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Abstract/Syllabus:
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Condry, Ian, 21F.067J Cultural Performances of Asia, Fall 2005. (Massachusetts Institute of Technology: MIT OpenCourseWare), http://ocw.mit.edu (Accessed 10 Jul, 2010). License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA
Cultural Performances of Asia
Fall 2005
Breakdancing in Yoyogi Park, Tokyo - 1998. (Image by Ian Condry.)
Course Highlights
This course features a detailed reading list and lecture notes.
Course Description
This course examines cultural performances of Asia, including both traditional and contemporary forms, in a variety of genres. Students will explore the communicative power of performances with attention to the ways performers, media, cultural settings, and audiences interact. The representation of cultural difference is considered and how it is altered through processes of globalization. Performances are viewed live when possible, but the course also relies on video, audio, and online materials as necessary. There are no prerequisites for this course and it is taught in English.
Syllabus
Course Description
This course examines cultural performances of Asia, including both traditional and contemporary forms, in a variety of genres. Explores the communicative power of performances with attention to the ways performers, media, cultural settings, and audiences interact. Also considers the ways the representation of cultural difference is altered through processes of globalization. Performances viewed live when possible, but the course also relies on video, audio, and online materials as necessary. There are no prerequisites for this course and it is taught in english.
Course Aims
Paying particular attention to gendered constructions of "Asian" identity, we will consider a variety of approaches to performance and culture. What does "Asian" mean in the popular imagination and in scholarly research? How can we learn more about how images of Asia and Asians are constructed by attending to theories of performance? Looking at the intersection of three terms "Asian / Performance / Cultures," we will examine the ways that identities are always caught between shifting actors and audiences, settings and economies, and explore what this tells us about how culture and identity changing in a globalizing world.
One premise of the course is that working at the intersection of Asian Studies and Women's Studies can provide insights for both fields. As Judith Butler argues, gender itself is not a core essence, but something that emerges from "performance," both on- and off-stage, which then constitute patterned understandings of masculine, feminine, transgendered, and so on. How can such a perspective enhance our understanding of the ways "Asianness" is constituted? Interestingly, many of the contrasts that are used to compare men and women are reproduced in comparing the West and Asia. Consider, for example, the ways "men/the West" are supposedly rational, individualistic, and competitive while "women/Asia" are allegedly emotional, group-oriented, and harmonious. The construction of national identities frequently, if not always, entails gendered characteristics, and this dynamic will be a key theme for exploring Asian performances. We will look not only at live performances, but also at various media and other spaces (such as museums) where images of Asia are portrayed.
Course Topics
The course will focus on Japan, but include performances related to other areas of Asia. Students will also be asked to identify some kind of Asian performance to explore for their final project (presentation and paper). Some of the particular performances and media that we will examine include:
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The all-female Takarazuka Revue (Japan) which presents elaborate romantic musicals, yet contradictory lessons for empowering women,
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The film King of Masks (China) which portrays an elderly male street performer trying to find a male heir for his art, and who is helped by a male actor who only plays female roles, and whose adopted protégé comes with surprises,
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Samurai imagery in an American film, The Last Samurai and a Japanese film Twilight Samurai, which offer very different portraits of relations between the sexes and the character of the samurai ethos,
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Japanese popular music, with an emphasis on Japanese hip-hop and the contrasts between male and female rappers, but also considering forms like enka, where men commonly sing from a women's perspective and vice versa, and the New Japan series of CDs on John Zorn's Tzadik label,
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The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston has a tremendous range of Asian artifacts, and striking differences in the ways that different civilizations are portrayed. Why are kimono and samurai swords so prevalent for Japan, yet China is more commonly shown through pottery and scholars' stones?
Course Requirements and Schedule of Major Assignments
Course grading.
ACTIVITIES |
PERCENTAGES |
Class Participation |
15% |
Essay 1 (5 pages, Week 5) |
15% |
Essay 2 (5 pages, Week 9) |
20% |
Essay 3 - Due Final Class (7-8 Pages) |
25% |
In-class Presentations (Weeks 10-13) |
25% |
Grading of Written Work
Essays are designed to encourage students to engage with the theoretical propositions of the course, while also taking a comprehensive and analytical look at the materials. Written work will be graded according to three criteria:
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Argument: Is there a coherent thesis? How clearly is the argument stated in the introduction and developed throughout the paper? Do the steps of the argument make sense and lead logically to the conclusion?
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Evidence: How well does the essay use the evidence available from the class materials (readings, lectures, films)? Are there contradictory examples that should be discussed to eliminate doubts?
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Style: How well is the paper written? Has it been carefully proofread? Does the paper length match the assignment?
Calendar
Course calendar.
