Job Opening: Program Assistant, Asian Studies Program, George Washington University

job opening - 5Program Assistant, Asian Studies Program
Institution: George Washington University
Location: Washington, DC
Posted: 03/08/2017
Type: Full Time
Education: BA or equivalent experience

DEPARTMENT INFORMATION
Campus Location: Foggy Bottom
College/School/Department: Elliott School of International Affairs (ESIA)

Job Description Summary:
The George Washington University’s Elliott School of International Affairs is one of the world’s leading schools of international affairs and one of the largest schools of international affairs in the United States. Located in the heart of Washington, D.C., its mission is to educate the next generation of international leaders, conduct research that advances understanding of important global issues, and engage the policy community in the United States and around the world.

The Sigur Center for Asian Studies promotes research and policy analysis on East Asia, Northeast Asia, Southeast Asia and South Asia through an active program of publishing, teaching, public events and policy engagement. The Sigur Center currently seeks a Program Assistant. Reporting to the Director, Sigur Center this position supports the Directors of PISA and the Bachelors and Masters Academic Programs by providing administrative and programmatic support to the undergraduate and graduate Asian Studies academic programs, Partnerships for International strategies in Asia (PISA), and the Sigur Center for Asian studies. In particular, duties involve academic scheduling, event and seminar planning, budgeting, student advising, making travel arrangements, and managing social media and communications tools.

PISA responsibilities (50 percent):
The Program Assistant will assist PISA staff with all administrative and logistical aspects of PISA programming. Duties include updating the website and PISA’s social media platforms; assisting with the scheduling and execution of short-courses, events management, photography, and other logistics; researching grant opportunities, as well as other duties that may be required to support PISA’s mission.

Sigur Center and Asian Studies Program responsibilities (50 percent):
The Program Assistant will serve as a liaison between students, faculty, staff, other departments and/or the general public on various issues relate to the Asian studies program. In particular, this position involves academic scheduling, events and seminar planning, making travel arrangements and managing social media and communications tools. Key responsibilities include:

  • Provides day-to-day administrative and operational support to program directors, including providing general budget support by processing transactions for the program.
  • Maximizes PISA’s online presence through the utilization of social networks, including assisting with quarterly updates, webcast and video-conferencing, etc.
  • Serves as a liaison between students, faculty, staff, other departments and/or the general public on various issues.
  • Performs other work related duties as assigned.

Minimum Qualifications:
High school diploma/GED, or equivalent combination of training and experience, is necessary plus 1.5 years of relevant experience, or a bachelor’s degree.

Preferred Qualifications:
Excellent communication, customer service, and organizational skills.
Demonstrated experience and interest in Asia and international affairs.
Ability to work with little supervision, but also teamwork skills.
Knowledge of a modern Asian language.
Experience using social media tools.

Details on HigherEdJobs.com

Posted in announcements, job openings, jobs | Leave a comment

Fun Link Friday: Vegetable Carving Art

Photo from Colossal.

Five years ago we featured an article on banana carving art, and let’s just say we never get tired of a new and fun food idea coming out of Japan. This week we have an article from Colossal highlighting the Japanese artist Gaku, who has taken mukimono 剥き物 (the art of decorative garnishing) to the next level with complex geometric patterns in his vegetable carvings. As Colossal points out, one of the most incredible parts of this art is that it must be done in a matter of minutes before oxidation sets in and begins to alter the color and integrity of some of your vegetables! Visit the original article  or Gaku’s instagram to see more incredible work!

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Summer Study Abroad: UNO-Japan: Study at Doshisha University Program

(reshared from H-Net)

The 2017 U. of New Orlean-Japan: Study at Doshisha University Program is a 6-week (online intro-week plus 5 weeks in Japan) summer program designed for participants to learn about Japanese Culture, Philosophy, Cinema, History, and Language while living in Kyoto, an ancient capital of Japan.

Eligibility: The program is open to any US College Students as well as eligible High School Seniors who will turn 18 by May 21, 2017. We accept students from around the US as guest students (including international students, although depending upon their nationality, they may have to acquire a visa to Japan).

Course offerings: Students choose two courses from the following:

*Basic Japanese II (Japanese language)
*The Tao of Happiness (Interdisciplinary course)
*Journey to the Heart of Zen (Philosophy)
*History of Asian Civilizations (History)
*Love in the Japanese Cinema (Film)

Dates: May 28-July 1, 2017 (online intro week is May 21 to 27th)
Cost: $4,995.00
Includes: TUITION, HOUSING, weekday LUNCHES on campus, a FIELD TRIP, CULTURAL ACTIVITIES, TOMODACHI PROGRAM, STUDY ABROAD HEALTH INSURANCE, a 1-MONTH BUS PASS for the city of Kyoto, and more!

