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X-WR-CALNAME:Japan Art History Forum | September 10\, 2010 - October 10\, 2010
PRODID:-//strange bird labs//Drupal iCal API//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120206T001812Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100913T000000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100914T000000Z
UID:http://jahf.net/node/144
URL;VALUE=URI:http://jahf.net/node/144
SUMMARY:Conference on Shunga at SOAS\, University of London
DESCRIPTION:<p>SHUNGA in its Social and Cultural Context</p>
 <p>13-14 September<br />
 SOAS<br />
 Faber Building FG08<br />
 All presentations in English unless otherwise noted. Presentations in<br />
 Japanese will have outlines in English.</p>
 <p>Monday\: 13 September</p>
 <p>9\:30 Registration and Coffee/Tea</p>
 <p>10\:00 Opening remarks\: Andrew Gerstle (SOAS)</p>
 <p>10\:10 Ellis Tinios (Leeds Univ.)<br />
 ‘Shunga in context’</p>
 <p>10\:35 Monta Hayakawa (International Research Center for Japanese Studies)</p>
 <p>Who enjoyed shunga? (In Japanese)</p>
 <p>11\:00 Questions and Discussion</p>
 <p>11\:20-30 Break</p>
 <p>11\:35 Timothy Clark (British Museum)<br />
 Exhibiting Shunga at the British Museum in 2013\: Key Messages</p>
 <p>12\:00 Ricard Bru (Univ. of Barcelona)<br />
 Shunga Japonisme\: European artists and Japanese erotic prints</p>
 <p>12\:25 Questions and Discussion</p>
 <p>12\:45-2\:25 Lunch</p>
 <p>2\:30 Amaury A. Garcia (El Colegio de México\, Colmex)<br />
 Nishikawa Sukenobu\: One hundred women\, two stories\, and a reconsideration</p>
 <p>2\:55 Jenny Preston (SOAS)<br />
 Pushing boundaries\: Nishikawa Sukenobu\, Fufu narabi no oka and the Kyoho Reforms</p>
 <p>3\:20 Laura Moretti (Newcastle University)<br />
 Onna enshoku kyôkun kagami and Onna genji kyôkun kagami\: parody or counter-discourse on women's sexuality?</p>
 <p>3\:45 Questions and Discussion</p>
 <p>4\:15-25 Break</p>
 <p>4\:30 Aki Ishigami (Ritsumeikan Univ.)<br />
 The influence of Nishikawa Sukenobu on shunpon produced in Edo</p>
 <p>4\:55 Fumiko Kobayashi (Hosei Univ.)<br />
 Was Ôta Nanpo ‘Seisôsai’\, the author of shunga books?</p>
 <p>5\:20 Questions and Discussion</p>
 <p>6\:00 Finish</p>
 <p>Tuesday\: 14 September</p>
 <p>9\:30 Coffee/Tea</p>
 <p>10\:00 Yukari Yamamoto (Ukiyoe Gakkai)<br />
 Tsukioka Settei’s shunga paintings (In Japanese)</p>
 <p>10\:25 John Carpenter (SOAS)<br />
 The shunga and surimono of Harukawa Goshichi</p>
 <p>10\:50 Questions and Discussion</p>
 <p>11\:10-20 Break</p>
 <p>11\:25 Ryo Akama (Ritsumeikan Univ.)<br />
 Kabuki actors in shunga (In Japanese)</p>
 <p>11\:50 Kenji Hinohara (Ota Memorial Museum of Art)<br />
 Kitao Shigemasa’s shunpon production\: an analysis of his Ehon yurushi no ne-iro (c. 1779) (In Japanese)</p>
 <p>12\:15 Questions and Discussion</p>
 <p>12\:35-2\:25 Lunch</p>
 <p>2\:30 Kazutaka Higuchi (Mitsui Memorial Museum)<br />
 Not very funny shunga\: an analysis of one gruesome scene in a work of Utagawa Toyokuni (In Japanese)</p>
 <p>2\:55 Rosina Buckland (National Museum of Scotland)<br />
 Hokusai's shunga</p>
 <p>3\:20 Monika Hinkel (SOAS)<br />
 Utagawa Kunisada's Shunshoku hatsune no ume(1842)</p>
 <p>3\:45 Questions and Discussion</p>
 <p>4\:15-25 Break</p>
 <p>4\:30 Final General Discussion<br />
 5\:00 Finish</p>
 <p>--<br />
 Drew Gerstle<br />
 SOAS<br />
 University of London<br />
 Russell Sq<br />
 London WC1H 0XG UK</p>
 <p>Tel\: 020 7898 4207<br />
 Fax\: 020 7898 4399</p>
 
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DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120206T001812Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100921T133000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100921T160000Z
UID:http://jahf.net/node/149
URL;VALUE=URI:http://jahf.net/node/149
SUMMARY:Symposium in Conjunction with exhibition--The Japanese Collections at the Library of Congress\:  Past\, Present\, and Future 
DESCRIPTION:<p>Room 119\, Thomas Jefferson Building\, Library of Congress</p>
