Stockholms universitet

Global Diplomacy Network Members and Participants

The network is a platform for a wide range of international researchers within several fields.

Stefan AMIRELL (Linnaeus University, Växjö)

AKUNE Susumu (Kyoto Prefectural University)

Catia ANTUNES (Leiden University)

Joshua BATTS (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)

Deborah BESSEGHINI (Università degli Studi di Torino)

Zoltán BIEDERMANN (University College, London)

Tessa DE BOER (Leiden University)

Massimo BOMBONI (University of Turin) 

Peter BORSCHBERG (National University of Singapore)

Guido BRAUN (University of Mulhouse)

Christina BRAUNER (University of Tübingen)

Ana BUSQUETS ALEMANY (Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Barcelona)

Céline CARAYON (Salisbury University)

Sinem CASALE (University of Minnesota)

Eline CEULEMANS (University of Antwerp)

Nandini CHATTERJEE (University of Exeter)

Eberhard CRAILSHEIM (Centro de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales)

DAITO Norifumi (University of Tokyo)

Rémi DEWIÈRE (Northumbria University)

Isaac DONOSO JIMENEZ (Universidad de Alicante)

José Miguel ESCRÍBANO PAEZ (Universidad Pablo de Olavide)

Michael FACIUS (University of Tokyo)

Carl FEDDERSEN (University of Agder)

Emma FORSBERG (Lund University)

Juliette FRANÇOISE (University of Geneva)

FUKUOKA Mariko (National Museum for Japanese History)

Guillaume GAUDIN (Université Toulouse II Jean Jaurés)

Anne GERRITSEN (Warwick University)

Shounak GHOSH (Vanderbilt University)

Dorothée GOETZE (Mittuniversitet, Sundsvall)

Lorenz GONSCHOR (University of the South Pacific, Fiji)

Rubén GONZÁLEZ CUERVA (Centro de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales)

Mathieu GRENET (Université Toulouse)

Jan HENNINGS (Central European University)

Hans HÄGERDAL (Linnaeus University, Växjö)

Sophie HOLM (German Historical Institute, Moscow) 

HANEDA Masashi (University of Tokyo)

Ubaldo IACCARINO (Università Degli Studi di Napoli “L’Orientale”)

JIAQI Liu (University of Warwick)

Yusuf Ziya KARABUCAK (American School of Classical Studies at Athens)

Mathias Istrup KARLSMOSE (Stockholm University)

Benjamin KHOO JUN QI (National University of Singapore)

Peter KITLAS (NYU Abu Dhabi)

André KRISCHER (University of Freiburg)

Brinda KUMAR (Linnaeus University, Växjö)

Florian KÜHNEL (Leibniz Institute of European History, Mainz)  

Elizabeth LAMBOURN (DeMontfort University, Leicester)

Ryan LANGTON (Temple University)

Markus LAUFS (German Historical Museum, Berlin)

Halvard LEIRA (Norwegian Institute of International Affairs, Oslo)

Ariel LOPEZ (University of the Philippines, Diliman)

Martin MANSE (Linnaeus University, Växjö)

Eleonor MARCUSSEN (Linnaeus University, Växjö)

Franklin MARTINEZ (Linnaeus University, Växjö)

MATSUI Hiroe (Doshisha Archives)

MATSUKATA Fuyuko (University of Tokyo)

João CARVALHO DE MELO (Seville)

Kurosh MESHKAT (British Library)

Matthew MOSCA (University of Washington, Seattle)

Tristan MOSTERT (Leiden University)

Leos MÜLLER (Stockholm University)

Pichayapat NAISUPAP (Leiden University)

Lena OETZEL (University of Salzburg)

Csaba OLÁH (International Christian Univerisity, Tokyo)

Ronald C. PO (London School of Economics)

Eleonora POGGIO (Linnaeus University, Växjö)

Anna PYTLOWANY (Independent Researcher)

Kapil RAJ (École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris)

Giorgio RIELLO (European University Institute, Florence)

Vladislav RJÉOUTSKI (German Historical Institute, Paris)

Antonella ROMANO (École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris)

Sebastian ROSE (University of Greenwich)

Janne SCHREURS (KU Leuven)

Anton SCHWEIZER (Kyushu University, Fukuoka)

Giles SCOTT-SMITH (Leiden University)

Travis SEIFMAN (Ritsumeikan University, Kyoto)

Alejandro SELL MAESTRO (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid)

Gül SEN (Universität Bonn)

Ajapa SHARMA (University of Illinois, Chicago)

SHIMAZU Naoko (Tokyo University)

Sean SILVIA (Oxford University)

Tracey SOWERBY (University of Oxford)

