The following four main types of results have been achieved:
1. Publications. E.g.:
Rebekah Clements. (2025) "Hegemony, Hunting, and Human Trophies in the East Asian War of 1592-8." Past and Present. In production, expected January 2025.
Baihui Duan. (2024) “Climate, diseases and medicine: The welfare of soldiers during the East Asian War of 1592–1598.” Medical History, vol. 86(3), 1–17 (Awarded the William Bynum Essay Prize, from Medical History, 2023).
Baihui Duan and Rebekah Clements. (2022). “Fighting for Forests: Protection and Exploitation of Kŏje Island Timber during the East Asian War of 1592–1598,” Environmental History, vol.27 (3) (Winner, 2023 Vandervort Prize, The Society for Military History).
Barend Noordam. (2023). “Chinese Volley Fire and Metanarratives of World History” Journal of World History 34 (3), pp. 329-368.
Rebekah Clements. (2022). “Alternate Attendance Parades in the Japanese Domain of Satsuma, 17th-18th Centuries: Pottery, Power, and Foreign Spectacle”, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, vol.32 pp. 135-158.
Sangwoo Han. (2021). "The marriage market for immigrant families in Chosŏn Korea after the Imjin War: women, integration, and cultural capital." International Journal of Asian Studies, vol.18 (2):247-269.
2. Virtual Exhibition/Digital History Project.
Stories of Clay (
https://aftermath.uab.cat/stories-of-clay/(öffnet in neuem Fenster)) was launched on 7th Feb 2022 and is co-authored by Rebekah Clements and Seung Yeon Sang. Stories of Clay combines the study of heirloom ceramic pieces and sherds, together with documentary evidence, to trace the experiences of Korean potters who were captured by Japanese troops and brought to Japan during the Imjin War (1592-1598).
3. Seminar/Webinar Series
A monthly seminar series for the AFTERMATH project was launched on 23 October 2019, providing a forum for the AFTERMATH team and invited guest speakers. The seminar series reflects the cross-over nature of the project, with experts from Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and European history backgrounds participating. During the COVID-19 lockdown, we took the seminar online, making it a webinar series. The webinar series regularly attracted 30-50 participants from all corners of the globe and has considerably raised the profile of the AFTERMATH project, as well as allowing us to connect with other scholars despite COVID-19 related travel restrictions.
4. Project Conference
“Mastering of Materialities: Resources and Technology in Post-Imjin East Asia (1598-1650).” Autonomous University of Barcelona, 4-5th September 2023