91直播 to Host Conference of Japanese Literary Studies
February 5, 2018
Amanda Nagy
Photo credit: Arisa Williams '06
91直播 students will get a rare opportunity to hear from scholars and graduate students specializing in Japanese literature, visual arts, and music from across North America, Asia, and Europe when the college hosts the Association of Japanese Literary Studies (AJLS) annual conference in mid-February.
This is the first time 91直播 has hosted the annual meeting of the AJLS in its 26-year history because it鈥檚 usually held at major research universities, says Professor of Japanese Ann Sherif, who has been involved with the association since its inception.
鈥淭his is a relatively small-scale conference鈥攊t鈥檚 a group of people who stay together in a single venue, so we develop a dialogue about our shared scholarly interests,鈥 says Sherif, a scholar of modern Japanese literature. 鈥淪tudents will get a sense of how researchers in the humanities develop as scholars, how they get feedback, how they receive validation and criticism, how they build knowledge. It鈥檚 an opportunity for students to observe that process.鈥
The theme of the multidisciplinary conference is titled 鈥淰iolence, Justice, and Honor in Japan鈥檚 Literary Cultures.鈥 Presenters will discuss ways that violence as a trope has occupied a space in Japanese literary cultures and has been a central part of expressive culture.
鈥淥ften in American media, we hear politicians describing Japan as a country of 鈥楽amurai warriors.鈥 In the United States, Japan鈥檚 attack on Pearl Harbor and Japanese militarism are still prominent in memories of World War II,鈥 Sherif says. 鈥淭he conference theme explores the many ways that writers, artists, and musicians in Japan have represented, beautified, and resisted different kinds of violence鈥攎ilitary violence on the battlefield, prolonged violence of empire, extreme violence of the atomic bomb, and the slow violence of pollution and radioactivity.鈥
As the host institution organizer, Sherif says she intentionally invited accomplished, mid-career scholars to present in the keynote panel. 鈥淚 wanted to highlight how the arts have engaged with the nuclear age over the past 70-some years鈥攕tarting with Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945 to the Fukushima meltdown now.鈥
The keynote panel, 鈥淎tomic Art and Violence,鈥 includes Yukinori Okamura, curator of the Maruki Gallery for the Hiroshima Panels in Saitama, Japan; Yumi Notohara, Osaka College of Music, a scholar of music involving Hiroshima; and Charlotte Eubanks, associate professor of comparative literature, Japanese, and Asian studies at Pennsylvania State University.
鈥淚 hope students and faculty will take advantage of this chance to hear talks and have conversations with some of the top scholars in the field. These include senior people such as Norma Field from the University of Chicago, and junior scholars such as Paul Roquette from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who will be exploring cutting-edge topics, and a range of fantastic researchers and writers from Asia, Europe and across North America.鈥
Students taking Japanese language courses might find themselves chatting in Japanese with presenters from Japan or hearing an academic lecture delivered in Japanese right here on campus. In addition to Sherif鈥檚 Modern Japanese Literature and Film course, other faculty will have course tie-ins, including Approaches to Japanese and Chinese Art (Bonnie Cheng, art history), Modern Japan (Emer O鈥橠wyer, history), and Queer Writing in Japan (Grace Ting, East Asian studies).
鈥淛apan is a culture that has a long and rich literary history. In our Japanese literature and comparative literature classes, students read works coming out of those traditions,鈥 Sherif says. 鈥淭he papers presented in this conference will span more than 1,000 years of literary and cultural history. There鈥檚 something for everybody.鈥
The conference will take place Friday, February 16, in the 91直播 Center for Convergence, and Saturday, February 17, in the Adam Joseph Lewis Center. See the .