Earn 6 college credit hours (fully transferable, check with your advisor for course equivalency). Open to anyone over 18 years of age at the time of departure who meet UNO admissions requirements.

No previous knowledge of the Japanese language required.
The program has been very well received by previous students – quite a few of them have participated twice!
For more information, please visit our website at: http://inst.uno.edu/Japan/, or e-mail us at: UNOJapan@uno.edu.

Also, please “like” us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/UNOJapan.Doshisha.
We hope you will join us this summer!

Posted in study abroad, summer program, undergraduate | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Funding: TIFO Fellowships for PhD candidates 2017

money [150-2]Toshiba International Foundation Fellowships 2017

Within the framework of the Toshiba International Foundation Fellowship programme conducted jointly by EAJS and the Toshiba International Foundation, the European Association for Japanese Studies (EAJS) selects candidates for a fellowship to undertake research in Japan.

The next application deadline is 15 May 2017.

To apply please use our online application system.

Applications are invited for Toshiba International Foundation scholarships for a three-month stay in Japan to be completed by the end of March 2018. Grantees can expect a fellowship of not more than 7.000 EUR.

Applicants must be doctoral students, and they should be specializing in any field in Japanese Studies at a European institution.

Applications must include:

  • A curriculum vitae and a brief statement (not more than 300 words) describing the project for which the applicant wishes to pursue their research in Japan. These two documents are to be submitted by the applicant via the online application system.
  • A letter of support from the student’s supervisor or advisor must be sent to the EAJS office separately by the advisor on the student’s behalf. It must be printed on university letterhead and display the advisor’s signature. The letter may be sent by post or in PDF format by email.

Since the purpose of the scholarship is to encourage the academic study of Japan by those who have not already had a long-term experience in Japan, applications by Japanese High School graduates will not be considered.

The EAJS has been asked by the Toshiba International Foundation to administer these scholarships, and the decisions will be made by the Council of the EAJS.

Successful applicants have to be members of the European Association for Japanese Studies in order to receive the fellowship.

For further information on the Toshiba International Foundation, please visit http://www.toshibafoundation.com/index.html

For further information on the Toshiba International Foundation Fellowships or the EAJS, please feel free to contact the EAJS office.

You can find this CFA online here.

Posted in announcements, funding, graduate school, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Fun Link Friday: Ama, traditional Japanese women divers

This week has highlighted the contributions of women as the International Women’s Day Strike took place on Wednesday, so this week our Fun Link Friday will highlight some amazing ladies who hold an important place in traditional Japanese practices. Messy Nessy posted an article three years ago on ama 海人・海女, female divers that have been on the hunt for oysters and abalone (famously, pearls) in Japan’s coastal villages for thousands of years. I can confirm from my own research that they appear in plenty of premodern sources and did essential work of diving deep into the waters with nothing more than a loincloth, which is pretty incredible!

The traditions of ama were affected by the introduction of Western ideas of modesty in the postwar period (women were forced to cover up with a suit to dive), and very few continue the tradition today. It is a dying piece of traditional Japanese culture, and though some men participated, it was identified with and performed primarily by women. The original article includes a lot of really striking photos by photographer Iwase Yoshiyuki from the mid 20th century, and there is another article on the remaining present-day ama that is worth checking out. Enjoy!

Posted in culture, fun links | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Funding: Japanese Association of University Women

2017 JAUW
INTERNATIONAL  FELLOWSHIP  PROGRAM

Currently Inviting Applications

MUST BE RECEIVED BY:March 31, 2017

Japanese Association of University Women (JAUW) is now calling for Applications for its 2017 International Fellowships.

This program is to offer core funding to financially help you come and stay in Japan when you have found that it is preferable or very important for you to stay in Japan to further pursue your ongoing study/research.

For details of this program, please see the INSTRUCTIONS, which is downloadable from below.
INSTRUCTIONS for 2017 JAUW International Fellowship Application, (pdf)& word (docx)

For more information, see:

http://www.jauw.org/english/fellowship.html

Posted in announcements, funding, graduate school, study abroad, study tools | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Call for Papers: Nation, Gender and History: Asian Cinemas in Perspective

call for papers [150-2]Nation, Gender and History: Asian Cinemas in Perspective

International conference

 Vilnius University, Centre of Oriental Studies, 7-9 September 2017

Asian Arts Centre and The Centre of Oriental Studies of Vilnius University (Lithuania) invite scholars, film professionals and enthusiasts to Nation, Gender and History, an international conference on the cinemas of Asia.