WEEK # |
TOPICS |
KEY DATES |
1 |
Introduction to the Course: Asian / Performance / Cultures
Discussion: Performances of Class and Gender - Street vs. Opera |
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2 |
Anime and Japanese Culture |
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3 |
Pokemon and Cross-Cultural Influence |
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4 |
Anime as Performance
Discussion of Issues Related to Paper 1 |
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5 |
Fiction, Music and Politics |
Writing paper 1 due - Anime, Japan and globalization |
6 |
Hip-Hop, Japan and Race as Performed |
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7 |
Asian Identities and Politics through Comics
Tak Toyoshima will Discuss his Editorial Comic Secret Asian Man during the First Half of Class |
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8 |
Beijing Film Academy - Animation from China |
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9 |
Gender, Sexuality and Performance |
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10 |
Transgendered Identities in Japan |
Writing paper 2 due - popular culture and identity politics |
11 |
Cultural Performances and Authenticity
Discussion of Authenticity, 47 Samurai ("Passing" as Failed Ronin) |
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12 |
Student Presentations
Discussion of Final Paper Topics |
Student presentations due |
13 |
Final Class |
Writing final paper due (7-9 pages, double spaced) |
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Further Reading:
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Readings
Readings are also listed by session.
Required Texts
Robertson, Jennifer. Takarazuka: Sexual Politics and Popular Culture in Modern Japan. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1998. ISBN: 9780520211513.
Napier, Susan. Anime from Akira to Princess Mononoke. New York, NY: Palgrave, 2001. ISBN: 9780312238636.
Keene, Donald, trans. Chushingura: The Treasury of Loyal Retainers. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 1997. ISBN: 9780231035316.
Readings by Session
Course readings.
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WEEK #
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TOPICS
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READINGS
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1
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Introduction to the Course: Asian / Performance / Cultures
Discussion: Performances of Class and Gender - Street vs. Opera
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Film: Wu, Tian-Ming. King of Masks, 1996.
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2
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Anime and Japanese Culture
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Geertz, Clifford. "Notes on the Balinese Cockfight." 1973, republished "Deep Play: notes on the Balinese Cockfight." 1972. Daedalus 134, no. 4 (Fall 2005): 56-86.
Napier, Susan. Anime from Akira to Princess Mononoke. New York, NY: Palgrave, 2001, pp. 3-138. ISBN: 9780312238636. (Text)
Film: Kon, Satoshi. Paranoia Agent, 2004. (TV show - Part 1)
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3
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Pokemon and Cross-Cultural Influence
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Selections from Pikachu's Global Adventure
Tobin, Joseph, ed. Pikachu's Global Adventure: The Rise and Fall of Pokemon. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2004, chapters 4-6. ISBN: 9780822332879.
Allison, Anne. "Cuteness as Japan's Millennial Product." In Pikachu's Global Adventure: The Rise and Fall of Pokemon. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2004. ISBN: 9780822332879.
Selected Short Stories by Haruki Murakami
Haruki, Murakami. "The Kidney-Shaped Stone That Moves Everyday," The New Yorker, September 26, 2005.
Film: Kon, Satoshi. Paranoia Agent, 2004. (TV show - Part 2)
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4
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Anime as Performance
Discussion of Issues Related to Paper 1
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Napier, Susan. Anime from Akira to Princess Mononoke. New York, NY: Palgrave, 2001. ISBN: 9780312238636. (Finish the book - text)
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5
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Fiction, Music and Politics
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Short Stories by Haruki Murakami
Murakami, Haruki. "UFO in Kushiro," The New Yorker, September, 2001.
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6
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Hip-Hop, Japan and Race as Performed
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Wood, Joe. "Yellow Negro." In Giant Steps: A New Generation of African-American Writers. Edited by Kevin Young. New York, NY: Perennial, 2001. ISBN: 9780613339032.
Condry, Ian. "Yellow B-Boys, Black Culture, and the Elvis Effect." In Hip-Hop Japan and the Paths of Cultural Globalization. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. (Forthcoming)
Atkins, Taylor. "The Japanese Jazz Artist and the Authenticity Complex." In Blue Nippon. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2001. ISBN: 9780822327219.
Film: Watanabe, Shinichirô. Samurai Champloo, 2004. (Selected episodes)
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7
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Asian Identities and Politics through Comics
Tak Toyoshima will Discuss his Editorial Comic Secret Asian Man during the First Half of Class
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Murakami, Takashi. Superflat Manifesto. Tokyo, Japan: Madora Shuppan, 2000. ISBN: 9784944079209.
Duus, Peter "Weapons of the Weak, Weapons of the Strong: The Development of the Japanese Political Cartoon." Journal of Asian Studies 60, no. 4 (November 2001).
Read "Secret Asian Man" archive. (Selections)
Film: Watanabe, Shinichirô. Samurai Champloo, 2004. (Selected episodes)
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8
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Beijing Film Academy - Animation from China
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Robertson, Jennifer. Takarazuka: Sexual Politics and Popular Culture in Modern Japan. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1998. ISBN: 9780520211513. (First half)
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9
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Gender, Sexuality and Performance
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Robertson, Jennifer. Takarazuka: Sexual Politics and Popular Culture in Modern Japan. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1998. ISBN: 9780520211513. (Finish)
Film: Longinotto, Kim, and Jano Williams. Dream Girls, 1994.
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10
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Transgendered Identities in Japan
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Keene, Donald, trans. Chushingura: The Treasury of Loyal Retainers. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 1997. ISBN: 9780231035316. (First half)
Film: Ogawa, Lulu. We Are Transgenders, 1998.
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11
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Cultural Performances and Authenticity
Discussion of Authenticity, 47 Samurai ("Passing" as Failed Ronin)
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12
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Student Presentations
Discussion of Final Paper Topics
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13
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Final Class
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