caroline Hau and Kasian Tejapira. Kyoto and Singapore: Kyoto University Press and NUS Press, March 2011. pp. 153-87.*

 

List of Academic Presentations during 2010:

  • Caroline S. Hau  (co-author with Takashi Shiraishi), “On Asianism as Fantasy and Network,” GRIPS Global COE Program Second Workshop on “Political Networks in Asia,” Graduate Research Institute of Policy Studies, Tokyo, May 14, 2010
  • Caroline S. Hau  “The Politics of (Chinese) Mestizoness in Colonial and Contemporary Philippines,” International Conference on Post-Colonial Praxis: Postcolonial Praxis: Theories, Cultural Practices and Movements for the Global South, University of the Philippines, Quezon City, July 21, 2010.
  • Caroline S. Hau  Keynote Speech, “Regional Contexts of Media Cooperation and Artistic Collaboration in East Asia,” International Conference on Media Cooperation and Cultural Exchange in Asia, sponsored by Inha University (S. Korea) and University of the Philippines College of Mass Communications, University of the Philippines, Diliman, Quezon City, Philippines, October 8, 2010.
  • Caroline S. Hau  “Rethinking Asianism: Region, Networks and the Question of Contemporary Relevance,” Kyoto University Press Club, Kyoto University, November 25, 2010.
  • Caroline S. Hau  (co-author with Takashi Shiraishi), “Rethinking Asianism as Network and Fantasy,” International Workshop on Asianism, Hokkaido University, January 29, 2011.
  • Caroline S. Hau  “Becoming ‘Chinese’ in China and Southeast Asia,” Workshop on Sinicization, Cornell University-Beijing University project headed by Peter Katzenstein, Peking University, Beijing, March 26, 2011

 

2011 G-COE Research Outcome:

  • Caroline S. Hau “’Patria e intereses’: Reflections on the Origins and Changing Meanings of Ilustrado,” Philippine Studies 59, no. 1 (2011): 3-54.
  • Caroline S. Hau and Kasian Tejapira, ed., Traveling Nation-Makers: Transnational Flows and Movements in the Making of Modern Southeast Asia. Kyoto and Singapore: Kyoto University Press and NUS Press, 2011.
  • Caroline S. Hau, Special Issue Editor, Southeast Asian Studies Special Issue on “Colonial Philippines in Transition”, vol. 49, no.3 (2011).
  • Caroline S. Hau  “Becoming ‘Chinese’ in Southeast Asia,” in Sinicization and the Rise of China: Civilizational Processes beyond East and West, ed. Peter J. Katzenstein. London and New York: Routledge, 2012. 175-206.
  • Caroline S. Hau  “Ethnicity, Ideology and the ‘Chinese’/’Mestizo’ Family in the Philippines,” The Family in Flux in Southeast Asia: Institution, Ideology, Practice, ed. Yoko Hayami, Junko Koizumi, Chalidaporn Songsampan, Ratana Tosakul. Kyoto and Bangkok: Kyoto University Press and Silkworm Press, 2012. 227-47
  • Caroline S. Hau  Caroline S. Hau and Takashi Shiraishi, “Regional Contexts of Cooperation and Collaboration in Hong Kong Cinema,” Popular Culture Co-Productions and Collaborations in East and Southeast Asia, ed. Nissim Otmazgin and Eyal Ben-Ari. Singapore and Kyoto: NUS Press and Kyoto University Press, 2012
  • Richard T. Chu, Chinese and Chinese Mestizos of Manila: Family, Identity, and Culture, 1860s-1930s by Richard T. Chu. Leiden: Brill. Southeast Asian Studies vol. 49, no. 3 (2011): 525-28

 

List of Academic Presentations during 2011:

  • Caroline S. Hau  Plenary Speech, “Rizal, Ilustrado, OFW?” International Conference on 150th Anniversary of the Birth of Jose Rizal, Asian Center, University of the Philippines, 24 June 2011.
  • Caroline S. Hau  “Commodifying Chineseness: Southeast Asian Female Ethnopreneurs and the Politics of Cultural Arbitrage,” CSEAS-Nanyang Technological University-Sun Yat-Sen University Joint International Workshop, “Plural Co-existence: East Asian Experiences in Comparative and Interdisciplinary Perspectives,” December 17, 2011, CSEAS, Kyoto University.
  • Caroline S. Hau  “Lillian Too, Ethnopreneur,” CSEAS-GRIPS International Workshop on “The Rise of China and the Transformation of Southeast Asia: National, International, and Transnational Perspectives,” January 22, 2012, CSEAS, Kyoto University.