 <p>A free public symposium in conjunction with the exhibition.  Joining Associate Librarian for Library Services Deanna Marcum and Asian Division Chief Peter Young are four speakers who will discuss the past\, present\, and future of the Library’s Japanese Collection. They include Manabu Yokoyama\, professor at Notre Dame Seishin University in Japan\; Ellen Hammond\, curator of the East Asia Library at Yale University\; Kakugyo Chiku\, professor at Kanazawa Institute of Technology in Japan\; and Eiichi Ito\, Japanese reference librarian of the Asian Division.  Seating is limited\; reservations are required by close of business on Monday\, September 13.  Contact Mari Nakahara\, (202) 707-2990\, <a href=\\"mailto\:mnak@loc.gov\\">mnak@loc.gov</a>.</p>
 
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DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120206T001812Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100930T071000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101002T071000Z
UID:http://jahf.net/node/138
URL;VALUE=URI:http://jahf.net/node/138
SUMMARY:Intercultural Crossovers\, Transcultural Flows\: Manga/Comics\, Cologne
DESCRIPTION:<p>International Conference organized by<br />
 Jaqueline Berndt (Kyoto Seika University)\, Franziska Ehmcke (University of Cologne)\, Bettina Kümmerling-Meibauer (University of Tübingen) and Steffi Richter (University of Leipzig)\, in cooperation with the Japan Foundation (Japanisches Kulturinstitut)\, the Center for Intercultural and Transcultural Studies\, University of Cologne and the International Manga Research Center\, Kyoto Seika University</p>
 <p>Conference venue\: Cultural Institute of Japan\, Cologne (<a href=\\"http\://www.jki.de\\" title=\\"www.jki.de\\">www.jki.de</a>)</p>
 <p><strong>*Program*</p>
 <p>Thursday\, 30 September 2010</strong></p>
 <p>Registration 11.30-13.00<br />
 Welcome 13.30-14.00</p>
 <p>Paper Presentation 1\: Ph.D. Students Workshop<br />
 chair\: Jean-Marie Bouissou (Paris\, France)</p>
 <p>14.00-14.35 Felix Giesa (Cologne\, Germany) &amp\; Jens Meinrenken (Berlin\, Germany)\: 20th century toy\, I wanna be your boy\: Character and identity in Urasawa Naoki’s “20th Century Boys”<br />
 14.35-15.10 Verena Maser (Nürnberg-Erlangen\, Germany)\: Love between girls in the graphic arts\: A comparison between yuri and the webcom “Yu+Me\: dream”</p>
 <p>15.10-15.20 Break</p>
 <p>15.20-15.55 Nele Noppe (Leuven\, Belgium)\: Translating the visual languages of Japanese fan comics and North American and European fan art<br />
 <a href=\\"http\://nelenoppe.net/fanficforensics/blog/1\\" title=\\"http\://nelenoppe.net/fanficforensics/blog/1\\">http\://nelenoppe.net/fanficforensics/blog/1</a><br />
 15.55-16.30 I-Wei Wu (Heidelberg\, Germany)\: A flow of satirical pictorials in East Asia\: The case of “Shanghai Puck” and “Tokyo Puck”</p>
 <p>16.35-17.00 Break\: Coffee</p>
 <p>Paper Presentation 2\: Manga in Asia outside Japan<br />
 chair\: Franziska Ehmcke</p>
 <p>17.00-17.35 Helmolt Vittinghoff (Cologne\, Germany)\: Chinese Comics\: Amusement or/and propaganda?<br />
 17.40-18.15 Ulrike Niklas (Cologne\, Germany)\: Amara Chitra Katha and modern Indian middle class</p>
 <p>18.15-19.00 Break\: Snack</p>
 <p><strong>Keynote Lecture<br />
 chair\: Bettina Kümmerling-Meibauer</p>
 <p>19.00-20.00 Frederik L. Schodt (San Francisco\, United States)\: Creation of a manga-comic hybrid</strong></p>
 <p>Reception at the Cultural Institute of Japan\, Cologne</p>
 <p><strong>Friday\, 1 October 2010</strong></p>
 <p>Paper Presentation 3\: Historical perspectives on manga<br />
 chair\: Steffi Richter</p>
 <p>09.30-10.15 Ronald Stewart (Hiroshima\, Japan)\: “Manga” as a form of “Western” resistance against traditional Japanese Expression\: Kitazawa Rakuten and the early discourse on “manga”<br />
 10.15-11.00 Pascal Lefèvre (Leuven\, Belgium)\: The mischief gag comic\, an international phenomenon\: Yokohama Ryuichi’s “Fuku-chan” and its friends in Europe and the Americas</p>
 <p>11.00-11.15 Short Break</p>
