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Dr Natsuko Akagawa
Dr

Natsuko Akagawa

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Phone: 
+61 7 336 56295

Overview

Background

Natsuko Akagawa has a PhD and Masters in Cultural Heritage and Museum Studies, Master of Business Administration, Graduate Diploma of Education, Diploma of Portuguese Language and Culture and Bachelor of Arts. She has published widely internationally and is recognised expert in Heritage, Museum and Asian studies. She is also an accomplished master of the Japanese arts of tea ceremony, flower arrangement, traditional martial arts (aikijujutsu) and studied traditional fabric dying techniques in Japan.

She is the Member of International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS), Expert Member of ICOMOS International Scientific Committee on Intangible Cultural Heritage (Former Vice President), Expert Member of ICOMOS International Scientific Committee of Vernacular Architecture, Australia ICOMOS National Scientific Committee on Intangible Cultural Heritage (NSC-ICH), Member of International Council of Museums (ICOM), Member of International Committee of Memorial Museums in remembrance of the victims of Public Crimes (IC-MEMO)and a member of Association of Critical Heritage Studies. She is also a member of Japanese Studies Association of Australia (JSAA) and a founding member of Australian Network for Japanese as Community Language and represetative for the State of Queensland.

She is also the Series Editor for Routledge Research on Museums and Heritage in Asia (Routledge) and the Member of the Editorial Board for International Journal of Heritage Studies (peer-reviewed leading international journal on heritage studies) and History of Museum Journal (the only international, peer-reviewed journal devoted to the history of museums).

Natsuko’s research focuses on heritage as it applies to people, communities, nations and global interactions. She is looking at how ‘heritage’ is contested and negotiated on national, international, multicultural and colonial and post-colonial context. It is interested in the way heritage assembles histories, memories and identities and is articulated in policies, practices and imaginaries.

Her book, Heritage conservation in Japan’s cultural diplomacy: Heritage, national identity and national interest (Routledge Contemporary Japanese Series 2014), which establishes a pioneering theoretical nexus between the politics of cultural diplomacy, heritage conservation, and national identity and interest, has become a focus for scholars in a range of disciplines

Natsuko is a co-editor of Intangible Heritage (Routledge 2009), internationally regarded as one of the first comprehensive texts on this topic and used widely as a prescribed reading material globaly. Her new book Safeguarding Intangible Heritage (Routledge 2019) with her co-editor will add another dimension to international heritage discourse. In her research in this area, she has been tracing the recent development of the concept of intangible heritage in heritage discourse and practice. In particular, this has examined the influence of Japanese heritage practice in recognising the importance of embodied skill in relation to material or tangible heritage. More generally she is interested in how this new understanding of heritage has influenced community practice, national policy-making and global heritage discourse.

She was also Associate Investigator ARC centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions. Her particular interest in relation to the history of emotions involves the way emotions mediated the cultural encounter of East and West at both personal and political levels in the early modern period. She is interested in the way such encounters played a role in shaping perceptions and the performance of heritage in both East and West, through engagement with both tangible and intangible elements such as meanings, memories and identity.

Other areas of her current research and publications have involved specific studies on the nature of colonial and post-colonial practice of heritage in several East and Southeast Asian nations, and the political use of heritage in framing contemporary national identities in the region, with particular reference to Thailand, Vietnam and Indonesia. Following an earlier article related to Japan’s occupation of Indonesia between 1942 and 1945, Natsuko is researching the legacy of Japanese naval administration in East Indonesia as part of a co-authored book on the history of Central Sulawesi (Indonesia). She is also developing these various studies for a book on Japan’s civil and cultural administration of Indonesia, Southeast Asia and the Pacific and its legacies.