Mattia STEARDO (University of Turin)

Michael TALBOT (University of Greenwich)

Tamara Ann TINNER (Linnaeus University, Växjö)

Carla TRONU (Kansai Gaidai University, Osaka)

Matylda URJASZ-RACZKO (University of Warsaw)

Martine VAN ITTERSUM (University of Dundee)

Yanna YANNAKAKIS (Emory University, Atlanta)

WANG Sixiang (University of California-Los Angeles)

Kathryn WELLEN (KITLV)

Christian WINDLER (University of Bern) 

ZHANG Meng (University of California-Los Angeles)

ZIYI Xia-Kang (Oxford University)

Joachim ÖSTLUND (Lund University)

Kontakt

For interest and questions about participating in the network, contact one of the network directors. 

Birgit Tremml-WernerUniversitetslektor

Om mig

Docent vid Linnéuniversitet 2023, lektor i historia med inriktning mot globalhistoria vid Stockholmsuniversitet från 2023.

 

Jag disputerade vid Wiens universitet i Österrike i 2012 med en avhandling om den tidigmoderna handelsstaden Manila och gav en ny bild av handel och diplomatiska förbindelser i Sydostasien. Avhandling publicerads som Spain, China and Japan in Manila, 1571-1644: Local Comparisons and Global Connections (Amsterdam University Press, 2015) och även översatt till kinesiska i 2022. Innan jag började vid Stockholms universitet har jag varit forskare vid Tokyo universitet (2013-2015), Zürichs universitet (2016-2019) och MSCA fellow vid Linnéuniversitet (2021-2023).

Undervisning

Undervisar på alla nivåer från första terminens grundkurs i historia till doktorandhandledning. Nuvarande kurser: Historia I (Delkurs 1: Historia som vetenskap och Dekurs 3: Tidigmoderna seminarium samt föreläsning om racism), Historia III (seminarium i Teori och metod samt föreläsning i Teori och metod).

De senaste åren undervisade jag mest i mastersprogrammet Koloniala i postkoloniala studier vid Linnéuniversitetet. Jag undervisar även regelbundet i olika kurser i historia vid University of the Philippines (Diliman, Baguio) och Universidad Autónoma de Madrid.

 

Doktorandhandledning: Mathias Istrup Karlsmose (SU), Tamara Ann Tinner (LNU), Isak Kronberg (LNU).

Forskningsprojekt

Publikationer

I urval från Stockholms universitets publikationsdatabas

  • The Elephant in the Archive: Knowledge Construction and Late Eighteenth-Century Global Diplomacy

    2023. Birgit Tremml-Werner. Itinerario 47 (2), 185-202

    Artikel

    This article explores the dynamics behind global diplomacy and knowledge in Asian maritime empires in the late eighteenth century. The short-lived diplomatic exchange between the Kingdom of Mysore and the Spanish Philippines in 1776–7 provides a rich resource for an analysis of how global diplomatic agents coproduced material objects, images, and written records which in turn impacted politics and trade relations. The article makes at least four important interventions in the burgeoning field of new diplomatic history. First, it sheds light on certain aspects of growing research on Asian diplomatic encounters connecting the Indian Ocean and Southeast Asia; second, it offers insights into the manifold actors involved in creating and negotiating knowledge; third, it highlights the epistemological importance of the visual and material archives for the study of global diplomacy in the early modern period; and fourth, it challenges narratives of cross-cultural foreign relations which tend to overemphasise asymmetrical and confessional explanations.

    Läs mer om The Elephant in the Archive
  • Rethinking colonialism through early modern global diplomacy: A tale of Pampangan mobility

    2024. Birgit Tremml-Werner. Journal of Global History 19 (1), 18-36

    Artikel

    This study is an intervention in early modern global diplomacy. Integrating an indigenous community of the Philippines into foreign relations and maritime connections, the article reevaluates the complex story of the Pampangans of Luzon, allegedly long-term allies of the Spanish conquerors, and the narrative of indigenous collaboration. Foregrounding the Pampangans’ involvement in military campaigns, as well as territorial and maritime expansion in the early decades of the 1600s, the article introduces three scenarios of Pampangan power bargaining with global consequences. The focus on Pampangan foreign relations opens new analytical perspectives on the role of language and knowledge for internal coloniality on the one hand, foreign and diplomatic negotiations on the other. Methodologically, it proposes a deep (re-)reading of the polyvocal archive of the colonial-indigenous encounter and integrates insights with the largely separated scholarship of diplomatic and indigenous history as a new avenue in global history.

    Läs mer om Rethinking colonialism through early modern global diplomacy

Visa alla publikationer av Birgit Tremml-Werner vid Stockholms universitet

Forskare
Network director