597 search results for “indonesie and japan language and culturele” in the Staff website
-
Mert Yazan
Science
-
Fei Bai
Faculty of Humanities
-
Tessa Verhoef
Science
-
Leticia Pablos Robles
Faculty of Humanities
-
Olaf Kaper
Faculty of Humanities
-
Peter Bisschop
Faculty of Humanities
-
Martijn Lemmen
Faculty of Humanities
-
Ying Zhang
Faculty of Humanities
-
Nominate students for the ECHO Award 2023
Social
-
Seminar: Refugees and asylum seekers in East Asia: Perspectives from Japan and Taiwan
Debate
-
High school students get acquainted with language studies at profile selection day
The Choose a Language Day was created to make high school students enthusiastic about choosing a linguistic profile and further education. Third-years were able to learn about different language studies at the Faculty of Humanities.
-
Katarzyna Cwiertka
Faculty of Humanities
-
Meddling for profit: Japan’s peace-building role in Myanmar
Lecture, Research seminar
-
Memories of Cinema-Going in Postwar Japan: An Ethno-history
Lecture
-
Decolonisation: Museums as Media, and the Representation of Ainu in Museums in Japan
Lecture
-
Important findings in plain language: Leiden University introduces lay talk
PhD ceremonies in the Academy Building will be much easier for family, friends and other non-specialist audience members to follow after the summer. The Doctorate Board is pleased to have decided that as of 1 September, all Leiden PhD candidates will begin their PhD defence with a lay talk. ‘It can…
-
Who spoke what language in north-western sixth-century China?
Fifteen hundred years ago, the north-west of what we now call China was a jumble of peoples. How did those Indians, Khotanese and Tocharians influence each other and each other's languages? Associate professor Michaël Peyrot has been awarded an ERC grant of almost two million euros to unravel this 'web…
-
New language proficiency requirements for new PhD candidates (starting trajectory from 1 September 2024 onwards)
Research
-
Blood, Tears and Samurai Love: A Tragic Tale from Eighteenth-Century Japan
Lecture, LIAS Lunch Talk Series
-
New professor Suzan Verberne aims to bring large language models and search engines closer together
Suzan Verberne has been appointed professor of Natural Language Processing at the Leiden Institute of Advanced Computer Science (LIACS) from 1 October. Verberne has been at LIACS since 2017 as group leader of the Text Mining and Retrieval group.
-
Some Contexts and Practices of S&T Foresight and Impact Assessment in Japan
Seminar
-
Social media
Social media is a good way to meet others or to hear about the latest news and developments. It is an excellent way to tell people about what you are doing and to hear what they are up to too. But social media also has its downsides: disinformation, trolling, disrespectful comments and even the misuse…
-
Japanese Culture: a Lecture on the Essence of the Funeral Culture in Japan
Lecture
-
vote: Peripheralization, redistribution, and electoral stability in Japan’s depopulating municipalities
Lecture, Lunch Research Seminar
-
Democracy: Mothers’ Education and Learning Activities in late-1950s Japan,
Lecture
-
Johanneke Caspers
Faculty of Humanities
-
Maria van der Schaar
Faculty of Humanities
-
Marianne van Dijken
Faculteit der Sociale Wetenschappen
-
Marga Sikkema-de Jong
Faculteit der Sociale Wetenschappen
-
Carmen van den Bergh
Faculty of Humanities
-
Matthew Sung
Faculty of Humanities
-
Alisa van de Haar
Faculty of Humanities
-
Brenda Assendelft
Faculty of Humanities
-
Martin Kroon
Faculty of Humanities
-
Tina Cambier-Langeveld
Faculty of Humanities
-
Gabe van Beijeren Bergen en Henegouwen
Faculty of Humanities
-
A dead language comes to life: Early medieval Old English in the 21st century
From films, video games and historical novels to Nordic folk bands, Old English from the early Middle Ages is experiencing a revival in the 21st century. Together with international colleagues, university lecturer Thijs Porck (LUCAS) made a book about the 'resurrection' of this dead language.
-
The BIAS project attends the summer school on ‘Law and Language’ at Pavia University
Carlotta Rigotti, Postdoc researcher at eLaw, and Eduard Fosch-Villaronga, Associate Professor at eLaw, delivered a lecture on AI and non-discrimination, engaging students with the Debiaser demo.
-
this is how you create a dictionary for an unknown Middle Eastern language
Leiden scholars succeeded in making Arabic accessible to Western academic communities as early as the sixteenth century. But how did they approach this problem?
-
Why do Japanese and South Korean women falter on their way to the top?
In recent decades, women in Japan and South Korea have been catching up in terms of educational achievements and economic activity. Yet the number of women in leadership positions is still lagging behind. PhD candidate Yorum Beekman investigated why this is.
-
Public Support for Citizenship Expansion in South Korea, Japan, and Taiwan
Lecture, LIAS Lunch Talk Series
-
Nominate a student for the ECHO Awards 2022
Organisation
-
Language, Stories, and Understanding Others
Lecture
-
NWO grant for research about crossing language borders: ‘ We know very little about how multilingualism works outside Western societies’
Professor Felix Ameka and university lecturer Maria del Carmen Parafita Couta have received an NWO Open Competition grant together with Enoch Aboh (University of Amsterdam) to do research on ‘code-switching’: switching languages by multilinguals.
-
NWO Grant for Research into the History of Languages: ‘It tells us something about our past as humans’
A collaboration between linguists, geographers and anthropologists aims to uncover how languages spread across South America over thousands of years. Associate Professor Rik van Gijn is responsible for the linguistic side of this NWO project.
-
From oscillations to language: behavioural and electroencephalographic studies on cross-language interactions
PhD defence
-
Inscription on the Folding Screen at the Turn of the 17th Century in Japan
Lecture
-
Benjamin Suchard: ‘The more you send out into the world, the more likely it will stick’
How do you make niche subjects interesting and accessible? Benjamin Suchard, historical linguist and researcher, seems to have created the perfect recipe, which consists of his various projects alongside his regular research, including a Twitter account and a major international film.
-
ERC grant for Jan Vonk: 'Mathematics is the most powerful language to describe our universe'
On 22 November, Leiden scientist Jan Vonk received an ERC starting grant for his research on the building blocks of mathematics. This grant is not his first this year: in fact, this July Vonk also received a Vidi from NWO. Four questions to the scientist who got two grants this year.
-
European Day of Languages
Festival