Research interests also include:

- Cultural diplomacy and heritage

- Intangible heritage - living heritage

- Culinary heritage

- Religion and heritage

- Borders and space: heritage, memory and migration (Transnational community and heritage: displacement, violence, trauma, identity, memory)

- Difficult heritage: trauma, emotion and heritage

- Heritage and Emotion / Heritage and Cultural Tourism

- Museum and affect

- Digital heritage

- Development of heritage policy and practice in Japan and Asia

- Colonial/Postcolonial/Decolonial heritage: politics and communities

- Historic urban/cultural landscape: identity, memory and heritage

Professional engagement

Expert Member of International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS)

Expert Member of ICOMOS International Scientific Committee on Intangible Cultural Heritage (Former Vice President)

Expert Member of ICOMOS International Scientific Committee of Vernacular Architecture

Australia ICOMOS National Scientific Committee on Intangible Cultural Heritage (Coordinating Group)

Member of International Council of Museums (ICOM)

Member of International Committee of Memorial Museums in remembrance of the victims of Public Crimes (IC-MEMO)

Research Fellow at the International Institute of Asian Studies with Leiden University (Netherlands) (EU funded)

Visiting research fellow at the East West Centre and University of Hawaii, Manoa (United States Federal Government funded)

Australian Network for Japanese as Community Language (Founding Member and Representative for Queensland)

QLD Senior External Assessment Panel member for the Queensland Curriculum and Assessment Authority

Associate Investigator for Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions

Series General Editor: Routledge Research on Museums and Heritage in Asia (Routledge)

Editorial Board member: International Journal of Heritage Studies (peer-reviewed leading international journal on heritage studies) and History of Museum Journal (the only international, peer-reviewed journal devoted to the history of museums).

Reviewer: International Journal of Heritage Studies, Asia Pacific Journal of Tourism Research, Journal of Travel and Tourism Marketing, Journal of Cultural Geography, SOJOURN (Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia), Japanese Studies, Asia Pacific Journal of Arts and Cultural Management, Nordic Journal of Human Rights, Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Management, Journal of the Institute of Conservation, Museum Management and Curatorship, Political Psychology. etc.

Designated Book reviewer: Anthropos (International Journal anthropology founded in 1903 in Germany)

Keynotes/Interviews/Invited Seminars/Featured

Akagawa, N. 2024Interviewed by Australian Broadcast Corporation - ABC News "Japan is serious about its unique Christmas traditions", 25 December 2024.

Akagawa, N. 2024 Interviewed by Australian Financial Review - News "The big sting: how a mythical bee halted a gold mine", 13 December 2024

Akagawa, N. 2024 Invited Guest Speaker for Queensland Department of Education - Three seminars: Japanese History, Japanese Education and Japanese tea ceremony. 5 December 2024.

Akagawa, N, 2024 Interviewed by Australian Broadcast Corporation – Radio National, Soul Search, "Exploring religion in Japan" aired and online July 2024.

Akagawa, N. 2024 Invited Speaker, at In-Tangible? Living Heritage and Museums // Unfassbar? Immaterielles Kulturerbe und Museen, Museum Europäischer Kulturen, Berlin, Germany

Akagawa, N. 2024. Interviewed and featured in international documentary program, Building Icons Series, globally distributed March 2024. (Premiered on Channel 9)

Episode on Castles, palaces and parliaments and temples, churches and sacred sites.

From the producer: “You shared some truly wonderful moments that were invaluable to the stories, and I'd like to thank you personally for persevering on the shoot day. Your insights and contributions have been pivotal in shaping the narrative and ensuring that the series stays true to its vision." The documentary inspires and ignites appreciation for the cultural, historical, and architectural significance of iconic structures. It celebrates innovation and explores the genius behind landmarks that define their era, culture, or nation, revealing the remarkable stories that shaped them.

Akagawa, N. 2023. Culinary heritage: Cookbook from 1747, featured in “We tried a 275-year-old dumpling recipe!” in Contact, 30 March 2023.

Akagawa, N. 2021 Keynote speaker, International Conference Conservation of Architectural Heritage, 8-9 February 2021

Akagawa, N. 2020. El Dorado Carousel, Interviewed by The New York Times, 2020. (NY times)

Akagawa, N. 2020. ‘Heritage and Pandemics: Impact on Living Heritage’, HASS COVID 19 Forum: What can the humanities tell us about COVID-19?, The University of Queensland, 24 July 2020. Virtual.

Akagawa, N. 2019, Invited Speaker, ‘Feeling the intangible: decolonising discourse and practice’, Heritage Symposium Expanding Heritage: The Future of our Past, National Trust of Australia (Queensland), Howard Smith Wharves, Rivershed West, Friday 11th October 2019.

Akagawa, N. 2019. Invited Speaker, 'Cultural Diplomacy in the 21st Century: cultivating the seeds of belonging', in BrisAsia Symposium 2019 – Belonging, QPAC, Brisbane City Council, 1 March, 2019.

Akagawa, N. 2018. ‘Current issues in heritage discourse’, International Studies Distinguished Guest Special Forum public lecture, Kwanseigakuin University, Japan. 21 December 2018.

Akagawa, N. 2018. ‘Intangible heritage: beyond convention,’ Distinguished Guest Public Lecture and Master class, Taiwan National University of Arts, Taiwan, 7- 12 December 2018.

Akagawa, N. 2018. ‘Digital heritage,’ Distinguished Guest Public Lecture, Taiwan National University of Arts, Taiwan, Taiwan, 7- 12 December 2018.

Akagawa, N. 2017. ‘Intangible Cultural Heritage on the Crossroads: Vanishing Existence or Protective Measures in Good Time?’ Keynote address to the European Cultural Forum 2017 to mark the start of the European Year of Cultural Heritage (2018) organised by EUNIC (European Network of National Cultural Institutes) and ifa (Institut für Auslandsbeziehungen/Institute for International Cultural Relations) in Milan, Italy, 7 - 8 December 2017.

Akagawa, N. 2017 ‘Language and Identity’, Invited Public Lecture, Waseda University, Japan, 20 January 2017.

Akagawa, N. 2015 ‘Heritage and Embodiment: Japan’s influence on global heritage discourse’, Department of Japanese Literature, Faculty of Letters, Universitas Hasanuddin, Makassar, Indonesia, 22 December, 2015.

Akagawa, N. 2015 ‘Japan, Word Heritage, National Interest and Cultural Diplomacy’, Architectural History, Urban and Cultural Heritage, University of Melbourne, The University of Melbourne, 2 September, 2015.

Akagawa, N. 2015 ‘Urban Heritage, Indonesian heritage systems; Seminar and workshop’, Soegijapranata Catholic University, Semarang, Indonesia, Faculty of Urban and Environmental Studies. 4-6th February 2015.

Akagawa, N. 2015 ‘Local, National and International Factors in the Protection of Intangible Cultural Heritage in Japan’, Protecting the Weak: Entangled processes of framing, mobilization and institutionalization in East Asia, Frankfurt, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main, and jointly organized with the Institute für Sozialforschung (Institute for Social Research, IfS), 22- 26 January 2015.

Akagawa, N. 2014 ‘Contemporary issues in heritage discourse’, Seminar and workshop (hosted by Taipei National University of the Arts, Graduate Institute of Architecture and Cultural Heritage). 13-17 December 2014.

Akagawa, N. 2014 ‘Heritage Conservation and Cultural Diplomacy’, Asian Studies Seminar Series at Asian Studies, The University of Western Australia, 28 March, 2014.

Akagawa, N. 2012 ‘Heritage Conservation and Japan’s soft power, Asian Institute -Sidney Myer Asia Centre, University of Melbourne. 18 May, 2012.

Availability

Dr Natsuko Akagawa is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Doctor of Philosophy, Deakin University

Works

Search Professor Natsuko Akagawa’s works on UQ eSpace

47 works between 2000 and 2024

1 - 20 of 47 works

2024

Book

Conservation of architectural heritage: Developing Sustainable Practices

Germanà, Maria Luisa, Akagawa, Natsuko, Versaci, Antonella and Cavalagli, Nicola eds. (2024). Conservation of architectural heritage: Developing Sustainable Practices. 4th ed. Advances in Science, Technology & Innovation, Cham, Switzerland: Springer. doi: 10.1007/978-3-031-33222-7

Conservation of architectural heritage: Developing Sustainable Practices

2023

Journal Article

Decolonising heritage: safeguarding intangible-living heritage in Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific

Akagawa, Natsuko (2023). Decolonising heritage: safeguarding intangible-living heritage in Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific. Historic Environment, 33 (1-2), 14-27.

