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The Society for East Asian Archaeology (SEAA) is a non-governmental organization established to:

SEAA News Blog

By mjstoroz on 02 Oct 2024 1:25 AM
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Thank you for your patience as we have been working diligently to complete our online registration and submission center for SEAA10, graciously hosted by the University of Aberdeen. We are pleased to inform you that you may now register for SEAA membership, register for SEAA10, and submit proposals for your research papers, posters, short films, and organized sessions all online. Registration will be open from now until November 29th. Feel free to use the image provided below to promote SEAA10.

You can find additional details regarding the conference and the call for papers here: https://seaa-web.org/conferences/upcoming/seaa10

By mjstoroz on 29 Aug 2024 7:21 AM
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On Behalf of the Council on East Asian Studies and the Archaia Program for the Study of Global Antiquity at Yale University:

Join scholars from across Japan, Europe, and North America for an exciting two-day conference, "The Archaeology of Early Japan: Debating Social Complexity." An in person event, coffee, lunch, light refreshments will be provided. Please register at the following link to attend: https://ceas.yale.edu/archaeology-early-japan-debating-social-complexity[/html]

By mjstoroz on 07 Aug 2024 5:16 AM

The Board of the European Association for Asian Art and Archaeology (EAAA) is pleased to announce a call for papers for the 4th EAAA Conference to be held at the School of Arts and Humanities – University of Lisbon (Portugal) between 8 and 13 September 2025. The 4th Conference is jointly organised by the European Association for Asian Art and Archaeology (EAAA), the UNIARQ – Centre for Archaeology (School of Arts and Humanities), the CH-ULisboa – Centre for History of the University of Lisbon, ARTIS-Institute of Art History and ACN-Asia Collections Network.

By mjstoroz on 07 Aug 2024 5:15 AM
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Our long-term member, Professor Koji Mizoguchi, was recently elected as an International Fellow of the British Academy.

Koji Mizoguchi is the Professor of Archaeology at Kyushu University's Faculty of Social and Cultural Studies. He is the first Japanese archaeologist and the first researcher from Kyushu University to receive this honour. Over the past decades as a social archaeologist, Mizoguchi has analysed materials such as artefacts, architecture, and human remains to reconstruct how people lived, interacted, and organised their societies. His work aims to uncover the stories behind historical artefacts and experiences, understanding how knowledge is produced and its impact on both past and present societies.

To know more about the full news release and Professor Koji Mizoguchi's research, please visit:
https://www.thebritishacademy.ac.uk/news/the-british-academy-welcomes-86...
https://www.kyushu-u.ac.jp/en/topics/view/580
https://hyoka.ofc.kyushu-u.ac.jp/search/details/K001760/english.html

By mjstoroz on 07 Aug 2024 5:13 AM
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The McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research (University of Cambridge) will host a two-day symposium on "The Transition to Agriculture at the edges of Eurasia: Neolithisation in the British Isles and the Jomon-Yayoi transition" on July 4-5.

This two-day symposium will present the latest advances on the transition to farming in the British Isles and the Japanese archipelago as well as the key outputs of the ENCOUNTER project. A total of 19 speakers will discuss different aspects of this pivotal event, covering aspects such as population genetics, cultural transmission, paleoecology, subsistence economy and paleodemography. The event will be both in person and online (the number of in-person attendees will be limited).

For detailed programme and registration: https://www.encounterproject.info/announcements