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Japan

Tagged With: Documentary, Japan, Japanese

On the Haikyo Trail: Screening and Discussion

On the Haikyo Trail: Screening and Discussion

Thursday, April 26, 2018
12:00-1:30 PM
International Affairs Building, Room 918
Refreshments will be served

Join us for a special screening of the documentary “On the Haikyo Trail,” presented by NHK World. In Japan, there are many abandoned places. These relics of the recent past are called Haikyos in Japanese. Currently 8 million homes lie empty in the Japanese archipelago due to rural exodus, population aging, transition of lifestyle, and natural disasters. This 30-minute documentary follows Haikyo explorers as they visit various schools, homes, and buildings.

A discussion facilitated by Professor Yumi Shimabukuro, Acting Director of the Urban and Social Policy Concentration, will follow.

04/26/2018 by admin

Tagged With: Global History, Japan, Japanese

Modern Japan, a steamship, and the ‘how-to’ questions of global history

Modern Japan, a steamship, and the ‘how-to’ questions of global history
Science, Technology and Environment Lecture Series

Martin Dusinberre, Chair for Global History, Historisches Seminar, University of Zürich

Thursday, April 5, 2018
6:00 PM
403 Kent Hall, Columbia University

04/05/2018 by admin

Tagged With: Japan, Japanese, Japanese Art

Narrative Painting in Seventeenth-Century Japan: The Emergence of a New Field

Narrative Painting in Seventeenth-Century Japan: The Emergence of a New Field

Melanie Trede, Visiting Professor, Professor of Histories of Japanese Art and Head of the Institute of East Asian Art History Centre for East Asian Studies, Heidelberg University

Thursday, March 29, 2018
6:00-7:00 PM
934 Schermerhorn Hall

No time period in Japan saw as rich, varied and monumental a visual genre of storytelling as the seventeenth century. Ranging from small fans to long handscrolls and large folding screens, the hundreds if not thousands of pictorial narratives created in this most historicizing century of Japanese history went unnoticed in art history until around twelve years ago. Why was this the case, and how has the field changed? This lecture addresses the rich engagement with history, past visualities and unknown cultures in this era of change and emerging socio-political stability, while touching upon recent research trends, and changing paradigms in Japanese art history.

03/29/2018 by admin

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