Decolonising heritage: safeguarding intangible-living heritage in Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific

2023

Journal Article

Introduction to Intangible cultural heritage in Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific

Akagawa, Natsuko and Johnston, Chris (2023). Introduction to Intangible cultural heritage in Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific . Historic Environment, 33 (1-2), 4-7.

Introduction to Intangible cultural heritage in Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific

2022

Journal Article

Applications of technologies in T&I courses in Australia: perceptions of T&I academics

Dianati, Seb, Uchiyama, Akiko and Akagawa, Natsuko (2022). Applications of technologies in T&I courses in Australia: perceptions of T&I academics. Journal of Translation and Language Studies, 3 (2), 50-80. doi: 10.48185/jtls.v3i2.511

Applications of technologies in T&I courses in Australia: perceptions of T&I academics

2022

Journal Article

Factors that influence Translation and Interpreting technology adoption by university instructors, through the lens of the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM)

Dianati, Seb, Taptamat, Nantana, Uchiyama, Akiko and Akagawa, Natsuko (2022). Factors that influence Translation and Interpreting technology adoption by university instructors, through the lens of the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM). Journal of Translation and Language Studies, 3 (1), 12-28. doi: 10.48185/jtls.v3i1.439

Factors that influence Translation and Interpreting technology adoption by university instructors, through the lens of the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM)

2022

Edited Outputs

Conservation of Architectural Heritage (CAH) : Embodiment of Identity

Versaci, Antonella, Cennamo, Claudia and Akagawa, Natsuko eds. (2022). Conservation of Architectural Heritage (CAH) : Embodiment of Identity. International conference on Conservation of Architectural Heritage (CAH) 2021, Online, 8-10 February 2021. Cham, Switzerland: Springer.

Conservation of Architectural Heritage (CAH) : Embodiment of Identity

2022

Book Chapter

Introduction

Akagawa, Natsuko (2022). Introduction. Conservation of architectural heritage: embodiment of identity. (pp. xii-xii) edited by Antonella Versaci, Claudia Cennamo and Natsuko Akagawa. Cham, Switzerland: Springer.

Introduction

2022

Journal Article

Conservation of cultural heritage in a changing world

Akagawa, Natsuko (2022). Conservation of cultural heritage in a changing world. Anthropos, 117, 278-280.

Conservation of cultural heritage in a changing world

2022

Book

Conservation of Architectural Heritage: Embodiment of Identity

Versaci, Antonella, Cennamo, Claudia and Akagawa, Natsuko eds. (2022). Conservation of Architectural Heritage: Embodiment of Identity. Advances in Science, Technology & Innovation, Cham, Switzerland: Springer. doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-95564-9

Conservation of Architectural Heritage: Embodiment of Identity

2021

Book

Conservation of architectural heritage

Versaci, Antonella, Bougdah, Hocine, Akagawa, Natsuko and Cavalagli, Nicola eds. (2021). Conservation of architectural heritage. 2nd ed. Advances in Science, Technology & Innovation, Heidelberg, Germany: Springer.

Conservation of architectural heritage

2021

Book Chapter

Lust, love and curiosity: the emotional threads in the Dutch encounter with an exotic east

Akagawa, Natsuko (2021). Lust, love and curiosity: the emotional threads in the Dutch encounter with an exotic east. Matters of engagement: emotions, identity and cultural contact in the premodern world. (pp. 73-94) edited by Daniela Hacke, Claudia Jarzebowski and Hannes Ziegler. London, United Kingdom: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9780429488689-6

Lust, love and curiosity: the emotional threads in the Dutch encounter with an exotic east

2021

Book Chapter

Preface

Akagawa, Natsuko (2021). Preface. Conservation of architectural heritage. (pp. vii-vii) edited by Versaci, Antonella, Bougdah, Hocine, Akagawa, Natsuko and Cavalagli, Nicola. Cham, Switzerland: Springer.

Preface

2020

Journal Article

Heritage and Digital Medium

Akagawa, Natsuko and Nagatomo, Jun (2020). Heritage and Digital Medium. International Studies , 9 (1), 219-221.

