Public Lecture: Prof. Robert Hellyer, Wake Forest University
February 24, 12:00pm - 1:15pmMānoa Campus, Sakamaki A-201
Following the Meiji Restoration of 1868, Japan emerged as a tea exporting nation, the first state to effectively challenge China芒鈧劉s centuries-old monopoly of the world tea market. As the second largest export commodity after silk, tea not only boosted economic development in the push toward industrialization but also provided jobs for groups dislocated by post-Restoration reforms, notably ex-samurai who became tea farmers. Women in treaty ports also found employment in tea refining factories, which were often supervised by Chinese experts. Japanese merchants focused on creating a 芒鈧揓apan Tea芒鈧 brand of green tea to meet the tastes of consumers in the United States, which since the early days of the republic had been a green-tea consuming nation.
This talk will explore the perspectives of the Japanese farmers, factory workers, and merchants (as well as the Chinese experts) involved in the trade, highlighting how their participation contributed to the successful formation of the Japanese nation-state. It will also examine US tea consumption to reveal ways in which US trends influenced Japan芒鈧劉s tea production and thus the livelihoods of those involved in the tea export trade.
Robert Hellyer is an Associate Professor in the Department of History at Wake Forest University.
Event Sponsor
Dept. of History, Mānoa Campus
More Information
Prof. David Hanlon, (808) 956-8486
Friday, February 24 |
|
9:00am |
E Ola Pono - Cultural, Health & Wellness Week West Oʻahu Campus, 1001 Farrington Hwy, Kapolei, HI 96707
|
9:30am |
Social Media Coaching: Facebook Honolulu Campus, Building 2
|
11:30am |
Geology and Geophysics Special Seminar Mānoa Campus, POST 723
|
11:30am |
Researching Atmospheric Events (and more) Through Hawaiian Language Resources Mānoa Campus, Kuykendall 106
|
12:00pm |
Atmospheric Sciences Seminar Mānoa Campus, Pacific Ocean Sciences and Technology 414
|
12:00pm |
Public Lecture: Prof. Robert Hellyer, Wake Forest University Mānoa Campus, Sakamaki A-201
|
1:30pm |
Public Presentation by Dr Arunima Datta Mānoa Campus, Center for Korean Studies Auditorium
|
2:30pm |
Talk by Dr. Philomene Verlaan- Tales of the Snow Leopard Mānoa Campus, Moore 258
|
3:00pm |
MIX International Coffee Hour Mānoa Campus, Queen Liliuokalani Center for Student Services 412
|
3:00pm |
Marriage at Mid-Life in Japan Mānoa Campus, Moore 319
|
3:30pm |
Geology and Geophysics and WRRC Joint Seminar Mānoa Campus, POST 723
|
4:00pm |
Chinese Corner Spring 2017 Mānoa Campus, Moore 109
|
5:00pm |
CCBAC's Living Legacy Mānoa Campus, Campus Center Ballroom
|
7:30pm |
Dobet Gnahor脙漏 Mānoa Campus, Orvis Auditorium
|