 <p>Paper Presentation 4\: “gekiga” movement revisited<br />
 chair\: Jaqueline Berndt</p>
 <p>11.15-12.00 Roman Rosenbaum (Sydney\, Australia)\: From the national to the transcultural\: Tatsumi Yoshihiro’s “gekiga”<br />
 12.00-12.45 CJ (Shige) Suzuki (Bethlehem\, PA\, United States)\: Tatsumi Yoshihiro and the gekiga movement in the global sixties</p>
 <p>12.45-13.45 Lunch</p>
 <p>Paper Presentation 5\: Transmedial and transcultural aspects 1<br />
 chair\: Thomas Becker</p>
 <p>13.45-14.30 Maheen Ahmed (Bremen\, Germany)\: Hybrid methodology for La Nouvelle Manga<br />
 14.30-15.15 Elisabeth Klar (Wien\, Austria)\: Mutants and machines\: The body in European and Japanese erotic comics</p>
 <p>15.15-15.30 Short break</p>
 <p>Paper Presentation 6\: Transmedial and transcultural aspects 2<br />
 chair\: Pascal Lefèvre</p>
 <p>15.30-16.15 Thomas Becker (Berlin\, Germany)\: Premedialisation as symbolic capital in the intercultural communication of graphic arts<br />
 16.15-16.45 Bettina Kümmerling-Meibauer (Tübingen\, Germany)\: Manga/comic hybrid forms in picturebooks</p>
 <p>16.45-17.15 Break\: Coffee</p>
 <p>Paper Presentation 7\: Manga in Europe<br />
 chair\: Jean-Marie Bouissou</p>
 <p>17.15-18.00 Marco Pellitteri (Trento\, Italy)\: Manga in Europe\: A short study of market and fandom<br />
 18.00-18.45 Paul Malone (Waterloo\, Ontario\, Canada)\: Transcultural hybridization in home-grown German manga</p>
 <p>18.45-19.00 Break</p>
 <p>19.00-20.00 Panel Discussion with female German mangaka\: Christina Plaka\, Anne Delseit &amp\; Martina Peters</p>
 <p>Dinner (restaurant\, just for speakers)</p>
 <p><strong>Saturday\, 2 October 2010</strong></p>
 <p>Workshop\:<br />
 Transculture\, Transmedia\, Transgenre\: NARUTO challenging Manga/Comics Studies</p>
 <p>The sort of manga\, which dominates the perception of Japanese comics worldwide in the early 21st century\, is hardly to be characterized by intercultural relations\, that is\, exchanges between discrete entities.<br />
 Mainstream manga today are\, first and for all\, shaped by and engaged in transcultural flows. Whereas previously\, American comics\, bande dessinée<br />
 and manga retained an obvious distinctiveness for both artists and readers\, nationally defined styles and narratives have been losing significance under the conditions of globalization and information society. This situation raises\, at least\, three issues\: first\, whether the intercultural is actually replaced by the transcultural or rather supplemented\; second\, whether the cultural is confined to the national\,or how the national relates to the regional\, local and subcultural\, which also applies to trans/gender\; third\, how the transcultural is facilitated by recent transmedia flows which call the very identity of comics into question. This workshop focuses on one representative work\, or more precisely\, franchise\: NARUTO.</p>
 <p>9.30-9.40 Introduction\: Steffi RICHTER (chair)</p>
 <p>Part 1\: A Media Product and its Crosscultural Mediators</p>
 <p>9.45-10.05 Radoslaw BOLALEK (Warsaw\, Poland)\: NARUTO on the Polish comics market\: Observations from the perspective of a (researching)publisher<br />
 10.05-10.25 OMOTE Tomoyuki (Kyoto\, Japan)\: NARUTO as a typical weekly-magazine manga<br />
 10.25-10.45 ITO GO (Tokyo\, Japan)\: Particularities of boys’ manga in the early 21st century\: How NARUTO differs from Dragon Ball<br />
 10.45-11.15 Zoltan KACSUK (Budapest\, Hungary)\: Subcultural entrepreneurs\, path dependencies and fan reactions\: The case of NARUTO in Hungary</p>
 <p>11.15-12\:00 Discussion</p>
 <p>12.00-13.00 Lunch</p>
 <p>Part 2\: National ‘Odor’</p>
 <p>13.00-13.20 YAMANAKA Chie (Echizen\, Japan)\: NARUTO as a manhwa\: On the reception of Japanese popular culture in the Republic of Korea<br />
 13.20-13.40 Franziska EHMCKE (Cologne\, Germany)\: The tradition of the naruto motif in Japanese Culture</p>
 <p>13\:40-14\:10 Discussion</p>
 <p>Part 3\: Gendered Readership</p>
 <p>14.15-14.35 FUJIMOTO Yukari (Tokyo\, Japan)\: Women in NARUTO\, women reading NARUTO<br />
