Published: Jan. 31, 2023

**Deadline has been extended to February 13th**

 Transgression

The Terasaki Center for Japanese Studies Graduate Student Conference

Transgression, by its very nature, is enigmatic. At once it implies various trespasses on established social, moral, or legal orders, while also suggesting a tantalizing foray into the forbidden. Beyond the mere act it describes, transgression can paradoxically serve a normative function as it establishes ex nihilo the very boundaries it seeks to challenge. The word itself raises questions about the very action it describes: transgressing what, when, where, how, and most importantly why? After all, as graduate students we are actively encouraged to grapple with and engage in transgressions ourselves, whether those transgressions be objects of study or a means to go beyond previously set boundaries in our own fields. This conference offers a chance for us to explore transgression as a generative process more thoroughly, as both a historical and conceptual phenomenon. The aim of this conference is to expose the objects of our studies to new scrutiny regarding the various geographical, temporal, and disciplinary boundaries we inevitably find ourselves confined to. We therefore invite participants to address the idea of transgression in their own work, be these thematic or methodological, to answer questions concerning what role transgression plays in their research, and how transgression establishes and/or undermines the very boundaries it engages with.

The Terasaki Center for Japanese Studies Graduate Student Conference invites papers from graduate students across all departments within the humanities and the social sciences whose research includes Japan. We welcome submissions for individual papers and presentations from graduate students at all levels. Proposals may cover a diverse field of topics and approaches, and can span chronology and geography. Participants are encouraged to address the idea of transgression in their own work, and proposals examining spatial, temporal, disciplinary, and methodological transgressions are particularly welcome.  

We are very honored to have Dr. Seth Jacobowitz as the guest keynote speaker who will also lead his workshop the next day (18th). 

 Abstracts of up to 300 words maximum with a working title should be submitted by February 13th, 2023, at 5:00pm (PST)  to the following Google Form: https://forms.gle/Comj7jgP3hJcjoqWA 

Selected participants will be notified of their acceptance by late February and will then be required to submit a final draft of their paper by late March. Please note that Terasaki Center may be able to cover the partial or whole expenses.