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Bates College: tenure–track position in Japanese and East Asian Studies
The Asian Studies Program of Bates College, a highly selective private liberal arts college located in south-central Maine, invites applications and nominations for a tenure–track position in Japanese and East Asian Studies to begin in Fall 2010. Ph.D. is preferred but ABD candidates will be considered. A native/near native proficiency in Japanese and English is required. A commitment to teaching language courses, as well as training and experience in Japanese language pedagogy are expected. The Program hopes to appoint a candidate with interests in both contemporary Japan and East Asia. Applicants with expertise in East Asian media, cultural studies, popular culture and/or social issues and Korean studies are invited to apply. Duties include courses in Japanese language and culture and topics that span contemporary East Asia. Review of applications will begin December 14, 2009 and remain open until the position is filled. For more information about Asian Studies at Bates, see our webpage (www.bates.edu/asia.xml). To apply, submit a letter of application, vita, academic transcripts, and three letters of recommendation. Candidates are also invited to submit scholarly manuscripts, course syllabi, teaching evaluations and a statement of teaching philosophy. Send materials to:
Japanese Language and East Asian Studies Search Committee R2124
c/o Academic Services
Bates College
2 Andrews Road
7 Lane Hall
Lewiston, Maine 04240
Bates values a diverse college community and seeks to assure opportunity through a continuing and effective Affirmative Action Program.
Japan culture promotion body launched in Brazil
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In response to the Japanese Consulate General's call for establishing such a body, Brazilian student groups launched the Instituto Japao Pop Br, or the J-pop Brazil association, with support from the Getulio Vargas Foundation, a Brazilian government-backed research institute.
Far from Oblivion: The Nanking Massacre in Japanese Historical Writing for Children and Young Adults
Workshop on Popular Culture, Cultural Policy, and Cultural Discourse in East and Southeast Asia, June 1-2, 2009, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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Workshop on Popular Culture, Cultural Policy, and Cultural Discourse
in East and Southeast Asia, June 1-2, 2009, the Hebrew University of
Jerusalem
The workshop on Popular Culture, Cultural Policy, and Cultural
Discourse in East and Southeast Asia, will be held at the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem, Israel. The purpose of this workshop is to
conduct a comparative and multi-sited study of the emergence of the
popular cultural industries of East and Southeast Asia, examine the
corresponding cultural policies initiated by the various states in the
region, and construct an empirically-plausible framework to examine
related issues. The workshop will particularly focus on the cases of
Chinese, Japanese, and Korean poplar cultures: their emergence,
expansion to other markets in the region, and the discourse they
create.
Panel 1: Popular Culture, Regionalization, and the State
1. Amitav Acharya, American University,
"Culture, Regionalism and Southeast Asian Identity"
2. Galia Press-Barnathan, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
"Does Popular Culture Matter to International Relations Scholars?
Possible Links and Methodological Challenges"
3. Nissim Otmazgin, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
"A Tail that Wags the Dog: Cultural Industry and Cultural Policy in East Asia"
Commentator: Arie Kacowicz, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Panel 2: Cultural Flows and Soft Power
1. Chua Beng Huat, National University of Singapore
"Delusional Desire: Soft Power and TV Dramas"
2. Jean Marie Bouissou, Science-Po
"From Niche Market to Hypermarkets: The Birth, Growth and Maturation
of the French Manga Market"
3. Eldad J. Pardo, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
"The Comeback of Iran's Z $B{ (Brkh $Bb (Bneh: Ancient Heroes in the Global Age"
Commentator: Eyal Ben Ari, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Panel 3: Cultural Policy in the Making
1. Kozuka Souichirou, Sophia University
"Copyright Law as a Tool of New Industrial Policy?: Japan's
Unsuccessful Attempt to Promote its Contents Industry"
2. Kukhee Choo, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies
"Cool Japan Nation: Japanese Governmental Policy towards the Anime Industry"
3. Jung-Yup Lee, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
"Managing the Transnational, Governing the National:
Cultural Policy and the Politics of "Cultural Archetype Project in South Korea"
Commentator: Ehud Harari, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Panel 4: Cultural Industry and Cultural Discourse
1. Miki Daliot-Bul, Haifa University
"The New 'Japan Brand': Cool Japan as Zeitgeist"
2. Pang Laikwan, the Chinese University of Hong Kong
"Censorship against Ghosts: China's Cultural Policy Historicized"
3. Kwai Cheung Lo, Hong Kong Baptist University
"Historical Tensions in East Asian Popular Culture and the Roles of the State"
Commentator: Chua Beng Huat, National University of Singapore
Panel 5: Cultural Production and Social Change
1. Marwyn S. Samuels, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
"The Media Industry, Popular Culture and Social Change in Contemporary China"
2. Shin Hyunjoon, Sungkonghoe University
"Trans/National Cultural Industries as an Agency of Regionalization?
The Case of South Korea"
3. Cherian George, Nanyang Technological University
"Silence and Protest in Singapore's Censorship Debates"
Commentator: Nir Avieli, Ben-Gurion University
Panel 6: A Comparative Perspective: Popular Culture in the Middle East
1. Wael Abu-Uksa, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
"State and New Media in the Middle East: An Overview"
2. Sariel Birnbaum, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
"Historical Audio-Visual Dramas: From Egyptian Dominance to a Pan-Arab
Satellite Discourse"
3. Tal Shenhav, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
"Broadcasting the Future Generation: Gender Messages for Women and
Youth in Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Tunisia"
Panel 7: Concluding Comments and Open Discussion
Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University
Eyal Ben Ari, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
For further information and registration please contact Dr. Nissim
Otmazgin at nissimot@mscc.huji.ac.il
Female masculinity and fantasy spaces: Transcending genders in the Takarazuka Theatre and Japanese popular culture
in 'Men and masculinities in contemporary Japan'
Japanese to build £80m 'shrine' to manga cartoons
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From video games to pop art, the government reportedly plans to establish a major collection of modern Japanese media arts to showcase and promote internationally at the new centre.
The government plans to collaborate with regional museums, galleries and institutions such as the Kyoto International Manga Museum and the NTT InterCommunication Centre in Tokyo in the establishment of the new centre.
Trendspotting in Post-Consumer Japan
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The "downward shift" of popular culture towards working class values and narratives could be said to be the most significant cultural trend of the last five years, but again, this is not a trend narrative anyone wants to hear.
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Unless the economy recovers dramatically, there is no reason to believe the two major narratives of cultural change in Japan — the erosion of conspicuous consumer spending and the rise of working class tastes amongst the middle class — will come to an end.
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