Heritage and Digital Medium

2020

Journal Article

Architectural conservation in Asia: national experiences and practice

Akagawa, Natsuko (2020). Architectural conservation in Asia: national experiences and practice. International Journal of Cultural Property, 27 (1), 157-160. doi: 10.1017/S0940739120000065

Architectural conservation in Asia: national experiences and practice

2020

Book Chapter

Acknowledging trauma in a global context: narrative, memory and place

Hubbell, Amy L., Rojas-Lizana, Sol , Akagawa, Natsuko and Pohlman, Annie (2020). Acknowledging trauma in a global context: narrative, memory and place. Places of traumatic memory: a global context. (pp. 1-12) edited by Amy Lynn Hubbell, Natsuko Akagawa, Sol Rojas-Lizana and Annie Pohlman. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan. doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-52056-4_1

Acknowledging trauma in a global context: narrative, memory and place

2020

Book Chapter

Preface

Hubbell, Amy L., Akagawa, Natsuko, Rojas-Lizana, Sol and Pohlman, Annie (2020). Preface. Places of Traumatic Memory: A Global Context. (pp. v-vi) edited by Amy L. Hubbell, Natsuko Akagawa, Sol Rojas-Lizana and Annie Pohlman. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan. doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-52056-4

Preface

2020

Book

Places of traumatic memory: a global context

Amy Lynn Hubbell, Natsuko Akagawa, Sol Rojas-Lizana and Annie Pohlman eds. (2020). Places of traumatic memory: a global context. Palgrave Macmillan Memory Studies, Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan. doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-52056-4

Places of traumatic memory: a global context

2020

Book Chapter

‘Difficult heritage’, silent witnesses: dismembering traumatic memories, narratives and emotions of firebombing in Japan

Akagawa, Natsuko (2020). ‘Difficult heritage’, silent witnesses: dismembering traumatic memories, narratives and emotions of firebombing in Japan. Places of traumatic memory: a global context. (pp. 37-59) edited by Amy L. Hubbell, Natsuko Akagawa, Sol Rojas-Lizana and Annie Pohlman. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan. doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-52056-4_3

‘Difficult heritage’, silent witnesses: dismembering traumatic memories, narratives and emotions of firebombing in Japan

2019

Book Chapter

National identity, culinary heritage and UNESCO: Japanese washoku

Akagawa, Natsuko (2019). National identity, culinary heritage and UNESCO: Japanese washoku. Safeguarding intangible heritage: practices and politics. (pp. 200-217) edited by Natsuko Akagawa and Laurajane Smith. London, United Kingdom: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9780429507137-13

National identity, culinary heritage and UNESCO: Japanese washoku

2019

Book Chapter

Where do we draw a line?: heritage, identity and place in global heritage

Akagawa, Natsuko (2019). Where do we draw a line?: heritage, identity and place in global heritage. Architecture on the borderline: boundary politics and built space. (pp. 257-274) edited by Anoma Pieris. London, United Kingdom: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9781315103419

Where do we draw a line?: heritage, identity and place in global heritage

Funding

Current funding

  • 2024 - 2025
    Bridging Tradition and Innovation: The role of corporate museums in safeguarding and promoting Japanese tangible and intangible heritage
    Queensland Program for Japanese Education
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2020 - 2021
    Living Heritage in Australia
    UQ Early Career Researcher
    Open grant
  • 2018
    Ainu heritage: affect, use of digital medium, community and creative industry
    Queensland Program for Japanese Education
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Dr Natsuko Akagawa is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Professional Translators Strategies and Procedures for Translating Intertextual Features of Academic Journal Manuscripts from Indonesian to English

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Angela Cook

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Dr Natsuko Akagawa directly for media enquiries about:

  • arts/crafts creative industries
  • Asian history and culture
  • culinary heritage
  • cultural diplomacy
  • cultural landscape
  • heritage
  • heritage and religion
  • heritage/cultural tourism
  • ICOMOS ICOM UNESCO
  • Indigenous cultures (Japan/Asia/Europe/Americas)
  • intangible heritage
  • Japanese/Asian/European folklore culture and writings
  • living heritage
  • memory and identity
  • migrant heritage
  • Nikkei (Japanese diaspora)

Need help?

For help with finding experts, story ideas and media enquiries, contact our Media team:

communications@uq.edu.au