 14.35-14.55 OGI Fusami (Dazaifu\, Japan)\: NARUTO as a transcultural narrative in North America\: Uniting superheroes and women</p>
 <p>14\:55-15\:20 Discussion</p>
 <p>Part 4\: Beyond Comics</p>
 <p>15.20-15.40 Martin ROTH (Leipzig\, Germany)\: Playing NARUTO\: Gaming experience\, databases and unit operations<br />
 15.40-16.00 Jaqueline BERNDT (Kyoto\, Japan)\: NARUTO as a challenge to Comics Studies</p>
 <p>16\:00-16\:15 Coffee Break</p>
 <p>16\:15-17\:00 Final discussion</p>
 
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DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120206T001812Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101007T180000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101009T000000Z
UID:http://jahf.net/node/151
URL;VALUE=URI:http://jahf.net/node/151
SUMMARY:Images and Objects in Japanese Buddhist Practice
DESCRIPTION:<p>The Columbia Center for Japanese Religion presents<br />
 the 2010 John C. Weber Symposium on Japanese Religion and Culture\: Images and Objects in Japanese Buddhist Practice. </p>
 <p>Columbia University<br />
 116th street and Broadway<br />
 New York\, NY\, 10027</p>
 <p>The Columbia Center for Japanese Religions announces the first annual John C. Weber International Symposium on Japanese Religion and Culture. The 2010 symposium\, entitled Images and Objects in Japanese Buddhist Practice\, will be held in Room 301 Philosophy Hall at Columbia University from October 7th to the 9th\, 2010. </p>
 <p>It will begin with a keynote address on the evening of Thursday October 7 and will be followed by two days of papers and discussion on Friday and Saturday\, October 8th and 9th. The symposium will bring together scholars of Japanese Buddhist art from Japan\, Europe\, and North America to critically examine the historical use of objects of visual and material culture in Japanese Buddhist practice. Through the presentation and discussion of new scholarly work from diverse theoretical and methodological perspectives\, this symposium will explore the relations between images\, objects\, and ritual in the history of Japanese Buddhism. </p>
 <p>The symposium is free and open to the public. </p>
 <p>CCJR offers travel grants to help cover the expenses of any graduate student who wishes to attend.  </p>
 <p><br><br />
 THURSDAY\, October 7 th<br />
 6\:00 - 6\:30pm Reception</p>
 <p>6\:30 - 8\:00pm Mimi Yiengpruksawan\, Yale University<br />
 Fire Starter\: The Local and Global Implications of Fujiwara no Yukinari’s Devotion to Blue Acala<br />
 <br><br />
 FRIDAY\, October 8th<br />
 9\:30 - 10\:25am Helmut Brinker\, University of Zurich<br />
 The Iconic Body as Insight into Japanese Buddhist Practice</p>
 <p>10\:50 - 11\:45am Nedachi Kensuke\, Kyoto University<br />
 Materiality and Meaning\: Sacred Trees and the Construction of Buddhist Images</p>
 <p>1\:00 - 1\:55pm Cynthea Bogel\, University of Washington<br />
 Representation\, Visual Efficacy\, and the Impact of Mikkyo<br />
 2\:30 - 3\:25pm Nagaoka Ryusaku\, Tohoku University<br />
 Landscape and Buddha Image\: Place and Symbolic Function in Buddhist Practice</p>
 <p>4\:00 - 4\:55pm Sherry Fowler\, University of Kansas<br />
 Finding the Feminine in the Thirty-Three Kannon<br />
 <br><br />
 SATURDAY\, October 9th<br />
 9\:30 - 10\:25am Samuel Morse\, Amherst College<br />
 Securing a Place\: Chindangu in Early Japan</p>
 <p>10\:50 - 11\:45am Yui Suzuki\, University of Maryland<br />
 Possessions\: Spirits\, Objects\, and Bodies in Heian Birthing Rituals</p>
 <p>1\:00 - 1\:55pm Yonekura Michio\, Sophia University<br />
 Format and Function\: On Hanging Scrolls Depicting<br />
 the Lives of Eminent Monks</p>
 <p>2\:30 - 3\:25pm Bernard Faure\, Columbia University<br />
 The Benzaiten and Dakiniten Mandalas\: A Problem or an Enigma?</p>
 <p>4\:00 - 4\:55pm Abe Yasuro\, Nagoya University<br />
 Performing the Prince\: Shotoku Taishi in Medieval<br />
 Religious Text\, Image\, and Ritual Space</p>
 
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