The idea of a national culture has played a fundamental role in the definition, historiography and evaluation of Asian cultural practices for at least two centuries, and cinema is no exception. In today’s world, however, ideas of the nation appear as increasingly problematic. The same can be said of gender, the pertinence of which in individuals’ understanding of themselves and their history has, over the last decades, been challenged from many fronts. And yet both ideas of nation and gender continue to mark discourses about identities and countries, including and perhaps especially in situations of conflict. 2017 marks the 70th anniversary of the independence and partition of India and Pakistan. The conference takes this opportunity to raise the question: can we still argue for the centrality of national cinemas? What role do notions of gender play in our appreciation of a nation’s cinema? And how do the interconnections between gender and nation in cinema help us understand the present historical moment?

The first aim of this conference is to create a dialogic space in which to revisit the ways in which, today and in the past, nation, gender and history interact(ed) and shape(d) one another in the cinemas of Asia. The term ‘Asia’ is used here as a short-hand to point to the cinema made in wide range of very diverse countries, rather than as a fixed, singular or homogenous entity – an invitation to look beyond the globalised canon of much film theory. Our second aim is thus also to explore points of convergences and trans-cultural forms and practices across this region. Has cinema ever been ‘national’ in Asia? What role does it play today, or did it play in the past, in constructing pan-Asian subjectivities? How does gender – the staple of nationalist discourses – function in specific trans-national or regional cinemas?

While we are interested in papers on the cinema of every Asian country, we particularly welcome papers on the all too often overlooked and still poorly researched cinemas of Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Myanmar, Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, Singapore, the Philippines, as well as on regional language formations such as Pashto, Sindhi, or Bhojpuri cinemas. We especially welcome papers on popular, low-budget genres (exploitation, B-grade, horror, sci-fi, and erotic films).

Below is a list of themes the conference will endeavor to address. It is not an exhaustive list and is intended as a guide, not as a set of limitations. We welcome suggestions and proposals on related topics.

  • the representation of sexuality and/or its repression; cinematic images of a sexual nature, their censorship and their exploitation; the filmic displacement of representations of sexual desire;
  • gender and film genres. We are particularly interested in papers examining gender in exploitation, B-grade, horror, sci-fi, low budget film productions;
  • gendered allegories of the nation, including mythological representations;
  • technical and/or narrative aspects of gender representations; male and female gazes; cinematography, editing, sound and gender;
  • national and trans-national aspects of stardom, production and/or distribution; transnational connections; diaspora cinema;
  • gender and the film industry, including directors, distributors and exhibitors.

Abstracts / proposals should be in English and of no more than 350 words, including a 50 word author biography.  Time for each paper: 20 minutes.

The deadline for abstracts is 30 April 2017.

Send your abstract / proposal to the conference organisers at nagehi2017@gmail.com

In your email, please specify academic or professional affiliation.

More information at the conference website: https://nagehi2017.wordpress.com/

Contact Info:

The conference is organized by Dr Deimantas Valanciunas (Vilnius University) and Dr Valentina Vitali (University of East London). For all conference related queries you can contact the organizers by the conference email nagehi2017@gmail.com or by writing directly to Dr. Deimantas Valanciunas at deimantasval@gmail.com.

Contact Email:

nagehi2017@gmail.com

URL:

https://nagehi2017.wordpress.com/

Posted in announcements, conferences, graduate school | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Call for Applicants: International Noh Institute Summer Program 2017

The INI – International Noh Institute is now accepting applications for its 2017 Summer Intensive Program (September 4 – 14 2017).

Participants will take part in an intensive training period, during which they will study Noh chant and dance at the INI headquarters in Kyoto with Kongō school Noh actors Udaka Michishige, Udaka Tatsushige and Udaka Norishige. In addition, they will be able to observe the rehearsal and to attend the Udaka Seiran Noh performance. During the program, participants will learn about various aspects of noh, including masks and costumes. The program is coordinated by Dr Diego Pellecchia (Ritsumeikan University).

Application deadline: May, 1st 2017

Program highlights:

  • Train intensively in noh chant and dance, following the traditional methods
    of the Kongō school.
  • Practice in a small group at the okeikoba, private training space of a noh master, for an immersive experience.
  • Observe the rehearsals of a professional noh performance.
  • Watch two noh performances: at a Buddhist temple (free of charge) and at the Kongo Noh theatre (included in the participation fee)
  • Experience living in Kyoto, the heart of Japanese traditional culture.

