2024/05/19

Sanja Matsuri 2024 in 2-minutes

via Twitter today, Tokyo expat with camera(s) and an eye for visual interest shares this short video; suitable for students of Japanese society and language at all levels: both for visual exposure and for reflection, too.

2024/05/10

Kyoto since the 1850s

crossposting from H-Japan humanities network (listserv, h-net.org)


Modern Kyoto Research
, a new digital resource for researchers, students, visitors, and general readers interested in debating, analyzing, and learning about change and continuity in Kyoto from the 1850s to the present day.


Building on up-to-date scholarship, and making full use of visual and other primary sources, various thematic units investigate not only how Kyoto's image was constructed in the modern period but open a window on people and places often excluded from popular histories and public promotions. Users will hopefully find the site accessible and visually appealing, as well as critical and diverse in its perspectives on the city/region over the last 170 years. 

At present, there are uploaded units on inbound tourism in Kyoto, 1872-1941 (Andrew Elliott), Kyoto and the Asia-Pacific War (Oliver Moxham), Kyoto tourism during the Allied Occupation (Riichi Endo), and war-related sites in contemporary Kyoto (Daniel Milne).


Other units in the pipeline include punk in Kyoto, interwar Geisha in Kyoto, and Kyoto vegetables and food-related regional branding.


Please follow this link to find the site: www.modernkyotoresearch.org


2024/05/09

grants for Japan research (online database)

The External Grants database provides a filterable list of non-JPP affiliated funding opportunities related to Japan Studies.

2024/05/07

documentary film, 100 years after Kanto (earthquake and Korean) massacre

crossposting from Association for Asian Studies - Korean Studies googlegroup
======================
...If you happen to be in Korea or Japan this month, I would like to invite you to a new historical documentary film screening event at the legislature in Seoul or Tokyo (free admission with ID for entrance). 1923 Kanto Massacre is the very first Korea-produced documentary film on the historical event of the massacre of Koreans following the Great Kanto Earthquake in Japan in 1923 which was produced on the occasion of its centenary last year. 

The event at the Korean National Assembly building in Seoul starts at 6:30 pm on Tues May 7 (TODAY in KST), followed by that at the Japanese Diet building in Tokyo at 4 pm on Mon May 13 (this coming Monday). Director KIM Taeyong (renown long-time documentary filmmaker) will be present along with the members of the respective Congress. 1923 Kanto Massacre will be released to the public later this summer both in Korea and Japan as well as selected areas in Europe, Australia, and the U.S. (starting in Paris in Nov). Free of charge, but due to limited seating, please RSVP at jlee@eiu.edu.

Event: 1923 Kanto Massacre Documentary Film Screening
(Directed by Kim Taeyeong, Korea,118 minutes)

Date and Location: 
6:30 PM May 7 (Tues)
The National Assembly of the Republic of Korea (Members' Office Building), Seoul

4:00 PM May 13 (Mon)
The National Diet of Japan (House of Councillors), Tokyo
The experience of violence has powerful consequences in the transformation of culture. The Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923 marked a moment of unprecedented material destruction and cultural rupture in the Japanese empire. The disaster soon became subject to human interpretation and political manipulation, for the trauma of earth tremors and subsequent fire produced not only physical chaos but also rumors and violence against the colonized in the metropole. Such violence manifested itself in the massacre of Koreans immediately following the earthquake--triggered by rumors of arson, murder, rape, and rebellious riots by Koreans in the Tokyo-Yokohama area. Despite the shock of the rumors and the violence, the lack of critical evidence and the contradictions in the testimonies has rendered the incident a historical enigma, panic-driven aberration, or conspiracy in modern Korea and Japan. After a century, film 1923 Kanto Massacre traces the ways in which the historical narratives and memories of the colonial violence have been constructed haunting those whose lives were never the same after encountering the manmade mayhem.   

See the detailed schedule and the
film excerpt here (click).
Sincerely,
Jinhee Josephine Lee, Creative Producer of "1923 Kanto Massacre"
History Professor and Asian Studies Chair
Eastern Illinois University, Charleston, IL