INI SUMMER INTENSIVE PROGRAM 2017

Requirements: Anyone is welcome to join – no previous knowledge of Noh is required. Lessons are given in English and/or Japanese. Past year program attendees are entitled to the repeater discount of 10,000JPY, as shown below.

Capacity: 3-5 participants

Place: INI Training Space, Kyoto

Period: September 4 – 14 2017, every day

Fees (in Japanese yen)

Regular 60,000 Repeater 50,000

Fees include:

  • Regular: chant/dance lessons, basic materials (according to their level), Udaka Seiran Noh ticket, INI certification of completion of the introductory course.
  • Repeater: chant/dance lessons, basic materials (according to their level), Udaka Seiran Noh ticket, INI certification of completion of the intermediate course. Audiovisual materials to continue dance and chant practice from home.

Fees do not include:

  • Tabi white split-toe socks (around 700JPY)
  • Kongō-style Noh dance fan (5000JPY).
  • Transportation, accommodation, and any other personal expenses.

See our activities calendar here.

Lessons will take place 10:00-15:00 at the INI training space in Iwakura, Kyoto.

How to apply: send us an email at ini.kyoto[at]gmail.com Please attach your C.V. and a brief statement of interest. Learn more about the International Noh Institute.

Application deadline: May, 1st 2017

*Late applications will be considered only if places are still available. The program will be cancelled if it does not reach the minimum number of participants.

Posted in announcements, culture, graduate school, study tools, summer program | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Job Opening: Japanese art and material culture, Leiden University

job opening - 5Institution: Leiden University, Leiden University Institute for Area Studies (LIAS)
Location: Netherlands
Position: Assistant Professor, University Lectureship in Japanese Art and Material Culture

Leiden University invites applications for a University Lectureship in Japanese Art and Material Culture. Applicants have must specialist expertise in art and material culture of Japan, with proven affinity with pre-Meiji sources, be able to teach on traditional and contemporary topics at the undergraduate level, and be able to engage with the wider East Asian and Asian contexts and position the study of Japanese art and material culture in transnational and global configurations. Appointment will initially be for three years starting August 2017, with the possibility of a permanent position thereafter. Leiden University is committed to diversity, inclusiveness, and equal opportunities. Candidates from outside the Netherlands may be eligible for a substantial tax break. Application deadline: 1 April 2017. Please read the full CFA at http://www.werkenbij.leidenuniv.nl/vacatures/wetenschappelijke-functies/17-045.html

Contact:

Ivo Smits
Professor of Arts and Cultures of Japan
Leiden University Institute for Area Studies (LIAS)
Leiden University
P.O. Box 9515
2300 RA  Leiden
The Netherlands
E-mail:  i.b.smits@hum.leidenuniv.nl
Website:http://werkenbij.leidenuniv.nl/vacatures/wetenschappelijke-functies/17-045.html

 

Posted in announcements, job openings, jobs | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Book Announcement: The Stakes of Exposure: Anxious Bodies in Postwar Japanese Art

stakes

The Stakes of Exposure

Anxious Bodies in Postwar Japanese Art

Author: Namiko Kunimoto

How would artistic practice contribute to political change in post–World War II Japan? How could artists negotiate the imbalanced global dynamics of the art world and also maintain a sense of aesthetic and political authenticity? While the contemporary art world has recently come to embrace some of Japan’s most daring postwar artists, the interplay of art and politics remains poorly understood in the Americas and Europe. The Stakes of Exposure fills this gap and explores art, visual culture, and politics in postwar Japan from the 1950s to the 1970s, paying special attention to how anxiety and confusion surrounding Japan’s new democracy manifested in representations of gender and nationhood in modern art.

Content:

Introduction: Gendered Bodies and the Minamata Disaster
1. Katsura Yuki’s Bodies of Resistance
2. Nakamura Hiroshi and the Politics of Embodiment
3. Tanaka Atsuko and the Circuits of Subjectivity
4. Heroic Violence in the Art of Shiraga Kazuo
Conclusion: Thresholds of Exposure in Postwar Manga

https://www.upress.umn.edu/book-division/books/the-stakes-of-exposure

https://www.amazon.com/Stakes-Exposure-Anxious-Postwar-Japanese/dp/1517900964/ref=sr_1_1?i…

Posted in announcements, culture | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment