Contents
From the Director
New Joint MA/JD Degree Program in
Law and Japanese Studies
CJS Events
Special Events
Publications
From the Librarian
Faculty Profile
Whitmore Gray, Professor Emeritus of Law
Faculty & Associate News
Student & Alumni News
Visitors
Japan Related Resources at U-M
Faculty & Student Funding
Announcements
1999 Fall Calendar
_______________________
From the Director
This year will be one
of considerable transition for our Center. The International Institute
(II), once under the umbrella of the College of Literature, Science,
and the Arts, now has a more immediate connection to the Provost's
office, and Michael Kennedy, the new Director of the II, is simultaneously
Vice Provost for International Affairs. This will give the II, and
by extension CJS, a more prominent position within the University
at large. Prior to assuming his new position, Michael was Director
of the Center for Russian and East European Studies, and he is acutely
aware of the issues affecting a large area center like our own.
We at CJS look forward to working with Michael, and making the most
of II's new and enhanced position within the administrative structure
of U of M.
The CJS office is in transition as well. Our beloved
chief administrator, Lori Coleman, has been promoted to Business
Manager at the International Institute, much to II's gain and our
loss. Fortunately, she is just downstairs from us and continues
to lend us her expertise and support. In our ongoing search for
a new administrator, we are exploring ways to rearrange the administrative
structure of the CJS office to make CJS more responsive to faculty
and student needs. Specifically, we would like to be able to facilitate
better the planning and management of academic symposia and conferences
to further CJS's active role in the intellectual life of the university
community. We hope to have things figured out by the time this newsletter
appears; in the meantime our Graduate Secretary, Linda Williams,
and our Program Coordinator, Brett Johnson, continue their invaluable
work to keep the center running smoothly.
As the new Center Director, I am just beginning to
learn my way about. It is no easy task following Hitomi Tonomura,
who guided CJS with such skill and aplomb for the past four years.
Tomi, as she is known to all of us here, threw herself into the
Directorship, advancing existing programs, developing new ones,
and managing our relations with literally dozens of organizations
in both the United States and Japan. Our staples--the very successful
Noon Lecture Series, the Fall and Summer Film Series, and the Toyota
Visiting Professorship program--all flourished under her leadership,
as did the CJS Publication Program run by the Executive Editor,
Bruce Willoughby. Tomi worked closely with the University Musical
Society, the Museum of Art, the Humanities Institute, other area
centers, and, of course, the II in organizing a host of cosponsored
campus events.
CJS continues to be a major partner in the Kyoto Center
for Japanese Studies and the Inter-University Center in Yokohama,
and Tomi maintained and strengthened our affiliations with a variety
of other educational and research institutions throughout Japan.
Tomi was equally active in nurturing our affiliations with local
groups and organizations, including the Japanese School of Detroit,
the Japanese Business Society of Detroit, the Consulate General
of Japan in Detroit, Toyota Motor Corporation, and IMRA America.
All of this took a tremendous amount of time, skill, dedication,
and energy, and Tomi managed it all with her irrepressible grace
and good humor. We all wish her the very best as she returns to
her own research and teaching.
Robert Sharf
The Center for Japanese Studies
________________
New Joint MA/JD Degree in Law
and Japanese Studies
We are quite pleased
to be able to announce that this past April the Rackham Executive
Board and the U-M Law School approved a new joint degree program
in Japanese Studies and Law, expanding the University of Michigan's
already prominent position in the training of a new generation of
multidisciplinary specialists. The program takes advantage of the
parallel strengths of the Center for Japanese Studies and the Law
School and will allow students to participate in interdisciplinary
studies that combine the professional training of the Law School
and the regional specializations involved in Japanese studies. Graduates
of this program will fill a rapidly growing need for cross-cultural,
transnational expertise in law, a demand that is especially high
in Japan where the need for debt workouts, restructuring, and mergers
and acquisitions work, for example, continues to grow. The new MA/JD
degree will add to the diverse professional possibilities for Japanese
studies students at U-M, with a joint MA/MBA program already in
place.
The new MA/JD degree program is designed so that students will finish
requirements for both degrees in three to four years. It is expected
that no more than two or three students will enroll annually, thus
creating a viable cohort of similarly minded, well qualified, driven
students focusing on Law and Japan. Students must have already completed
first-year Japanese, and must achieve at least third-year competency
to complete their degree. Up to nine credits may be double-counted
toward both degrees, but students must fulfill the graduation requirements
for both degree programs.
In 1955, U-M Law School was one of three schools (along with Stanford
and Harvard) to be chosen for the Japanese American Program for
Cooperation in Legal Studies which created connections with the
Supreme Court of Japan, the Ministry of Justice of Japan, and the
law faculties of Chuo, Keio, Kyoto, Tohoku, and Tokyo Universities.
Faculty and graduate students traveled between the U.S. and Japan
to conduct classes, train, and do research. Today, Michigan-trained
public prosecutors form an identifiable cadre within Japan's Ministry
of Justice. U-M Law faculty member B. James George Jr. contributed
to the seminal, interdisciplinary 1965 book, Twelve Doors to Japan,
and conducted wide-rangingstudies of Japanese Law, as did Whitmore
Gray (see faculty profile in this issue.)
Today, the interdisciplinary, regional collaboration continues.
In 1998/99, the Law School welcomed Japan Law Specialist Mark West
to its faculty, furthering the commitment to Japan-related law studies.
In addition, faculty exchanges continue with Tokyo University, under
terms of which, two professors from each university visit the other
for some part of a year. This year, Atsushi Kinami from Kyoto University
and Takashi Maruta from Gakushuin are visiting Michigan in addition
to Osamu Morita and Inouye Masahito from Tokyo University. As a
result, the MA/JD students will be able to learn from not only U-M
faculty who have worked in Japan, but Japanese professors of Law.
The Law school will offer four Japan-related classes in the 1999-2000
year. Professor Maruta will teach, "Individual Rights in Japan"
in the fall term. In the Winter term, Mark West will teach "Institutions
and Actors in the Japanese Legal System" (the seminar version
of the Japanese law course), Professor Maruta will teach "Japanese
Legal Documents" (in Japanese), and Professors Schneider and
Hayakawa will offer the upper-level law course, "Comparative
Family Law."
With the teaming of CJS and the Law School on the new MA/JD degree,
yet another avenue opens up for Japan/Law specialists. The backing
of the Center for Japanese Studies, combined with the Law School,
will provide students with a multitude of research opportunities,
allowing them to better prepare for the rigors of professional life.
This new degree is another achievement for the University of Michigan,
complementing the MA/MBA degree program perfectly and adding greatly
to the possibilities open to Japanese Studies students at U-M.
________________
CJS Events
Phyllis Birnbaum to Give 2nd Annual Robert L. Danly
Memorial Lecture
Phyllis Birnbaum will give the
second annual Robert Lyons Danly Memorial Lecture promoting Japanese
literature on September 15, 1999 at 4:00p.m. in the Rackham Fourth
Floor East Conference Room. She will speak on, "Why read (or
write) literary biographies?" and will discuss English-language
biographies of Japanese literary figures such as Nagai Kafu, Higuchi
Ichiyo, Dazai Osamu, and Mishima Yukio, analyzing the value of such
biographies and the motives of their authors. Ms. Birnbaum is an
award-winning writer, translator, and editor. This year, her book
Modern Girls, Shining Stars, The Skies of Tokyo: Five Japanese Women,
was published by Columbia University Press. Other publications include
two translations of Japanese women writers, a novel, and several
articles. She won the 1989 Japan-U.S. Friendship Award for Translation
of Japanese Literature, and has received several fellowships including
the Japan Foundation Professional Fellowship, a National Endowment
for the Arts Fellowship, and a Translation Center Fellowship from
Columbia University.
The Danly Memorial Lecture was inaugurated last year to honor Robert
L. Danly, award-winning writer and translator and Professor of Japanese
Language and Literature at the University of Michigan. Professor
Danly was also instrumental in turning the Center's Publications
program into one of the most highly regarded American publishers
of works on Japanese studies during his tenure as Director of the
Center for Japanese Studies. He passed away on April 27, 1997. The
inaugural lecture was given last year by Professor Danly's mentor,
Edwin McClellan, Sumitomo Professor of Japanese Studies at Yale
University.
There will be a reception following the lecture, and on Thursday,
September 16, Ms. Birnbaum will have a book-signing at Shaman Drum
Bookshop on State Street between William and Liberty from 4:00-6:00p.m.
Fall Film Series
This fall, CJS is proud to present
"Round Pegs, Square Holes: Cinematic Views of Japan's Margins
at the End of the Century," the 1999 Center for Japanese Studies
Free Fall Film Series. All of the films in this series are from
the 1990s and most deal with marginal groups of people who have
fallen through the cracks of modern Japanese society: ex-cons, ex-loves,
troubled teens. The series focuses on quests for identity, truth,
and to uncover hidden pasts. There are grim dramas and comedies
both dark and light. Beginning with Shohei Imamura's 1997 film The
Eel on September 17, the series continues on Friday nights through
December 3. Other films in the series include Akira Kurosawa's Dreams,
Minbo, and Sonatine. For a full listing of films and dates, please
consult the calendar at the end of this issue.
Noon Lecture Series
The CJS Noon Lecture Series begins
this fall on September 16 with U-M Sociology professor Gayl Ness
speaking on "Kobe: Modern Urban Population-Environment Dynamics."
Other lecturers will include our fall TVP Stephen Vlastos from the
University of Iowa; Tom Lamarre from McGill University; Susan Klein
from UC-Irvine; Keller Kimbrough, a Visiting Professor in ALC; Sheldon
Garon from Princeton; Joshua Mostow from the University of British
Columbia; Helen Hardacre from the Harvard Reischauer Institute of
Japanese Studies; Gennifer Weisenfeld from Duke University; Mark
Ramseyer from the Harvard Law School; and Margarita Estevez-Abe
from the University of Minnesota, and a Toyota Visiting Professor
from last year, T.R. Reid. Our speakers' topics cover a wide range
of topics, from sociology, history, art and literature, to law.
All Noon Lectures are held on Thursdays (except for the December
6 lecture) from 12:00-1:00p.m. in Room 1636 on the first floor of
the School of Social Work Building. Limited refreshments will be
served. Please refer to the calendar at the end of this issue for
a comprehensive listing of dates, times, and titles.
Toyota Visiting Professors (TVP) for 1999-2000
The Toyota Visiting Professor
for Fall 1999 will be Stephen Vlastos from the University of Iowa.
His interests include nineteenth and twentieth century Japanese
rural and agricultural history; and he has published widely on rural
unrest in 19th and 20th century Japan. His fall course offering
is titled, "Agriculture, Japanese Society, and Political Economy,
1700-1930."
For Winter, 2000, CJS brings in two TVPs: Donald McCallum of UCLA
and John Dower of MIT. Professor McCallum is a professor of Japanese
Art History, with an abiding interest in East Asian Buddhist Art,
Japanese Buddhist iconography, sculpture, and ritual, who has published
a book on the Buddhist art of the Zenkoji Temple, Zenkoji and Its
Icon: A Study in Medieval Japanese Religious Art (1994). Professor
Dower specializes in modern Japanese history, especially that of
World War II and the Occupation. He is the author of the well-known
War Without Mercy (1986), and will offer a two-day seminar on the
topic of his newest book, Embracing Defeat: Japan in the Wake of
World War II (1999).
Accepting invitations for Toyota Visiting Professorships in 2000-2001
are: Social Psychologist Susumu Yamaguchi from Tokyo University;
Historian Fumiko Umezawa from Keisen University, and Ethnomusicologist
Takanori Fujita from the Osaka International University for Women.
___________________
Special Events
CJS and the 9th Asian Business Conference
CJS MBA/MA student Aundrea Almond-Wallace and Professor of Political
Science John C. Campbell were among many U-M participants at the
9th Asian Business Conference. An article written for the conference
report by Almond-Wallace details panelists Makoto Ariga, Director
of Human Resources of Delphi Automotive Systems, Andrew M. Isaacs,
President of California Technology International, and Gary P. Sullivan,
Director, NBD Health Care, Asia Proctor and Gamble discussing how
American and Japanese companies are dealing with the recession in
Japan. Professor Campbell moderated. The full report on the Asian
Business Conference can be obtained at: http://www.umich.edu/~asiabus/Report/9thabc.htm.
The 10th Asian Business Conference will be held on January 20-21,
2000. Contact asiabus2000@umich.edu
for additional information.
JSA Japan Cultural Festival A Success
The 8th annual Japan Cultural
Festival was held on March 14th, 1999 at the Michigan Union Ballroom
in Ann Arbor. A record 900 visitors attended the festival this year,
nearly twice the 1998 total, and there were more events introduced
to a wider variety of people from the campus and the local community
than ever before. Activities included a Tea Ceremony presented by
the Japan Business Society of Detroit Women's Club, a Kendo demonstration
by the All United States Kendo Federation, a Japanese traditional
dance (Nihon Buyo) performance by a master of the Fujima School
of Dance, Kyoko Ejima, traditional music with hayashi drums and
gagaku, Japanese pop music by ALWAYZ, karate, origami, calligraphy,
Japanese animation, a kimono photo booth, traditional cuisine, and
more.
The Japan Student Association (JSA) is a non-profit organization
run by students attending the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
Since its founding in 1991, JSA has held numerous educational activities
each year to share the culture of Japan with its members and the
diverse community at the University of Michigan. The JSA Japan Cultural
Festival (JCF) originated during the 50th anniversary year of the
bombing of Pearl Harbor and in commemoration of the internment of
more than 120,000 Japanese-Americans. The festival was begun in
hopes of loosening any tension the Pearl Harbor anniversary may
invoke and to break down the social barriers between Japanese and
Americans.
The 9th Annual Japan Cultural Festival will be held on Sunday, March
12th, 2000 in the Michigan Union Ballroom. For more information
on the JCF, or to inquire about joining JSA, contact jsao@umich.edu.
________________
Publications
Two reprints in our
series Michigan Classics in Japanese Studies are part of our fall
lineup. Government and Local Power in Japan, 500 to 1700: A Study
Based on Bizen Province, by John Whitney Hall (Classics No. 19,
ISBN 0-939512-96-3, paper, $18.95), is an important interpretation
of premodern Japanese political and institutional history. The journal
Asia and the East mentioned that Government and Local Power "makes
the pre-1700 political life of Japan not merely colorful and interesting
but more comprehensible." This work joins Japan: From Prehistory
to Modern Times, as the second Hall title to be reissued by the
Center for Japanese Studies. The other reprint is Japan in Crisis:
Essays on Taisho Democracy, edited by Bernard S. Silberman and H.D.
Harootunian (Classics No. 20, ISBN 0-939512-97-1, paper, $18.95).
A classic study of culture and politics in early twentieth-century
Japan, the book garnered impressive reviews when it was published.
The American Political Science Review said of Japan in Crisis: "No
better study of those years, in the English language at any rate,
has been published." The Journal of Asian Studies called it
"essential reading for anyone interested in early twentieth-century
Japan." We are pleased to add these two books to our distinguished
series.
Following on the heels of A Tanizaki Feast: The International Symposium
in Venice, edited by Adriana Boscaro and Anthony H. Chambers, which
received favorable mention in the Times Literary Supplement, will
be Professor Boscaro's Tanizaki in Western Languages: A Bibliography
of Translations and Studies (ISBN 0-939512-99-8, cloth, $19.95).
The author has compiled a bibliography of Western-language works
on Tanizaki that will be an important research tool for those interested
in one of the greatest writers of the twentieth century. In addition,
the volume will challenge scholars to look beyond national, linguistic,
or generic boundaries when thinking about the reception or study
of Tanizaki's literature and of texts in general. The book raises
questions about a text's "afterlife," about "national"
literature, and about the significance of "original" versus
later versions.
Our final fall title is a major contribution to the study of an
important Japanese woman writer and a masterwork of reader reception
studies. Yosano Akiko and The Tale of Genji, by G. G. Rowley (Monograph
No. 28, ISBN 0-939512-98-X, cloth, $32.95), traces for the first
time the full range of Yosano Akiko's involvement with The Tale
of Genji. Akiko, one of the most important literary figures of prewar
Japan and known primarily for the passion of her early poetry and
for her contributions to twentieth-century debates about women,
pioneered some of the most promising avenues of modern academic
research on Genji and felt that Genji was the bedrock upon which
her entire literary career was built. To a great extent, Akiko gave
the text the prominence it now enjoys as a translated classic.
To order these and other titles, please contact the University of
Michigan Press, 839 Greene St. / P.O. Box 1104, Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1104,
tel: 734.764.4392; fax: 734.936.0456; e-mail: um.press.bus@umich.edu.
To find descriptions of all of our publications, see the Center's
web page and click on Publications.
Bruce Willoughby
_________________________
From the Librarian
Kenji Niki, New Curator Mr. Kenji Niki has
joined the staff of the Asia Library as the Curator of Japanese
Collections. He will be responsible for the development of the Japanese
collections and will coordinate the acquisition operations of the
Asia Library. Mr. Niki brings to this position a great deal of subject
expertise and professional experience. He was the Asian Collection
Librarian at St. John's University, 1992-99, and the Japanese Studies
Librarian at the Starr East Asian Library, Columbia University,
1983-1992. Mr. Niki was educated in Japan and studied philosophy
at Sophia University in Tokyo. He holds a graduate degree in Asian
Studies from St. John's and a MLS from Pratt Institute, and is also
an active member of ALA, AAS, and several other professional associations.
Mr. Niki is an avid reader of Japanese literature. When at Columbia
University, he read almost all of the collected works of Japanese
literature (though, he says, this was partially work-related). His
current interest is the history of and relations among ancient China,
Korea, and Japan, and ancient Chinese civilization. He can be reached
at 647-4590 and nikik@umich.edu.
Asia Library Statistics and Resources As of June 1999,
the total holdings for the Asia Library reached 665,500 volumes
and microforms; more than 279,300 items are in Japanese. During
the 1998-1999 academic year we received 1,924 Interlibrary Loan
requests, and 15 Asia Library Travel Grant recipients visited the
library from all over the U.S. and abroad. Both in terms of size
and program the Asia Library remains one of the most important research
libraries in North America.
New Electronic Sources New additions to our electronic
resources collection are: Asahi Shinbun gogai 1879-1998, full text
and image collections of Asahi gogai on 6 CD-ROMs; Asahi Shinbun
kiji detabesu 1985-1996, full text collections of the articles (no
illustrations) on 12 CD-ROMs; and Mainichi Shinbun hodo shashin
1997, about 4,000 photographs and short articles from Mainichi Shinbun
issued in 1997. CD-ROMs in the collection can be viewed at our CJK
Computing Facility, located at 414 North Harlan Hatcher Graduate
Library.
One of the best ways to learn about our library resources
and services is by visiting our homepage http://www.lib.umich.edu/asia/.
Selected new acquisitions are listed in the "New Books"
page (updated monthly); a list of our electronic resources collection
is also on the CJK Computing Facility (CJK-CF) page with numerous
links to major Asian newspapers and tips on how to read on-line
CJK materials. On the "Reference" page there are links
to such sources as the Bibliography of Asian Studies (BAS) and LEXIS®-NEXIS®
Academic Universe, databases of news, business, legal, and reference
information. Questions and/or comments can be made via toasia@umich.edu.
For questions on the use of Japanese CD-ROMs as well
as general questions on the Asia Library, please contact Mari Suzuki
at 764-0406 or send an e-mail to msuzuki@umich.edu.
_________________________________________________________
Faculty Profile: Whitmore
Gray, Professor Emeritus of Law
When he was still a
student, Whitmore Gray would rise early to find a couple
of tranquil hours to hone his language skills. A few years and a
number of languages later, the only thing that's changed is which
language he's studying. On a recent cab ride, the cultural stew
review included Chinese vocabulary, and immersion in his most recent
linguistic challenge, Arabic. This newspaperman's son has never
lost the desire to learn languages, and the languages he's pursued
have never failed to transport him into new cultures and new adventures.
As a Professor Emeritus in the University of Michigan Law School,
and a Law School alumnus, Whitmore Gray?Whit, to his friends?is
never long in one place. He continues to teach part time at the
University of Michigan and at Fordham University in New York, while
practicing half time with the New York firm of LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene
& MacRae. He has recently written the new arbitration law for
Cambodia and new contract law for Indonesia, and has lectured on
American contract law in Vietnam. The fact that the Monroe, Michigan
native can read and write legal documents in Spanish, French, German,
and Russian might surprise you. That this same person also has conversational
fluency in Chinese, Japanese, and Thai certainly should.
A lover of theater and the arts, Professor Gray traded his initial
legal lectures in Kyoto for two sets of woodblock prints. The first
money he ever earned for a law lecture, in New York, was promptly
converted into an original Picasso sketch. Whitmore Gray always
seems one step ahead of the rest of us, but it wasn't always so.
Until his sophomore year in college he was probably as far from
"cosmopolitan" as only a Midwesterner could be. It was
the early 1950s and he had gone from a small town to a small college
when his father, a newspaper publisher, took him along on a whirlwind
tour of Europe and the Middle East. This was actually a working
trip that was to give a small group of newspaper editors and publishers
(and one college student) needed background in current world events.
It was itself an event that would change Whitmore Gray forever.
The group's chartered plane was the first Western plane to land
at the Belgrade airport. In daily sojourns on their way to Paris,
the group had tea with Tito (at his home), met with the King of
Greece and the Shah of Iran, rubbed elbows with General Eisenhower
in Brussels, were guests at a dinner hosted by London's Lord Beaverbrook,
had an audience with the Pope, and were joined at a press conference
by a "retired" DeGaulle. When the group hit Paris, young
Whit, to the surprise of his mother and father, declared his intention
to stay and study.
Three months of study in Paris were followed by two more years of
college back in the States and then graduation. A yearning to teach,
to be a diplomat, or perhaps a foreign correspondent, was momentarily
displaced when Whit came back to Michigan for a last fling at music.
During a summer at Interlochen, he didn't find a musical calling,
but did meet his wife-to-be, Svea Blomquist. His next step was into
the University of Michigan Law School. At U-M, he became editor
of the Law Review and managed to study Chinese "on the side."
A pursuit of cultures through language has been a lifelong theme.
His foreign language studies had initially been sparked by a high
school French teacher who so inspired him that he had gone on to
add Spanish, German, and Russian in college as a Modern European
Languages major. Chinese appeared to be another opportunity to expand
his horizons. By the mid 1960s, Whitmore Gray was a young law teacher
who had published a translated version of the new Russian Civil
code and spent a year in Hong Kong studying Chinese and interviewing
Chinese refugees about the Mainland legal system. French and Russian
law studies in Paris were next, and then Gray was a working lawyer
who spent two years at a New York firm. U-M was impressed. Whitmore
Gray was invited back to Ann Arbor to join the Law Faculty.
Apart from a brief stopover in Japan on his way back from Hong Kong,
it was at Michigan that the now Professor Gray truly crossed paths
with Japan. The Michigan Law School already had received students
from Japan for almost 100 years, but after the Second World War,
a Ford Foundation grant and a joint program to retrain the Japanese
legal profession all but insured that a large, new cohort of Japanese
were trained at Michigan. This group included lawyers, professors,
and eventually judges as a "Michigan Mafia" filled many
important posts in Japan's Ministry of Justice. Professor Gray's
training in European languages and Law gave him a background uniquely
suited to understanding the Japanese legal system which had drafted
much of its legislation based on European models at the beginning
of the 20th Century. As a result, Whitmore Gray was a good mentor
for the Japanese studying at Michigan, and found himself very much
in demand as a substantive lecturer on U.S. law in Japan. Not accustomed
to being in a country where he couldn't speak the language, his
visits to Japan made him want to include formal study of Japanese.
For two years in the 1970s, the entire Gray family split time between
Ann Arbor and Kyoto, and then later, between Ann Arbor and Tokyo.
Whit was picking up the language while he was laying out the law.
When he was back in the States, Professor Gray's Japanese experiences
led to a course about how the Japanese legal system worked: an effort
to prepare American lawyers to work with Japanese lawyers (as opposed
to merely providing academic comparisons of U.S. and Japanese law).
In these years, Professor Gray was also an active member of the
U-M Center for Japanese Studies, serving on the executive committee
and attending various Center activities regularly. He eventually
participated in the Business School's seminars for businessmen on
"Negotiating with the Japanese". This experience inspired
him to develop a number of similar lectures and seminars for American
and foreign lawyers. Also inspirational was a course he gave as
a distinguished Fulbright Lecturer at the Kyoto American Studies
Seminar, where an American and Japanese law professor collaborated
on lectures to interested law teachers from Japan and other Asian
countries. It was a model of substantive collaboration that Professor
Gray has tried to incorporate in the teaching about Japan at Michigan.
As he neared the end of his active tenure at Michigan, Whit was
able to assist in securing Japanese funding for a continued Japanese
legal studies program. In fact, one sizable chunk of this money
came in from U-M alumni in Japan, who presented it as a "retirement"
gift in recognition of Professor Gray. Thanks to the funding received,
U-M will continue to train legal experts from Japan and teach interested
students about the Japanese legal system with the help of many distinguished
Japanese visitors. Additionally, while Michigan professors had gone
to Japan in the past to lecture, this pace accelerated in 1992 with
the beginning of a new program whereby three U-M professors go to
the University of Tokyo for a series of lectures each year. By now,
almost half the U-M law faculty have visited Japan, probably a record
in the U.S.
Even as he was easing out of his Michigan teaching duties and Japan-specific
studies, Professor Gray was immersing himself in other areas of
Asia. A 1989 trip to Thailand, was his springboard to learning the
Thai language, and to legal reform projects in Cambodia, Indonesia,
and Vietnam. As he contemplates his continuing odyssey, Whitmore
Gray realizes that he has tackled many things that he never thought
to prepare for, but that his language and cultural skills prepared
him for nevertheless. In Cambodia and Vietnam, for example, the
majority of senior legal people speak Russian, and French and German
law is what they consider the natural model for their current system.
How many other people could possibly bring the amalgam of skills
Professor Gray can to such a situation? In teaching at Michigan
and abroad, in his current teaching at Fordham, in his yearly summer
teachings (20 years and counting) at the Academy of American &
International Law in Dallas Texas--where 80 foreign lawyers from
35 countries come every summer?Professor Gray has had almost 3,000
foreign lawyers as students. These are now practicing attorneys,
professors, and judges?friends and colleagues who greet him in his
travels, work with him on wide-ranging projects, and respect the
work, energy, and dignity with which he has affected their lives.
Professor Gray and his wife Svea, an ordained Episcopal minister,
recently celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary with a trip to
Syria, Jordan, and Israel. It should come as no surprise then that
when he is not working in New York, or teaching throughout the world,
Whitmore Gray is now studying Arabic.
_________________________________
Faculty and Associate
News
Professor Abe Markus Nornes has received a
Fulbright to fund research in Japan during 1999-2000 for a book
on Ogawa Productions. Professor Nornes also recently co-organized
a U-M conference on Japanese film, "Japanese Cinema Studies
in the Rear View Mirror: Re-viewing the Discipline," for
the 1999 Workshop of the Kinema Club on March 27-28, 1999.
Professor Hugh de Ferranti (Musicology, ALC) received a Center
for Japanese Studies University of Michigan Faculty grant for, "Biwa
Music in the Twentieth Century: The Lives of Fumon Yoshinori and
Yamashika Yoshiyuki", part of a large-scale ethnographic
and documentary project on the life histories of the satsumabiwa
performer Fumon Yoshinori, and the zatobiwa performer, Yamashika
Yoshiyuki.
Doctor Michael Fetters published, "The Family in
Medical Decision Making: Japanese Perspectives," in the
Journal of Clinical Ethics, and co-authored "Cancer Disclosure
in Japan: Historical Comparisons, Current Practices" in
Social Science Medicine. Dr. Fetters also received funding for two
projects: the first as investigator for the "JHEP: Japanese
Health Education Project Web Page Development" funded by
the Japan Society of Detroit Foundation, and the second award was
Center funding to participate in the "Nagoya University-U-M
Family Medicine Exchange Program." Dr. Fetters has given several
lectures on topics related to bioethics within a comparative U.S.-Japan
perspective in Houston, Texas and Tokyo, and continues his participation
in the Pediatrics Ethics Committee, the Community Relations Task
Force of the University of Michigan Health Systems, and as Director
of the Japanese Family Health Program of the University of Michigan
Health Systems.
Professor Paul Huth (Political Science) received a Center
for Japanese Studies University of Michigan Faculty Grant for "Domestic
Political Conflict & Japanese Security Policy, 1870-1941"
a project which addresses when and why domestic political change
and conflict influence the foreign and defense policies of states.
Professor Sadashi Inuzuka (Art and Design) was recently elected
to the International Academy of Ceramics based in Geneva, Switzerland.
He received an Artistic Production and Performance Award from the
University of Michigan Discretionary Fund for both his forthcoming
solo exhibition, "Exotic Species" at the Davis
Arts Center in Davis, California, and his participation in the California
Conference for the Advancement of Ceramic Art, also in Davis. This
exhibition was inspired by the ecological imbalance of the Great
Lakes, and Works in Progress for this show were exhibited at the
Faculty Show at the U-M Museum of Art in 1997. In March-May, 1999,
he exhibited Nature of Things at the Rackham Institute of the Humanities.
From April 10-July 3, he participated in a joint exhibition with
other members of the School of Art and Design about the creative
transformation from inspiration to art held at the University of
Michigan Museum of Art.
Professor Ken Ito (ALC, Japanese Literature) received a Center
for Japanese Studies University of Michigan Faculty Grant for "Narrating
the Family in Late-Meiji Japan" a project which seeks to
delineate how the modes of narration in late-Meiji Japanese fiction
impacted, and were in turn impacted by, the representations of family
they produced.
Professor James S. Jackson (Psychology, ISR) received a Center
for Japanese Studies University of Michigan Faculty Grant for "Inter-Group
Relations among Japanese and Ethnic Minorities," a pilot
investigation among Japanese, Korean, and Chinese residents in preparation
for a larger empirical research project on inter-group relations
in contemporary Japan.
Professor Yuki Johnson (ALC) received an award from the Career
Development Fund for Women Faculty, and an Instructional/Course
Development Fund award to create a fourth-year Japanese textbook.
Professor Shin-Ying Lee (Center for Human Growth & Development)
received a Center for Japanese Studies University of Michigan Faculty
Grant for "Japanese Teachers' Manuals for Elementary School
Mathematics" a project which will make Japanese teachers'
manuals for elementary school mathematics available to American
educators, administrators, education policy makers, and curriculum
developers.
Professor William P. Malm signed a contract with Kodansha
International for the publication of his book, Traditional Japanese
Music and its Instruments to be released in the summer of 2000.
This is a revised edition of his 1959 book, Japanese Music and Musical
Instruments, and will contain forty years of new information and
a CD.
Professor Leslie Pincus (History) received a Michigan Humanities
Award for her project on Nakai Masakazu entitled, "The Culture
of Social Transformation in Twentieth Century Japan." Professor
Pincus presented a lecture titled, "Taking it to the Streets:
From Modernist Meditations to Social Transformation in 20th Century
Japan" as part of the Edwin O. Reischauer Institute of
Japanese Studies Events for Spring 1999, and presented "A
Salon for the Soul: The Postwar Culture Movement in Hiroshima"
as part of the Winter 1999 CJS Noon Lecture Series.
Professor Jonathan Reynolds (History of Art) has accepted
a position at the University of Southern California and was named
to be a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Studies in the Visual
Arts at the National Gallery of Arts.
Professor Jennifer Robertson (Anthropology) received a Michigan
Humanities Award for her project on the cultures of Japanese Colonialism
during the wartime period (1931-1945).
Professors Kiyoshi Sano (Family Medicine) & Michael Fetters
(Family Medicine), received a Center for Japanese Studies University
of Michigan Faculty Grant for "Nagoya University-University
of Michigan Family Medicine Exchange Program" an opportunity
for Japanese family physicians to observe the practice of family
medicine at the Japanese Family Health Program.
Professor Robert Sharf (ALC), newly installed Director of
the Center for Japanese Studies, received a Michigan Humanities
Award for his project, "How to Read a Zen Koan: Chao-chao's
Dog and the Buddhist Nature of Insentient Objects."
John Shook, co-director of the U-M's Japan Technology Management
Program, former U-M Professor Robert Cole, and U-M Professor Emeritus
Walter Hancock spoke as part of the 5th annual Lean Manufacturing
Conference held 5-7 May, 1999.
Professor Takeshi Takahara (School of Art & Design) received
a Center for Japanese Studies University of Michigan Faculty Grant
for "Kiso Sansen and Wajyu," a project for research
and creation of 3-dimensional, durable artworks that combine printmaking
processes with clay. In March-May 1999, he exhibited a show entitled
Flow Suite at the Institute for the Humanities at the Rackham School
of Graduate Studies.
Professor Ann Takata (Sociology) received a postdoctoral
fellowship from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science for
a project titled "The Introduction and Diffusion of the
Modern Corporation in Meiji Japan." During the term of
this fellowship, she will be a visiting scholar in the Department
of Business Administration at Bunkyo Women's University.
Professor Hitomi Tonomura (History) received a Michigan Humanities
Award for her project "Study of Gender Relations and Sexual
Meanings in the Kojiki" to explore the earliest literary
representations of Japanese attitudes towards gender and sexual
relations. Professor Tonomura also gave a talk as part of the Center's
Noon Lecture Series in honor of National Women's History Month entitled,
"Managing Illicit Sexual Relations in Japan's Samurai Age,
ca. 1200-1800." On May 15, 1999, Professor Tonomura participated
in the Silver Anniversary Symposium of the Journal of Japanese Studies
held at the University of Washington at Seattle, and gave a talk
entitled, "Gendering the Samurai: The Body and Merit in
Medieval Wars and War Tales." Her latest volume, co-edited
with Anne Walthall and Haruko Wakita, Women and Class in Japanese
History, has been published by U-M CJS publications and includes
an article by Professor Tonomura entitled "Sexual Violence
against Women: Legal and Extra-Legal Treatment in Premodern Japan."
Professor Mark D. West (Law School) received a Center for
Japanese Studies University of Michigan Faculty Grant for "The
Political Economy of Corporate Code Development in Japan and the
United States," an examination and analysis of Japanese
and U.S. corporate law with an emphasis on their shared origins
yet remarkably different corporate systems. Professor West is also
finishing up a project with Professor Curtis Milhaupt (Columbia
University) entitled "Organized Crime as Illicit Entrepreneurialism:
State Institutions and the Dark Side of Private Ordering"
to be presented at the American Law and Economics Association annual
meeting. This past summer, he has been researching and writing about
the political economy of corporate law development in Japan and
the United States.
Professor Mieko Yoshihama (School of Social Work) received
a Center for Japanese Studies University of Michigan Faculty Grant
for "WHO Multi-Country Study of Domestic Violence and Women's
Health-Japan," an investigation of the prevalence and health
consequences of domestic violence (by men against women) in Japan,
with a proposed cross-national comparative analysis of risk and
protective factors for domestic violence victimizations. Professor
Yoshihama also presented a lecture as part of the Center's Noon
Lecture Series entitled, "Breaking the Silence: Research
and Action to End Domestic Violence in Japan."
SeonAe Yeo (RN, Ph.D.) lectured on "Culturally Competent
Health Care" for the nursing staff of the UMMC in-service
training on March 31. Her article "Effect of Exercise on
Blood Pressure among Pregnant Women with a High Risk for Gestational
Hypertensive Disorders," co-authored with Ming-Chuan Chang,
Suzanne M. Leclaire, David Ronis, and Robert Hayashi, was accepted
for publication by the peer review journal, The Journal of Reproductive
Medicine. She was also awarded a grant from the Japan Ministry of
Health and Welfare for her project "Community Health and
Welfare Service for Child-Rearing Support: A Community Assessment"
in February.
________________
Student & Alumni News
Juliet Winters Carpenter (U-M alumnae) has
recently had her translation of Ryotaro Shiba's 1967 work, The Last
Shogun: The Life of Tokugwa Yoshinobu published through Kodansha
International.
Javan R. Corl (CJS MA) has recently published "Amerika
no Kirisuto Dobo Kyokai no Enkaku" (A History of the American
Church of the United Brethren in Christ) as part of Odawara juji-machi
kyokai hyaku nenshi (A One-hundred Year History of the Odawara Juji-machi
Church). Corl has lived in Japan for the past forty years.
Gunter Dufey published an article entitled, "Asian
Financial Matters: A Pedagogic Note," in the Journal of
Asian Business 15:1 (1999).
Warren Fernandez (CJS MA) has changed jobs, leaving Mitsubishi after
two-and-a-half years to become a program manager in the cellular
infrastructure division of Nippon Motorola Ltd.
Carl Freire (CJS MA) has been working since June 1997 as
associate editor of Asian Survey, a journal of contemporary Asian
affairs published at the University of California, Berkeley. Carl
lived in Shiga and Kyoto for six years, working as a journalist,
translator, and English teacher, which he followed with a stint
as a translator and interpreter in a joint venture California auto
plant before taking up his current position.
Alexander Gardner (ALC Ph.D. Candidate) was selected to participate
in the 1999 Summer Interdisciplinary Institute, "Disciplinary
and Interdisciplinary Approaches to the Body: From Cell to Self."
Dan Fenno Henderson (CJS MA) recently was a visiting professor
at the University of Hawaii at Manoa where he also gave a talk entitled,
"Fifty Years of Japanese Law in English."
Ruth Kanagy (CJS MA alum, Ph.D. Political Science) participated
as a keynote speaker in the Japanese Studies Association of Australia
Biennial Conference "Discourse, Dissonance, and Diaspora:
Identities for the New Millenium."
Asby Kinch (Ph.D. English) is the associate editor of Japanophile,
a new journal of Japanese culture.
Eric Rath (Ph.D. History) has been hired at the University
of Kansas in a tenure-track position in premodern Japanese history.
He just finished a one year postdoc in the Reischauer Institute
of Japanese Studies at Harvard University where he presented a lecture
entitled, "Historical Perspectives on Ritual in Noh Theater."
He also participated in a panel at AAS in March 1999 on Noh Theater
in Japanese History.
David Rosenfeld (ALC) gave a talk entitled, "War
of Afterwords: Hino Ashihei's Paratextual Battles" as part
of the U-M Institute for the Humanities Brown Bag Lecture Series.
Jon-Erick Schaudies is in Iwate, Japan for the summer. Recently
he was one of eight foreign residents of Iwate asked to give a short
speech concerning the quality of life for foreign residents of the
city.
George Totten III (Army School and CJS MA) attended the inauguration
of Kim Dae Jung, gave a talk on East Asian security in Korea for
the Advisory Council for Democratic, Peaceful Unification, attended
the International Standards Organization annual meeting in Athens,
Greece, and has had his book, The Social Democratic Movement in
Prewar Japan translated into Korean.
John Traphagan, postdoctoral fellow in the Population Studies
Center, recently received a $75,000 grant from the National Institute
on Aging for a project on Religion, Well-Being, and Aging in Japan.
Dr. Traphagan's recent articles include "Reasons for Gateball
Participation among Older Japanese in a Rural Hamlet,"
Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology, Vol. 13, no. 2, pp. 159-175;
"Localizing Senility: Illness and Agency among Older Japanese,"
Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology, Vol. 13, No. 1, pp. 81-98;
and "Contesting the Transition to Old Age in Japan,"
Ethnology, Vol 37, No. 4, pp. 333-50. His book Taming Oblivion:
Aging Bodies and the Fear of Senility in Japan is scheduled to be
published by SUNY Press in February 2000.
Pat Welch (CJS Alumnae) has accepted a tenure-track position
in the department of Comparative Literatures and Languages at Hofstra
University in Hempsted, NY.
Ali Zamiri (CJS Alumnus) is currently working at Qualcomm,
Inc. as an international marketing manager for the African, Russian,
and Middle East regions, but he reports that he still continues
to use his Japanese language skills. He relates that he enjoys living
in San Diego where he can surf on his lunch break and then return
to the office to work on hi-tech gadgetry.
_____________
Visitors
Fall 1998's Toyota Visiting
Professor Hiroyuki Hashimoto departed Ann Arbor in August,
but before he left he paid a visit to the Marshall Islands. There
he presented some heretofore unknown information on the history
of the Marshalleese to Mayor Mike Kabua, detailing jobwa dance and
Marshallese usage of boomerangs. Professor Hashimoto's research
was gleaned from the Asia Library here on campus, which Professor
Hashimoto calls "excellent." After his stint in Ann Arbor,
Professor Hashimoto is looking to continue his research into folk
performing arts in Japan and is looking forward to starting a new
project on the Pacific Festival of Arts and Marshallese performing
arts. We wish Professor Hashimoto the best in his endeavors and
hope that his further research will be fruitful!
In addition to the 1999-2000 Toyota Visiting Professors, the University
also welcomes Professors Osamu Morita and Masahito Inouye
who will be visiting professors at the U-M Law School during Winter,
2000. Their visit is part of the exchange program between U-M and
Tokyo University Law Schools. Professor Morita teaches the basic
civil code (contracts, torts) class at Tokyo University and is part
of the Japanese law and economics movement. Professor Inouye is
a specialist in criminal law and criminal procedure. We also welcome
visiting law professors Atsushi Kinami from Kyoto University and
Takashi Maruta from Gakushuin University.
The Department of Family Medicine will welcome two visitors from
Nagasaki University, Doctor Shinji Sato and Doctor Yoshiyuki
Ozono. Both are interested in Primary Care and Family Medicine,
and they will be on campus from September 1, 1999 until February
28, 2000.
CJS is helping to sponsor the renowned biwa performer, Mr. Fumon
Yoshinori, the only remaining active practitioner of Satsumabiwa
who received his training in the heyday of modern biwa performance.
He is scheduled to give a concert and lecture the week of November
7-14. Fumon-sensei will be accompanied on this visit by his deshi
(student), Thomas Marshall, a graduate of Cambridge University's
school of music who will interpret and aid in Mr. Fumon's presentations.
Deriving originally from southern Kyushu in the late 16th century,
Satsumabiwa consists of a narrative recited by the performer and
framed by complex musical figures played on the biwa. Transliterated
and translated texts will be available at the performance. For more
information, contact Hugh de Ferranti, Assistant Professor of Musicology.
From November 8, 1999 to June 30, 2000 Silvia Zanlorenzi
will be a visiting scholar in the department of Political Science
researching bureaucratic and political structures in Tokugawa Japan
and possible legacies carried over into today's political world.
Professor Kathleen Uno, Temple University, will be a visiting
scholar in the History department from September 1, 1999 to April
30, 2000. Professor Uno is highly regarded in the Japan field as
a social historian doing work on issues of gender, family, and childhood
in early modern and modern periods. Her book Passages to Modernity:
Motherhood, Childhood, and Social Reform in Early Twentieth Century
Japan was published in April by The University of Hawaii Press,
and Gendering Modern Japanese History, a work she is co-editing,
is forthcoming from Harvard University's Center for East Asian Studies
Publications program. On February 17, 2000, Professor Uno will present
a lecture at the International Institute as part of the CJS Noon
Lecture Series.
Professor Makoto Yamada, a Professor of Economic Policy at
Kagoshima University, will be a visiting professor at the School
of Public Health and the Center during the 1999-00 school year.
Professor Yamada is an expert on national-local financial relationships
in Germany and Japan, and has recently been studying their public
Long Term-Care Insurance systems (the only ones in the world). His
research in the United States will focus on the connection between
local government and utility organizations and how they finance
their activities.
______________________________________
Japan Related
resources at U of M
CJS receives a variety
of questions regarding a number of resources for Japan-related research
at the University of Michigan. This is not meant to be an all-inclusive
listing, but rather points to some helpful resources. If you know
of others that are available, please let us know.
Asia Library
In addition to its more than 648,604
volumes in books, journals, microfilm, etc., including more than
273,355 volumes in Japanese, the Asia Library also runs a Japanese,
Chinese, and Korean language computing center. Consisting of multimedia
hardware and software allowing computing in Japanese, Chinese, and
Korean, and database searching in these languages, the library also
runs training and other workshops related to its use. The library
also has an extensive reference room full of dictionaries, encyclopedias,
and other works in Japanese, Chinese, and Korean. For more information,
contact the Asia Library, or see their website at: http://www.lib.umich.edu/asia/.
Asian Art Archives
The Asian Art Archives is a photograph
collection located in the basement of Tappan Hall. A resource of
over 90,000 photographs, the Archives is open to both faculty and
students for study and research. Part of the Asian Art Archives
includes the Far Eastern Art Archive comprising some 48,000 photographs
of Chinese and Japanese painting, sculpture, architecture, and decorative
arts. A searchable index of Japanese artists is available online
at:
http://www.umich.edu/~hartspc/archives.html
Bentley Historical Library
Much of the history of the Center for
Japanese Studies, and therefore an important part of the history
of Japan studies in the United States (among many other artifacts),
is archived in the form of original documents at the Bentley Historical
Library on North Campus. The archives include photographs, films,
videotapes, audiotapes, administrative files, correspondence, course
materials, faculty files, financial statements, special activities
files, and more covering the period from the late 1940s to the present.
A finding aid is available at the library. Because the Bentley deals
in original materials, there are special rules for examining and
handling their collections. For more information see the Bentley
Historical Library web page at:
http://www.umich.edu/~bhl/,
or tel. 734.764.3482.
Center for Japanese Studies Library
The Center itself has a growing library
of books, periodicals, and reference works available for general
use. The holdings contain a comprehensive collection of CJS publications
going back to the 1950s and continuing to the present-day including
the Michigan Monographs in Japanese Studies and the CJS reprints
of classics in Japanese studies. The library also contains many
works by CJS-affiliated faculty, CJS visitors' publications, including
works by our Toyota Visiting Professors, gifts, an extensive number
of dictionaries, encyclopedias and other reference works related
to Japan, information regarding studying abroad in Japan and working
in Japan, and several Japan-related journals such as the Journal
of Asian Studies, Monumenta Nipponica, Positions, and the U.S.-Japan
Women's Journal. The collection is catalogued on a database located
at CJS to allow easy searching. Materials may be checked-out with
permission from Center faculty or staff.
Clements Library
The Clements library has in its archives
several important resources for the study of mid-nineteenth century
Japanese history including Ukiyo-e prints, journals, and other personal
accounts documenting early Japanese impressions of EuroAmerican
people, life, and cultures. The collection of prints ranges from
depictions of Perry and his sailors, to life aboard their black
ships, and includes maps of the various treaty ports, ethnographic
descriptions of foreign lands, and Europeans and Americans in their
home countries. Written documents include: contemporary manuscripts
of accounts of Japanese sailors shipwrecked and brought to America
in the first half of the nineteenth century; the seven-volume journal
of Tamamushi Yasushige, a member of the first official Japanese
diplomatic mission to the United States; and a series of original
documents relating to the etiquette and protocol for the visit of
Townsend Harris to the Shogun at Edo Castle. For more information
including a catalog, history of the library, hours, regulations,
etc., see the website at: http://www.clements.umich.edu/.
Film and Video Library:
U-M's Film and Video Library contains
a large number of Japanese films in VHS and laserdisc format from
documentaries and instructional works to the films of Akira Kurosawa,
Kenji Mizoguchi, and animation. The library is located in the Shapiro
Undergraduate Library on the second floor. See their website at:
http://www.lib.umich.edu/filmvid/
Gerald R. Ford Library
The Gerald R. Ford Library contains a
vast number and variety of documents relating to the Ford presidency
and Japan including files on state visits, economic relations, and
healing wounds of World War II. President Ford became the first
President to visit Japan while in office in 1974, and in 1975, Emperor
Hirohito first visited the United States. Economic-relations materials
deal with bilateral trade issues, treaty relations, balance of payments,
and international economic summits. The holdings also include materials
on President Ford's Official Rescinding of Executive Order 9066
which authorized the internment of Japanese-Americans during World
War II, and documents relating to his pardoning of Iva Touri D'Aquino
(Tokyo Rose). The library also holds a collection entitled, "America
Since Hoover: Selected Documents from the Presidential Libraries,
1928-80" that contains documents on the 1931 Japanese invasion
of Manchuria, the forced internment of Japanese-Americans, and the
use of the Atomic Bomb. For more information on the Ford Library,
see: http://www.fordlibrarymuseum.gov/.
Japan at U-M Online
The calendar normally found on the back
page of the newsletter is available on-line in a newly expanded
Events Calendar. This page lists not only CJS events, but also other
Japan and Japan studies related events that occur throughout the
area. If you have an event that you would like to publicize, please
call CJS at 734.764.6307. The Events Calendar page is at: http://www.umich.edu/~iinet/cjs/events/CJSevents.html.
The CJS website is constantly changing to meet the challenges of
our new environment. This site provides information on events, special
exhibits, and lecture and film series. Additionally, the site provides
information on the Center and its staff, funding opportunities,
academic programs and faculty, upcoming events, recent publications,
and resources on Japan which are available at the University and
elsewhere, including the new and always growing film database: "Japan
On Film: A WWW Guide to Japanese Film Prints."
Japanese Art at the University of Michigan Museum
of Art
The University of Michigan Art Museum
is home to a substantial collection of Japanese Art ranging in age
from 200 BCE to the present and illustrating the rich tradition
and evolution of the arts in Japan. The museum's Japanese art gallery,
underwritten by the Mazda Motor Corporation, includes a fully functional
traditional Japanese Tea House. Other highlights of the collection
include famous portraiture, Buddhist sculpture, lacquer-ware, ceramics,
painting, and ukiyo-e. For more information on their collection,
see their website: http://www.umma.umich.edu/.
Museum of Anthropology
The Museum of Anthropology has an extensive
collection of Japanese artifacts from prehistory to modern times.
The holdings include traditional footwear (geta, tabi, zori, etc.),
ancient potsherds from the Jomon period, various collections of
ceramics from kilns throughout Japan, Ainu handicrafts, artwork
such as a screen painting, a sword and two sets of armor, Buddhist
statuary, tea utensils, and modern textiles. These collections have
been donated by U-M faculty such as James Marshall Plummer and Richard
Beardsley as well as Sosuke Sugihara of Meiji University, and John
A. Pope, former director of the Freer Gallery. Though not open to
the public, arrangements can be made to study artifacts with museum
faculty and staff. The Museum of Anthropology is located at the
Exhibit Museum of Natural History. There is a searchable internet
database at: http://www.umma.lsa.umich.edu/data.html.
School of Music Library
Due chiefly to the efforts of Professor
William Malm during more than three decades of teaching musicology
at U-M, the School of Music library's holdings in the area of traditional
Japanese music are the strongest of any institution in North America.
Areas of primary concentration are Edo period theatre and chamber
music (nagauta, various styles of joruri, shamisen song forms, jiuta
sokyoku and sankyoku among others), but all major historical genres
are reasonably well represented in LP and CD recordings, published
scholarly works and traditional notations (note that books and other
materials in Japanese are held in the Asia Library on Central Campus).
The collection also contains extensive holdings of Japanese participation
in western classical music through the good offices of the Japan
Federation of Composers. Hugh de Ferranti (joint appointee in Musicology/Asian
Languages and Cultures) is seeking to continue expansion of the
foundational collection, both by updating materials in established
areas, and introducing areas that have been relatively underrepresented
to date, such as Japanese popular music.
Slide Library
The Visual Resources Collections of the
History of Art Department includes an extensive collection of 35mm
slides. All U-M faculty members and graduate students are welcome
to borrow slides for use in classroom presentations. The collection
is housed in the lower level of Tappan Hall and is open Monday through
Friday from 8:00a.m..-4:30p.m. (these hours may change slightly).
Faculty members and graduate students who would like to incorporate
visual materials into their lectures are encouraged to come for
an orientation to the collection. The slide library contains an
extensive collection of Japanese art from early history to the present
including painting, sculpture, architecture, and other decorative
arts. The History of Art Visual Resources Collection is online and
includes a searchable database.
See: http://www.lsa.umich.edu/histart/visual/slides/.
The Stearns Collection
The Stearns Collection contains displays
more than 2000 rare and familiar musical instruments from communities
across the globe, including Japanese instruments such as Taiko drums.
It also has a searchable internet database of its holdings. The
website is: http://www.sils.umich.edu/CHICO/Stearns/StearnsHP/stearns.html.
Teaching and Job-Search Help For Graduate Students
The Asian Languages and Cultures Pedagogy
Workshops that were held for graduate students throughout 1997 and
1998 (sponsored by the Rackham-funded Pedagogy Initiative Project)
have been summarized in a workbook of benefit to anyone pursuing
an academic career. The workbook includes succinctly particularized
advice on a range of topics including "Teaching Across Disciplinary
and Generic Bounds," "Designing Exams," "Creating
Energy in the Classroom," "Preparing for a Job Interview,"
and "Job Search Secrets" among others. Whether you're
a temporary GSI or on-track for a teaching career this book could
help. To get a copy, e-mail Lili Selden at lselden@umich.edu.
Zatsudan Club
The Zatsudan Club, a Japanese conversation
group for native and non-native speakers, meets more or less regularly
to chat over coffee in Ann Arbor. They are always seeking new friends
to join them. For more information, contact: Ann Hooghart, tel.
616.965.2326, e-mail: Anne_M._Hooghart@glfn.org.
___________________________
Faculty &
Staff Funding
Faculty Funding:
Center for Japanese Studies U-M Faculty
Associates Instructional/Course Development Seed Grants deadlines
are February 1 and May 1. Please click here for more detailed information about these opportunities.
The Center for Japanese Studies sponsors an annual competition for
grant awards supporting research on Japan. The competition is open
to all University of Michigan faculty pursuing research that investigates
any aspect of Japanese society and culture. Grants are awarded in
a range from $500 to a maximum of $30,000. Funds may support individual
or group projects and are designed to provide support for travel,
lodging, salaries and benefits for the principal researcher and
research assistants, supplies, and books directly related to the
project. Award recipients report at the end of the award period
and offer a presentation in the Center's Noon Lecture Series. The
Center for Japanese Studies wishes to invite interested faculty
to submit proposals for the next award cycle. Interested individuals
should contact the Center for Japanese Studies for an application
form and more information. The application deadline for grants to
be awarded for 2000-2001, including Summer 2000, is February 15,
2000. For more information on CJS and external funding, please click here .
Student Funding:
Foreign Language Area Studies (FLAS)
fellowship deadline is January 15, 2000. For more information, please
click here.
Deadlines for Center for Japanese Studies Students Specializing
in Japanese Area Studies Conference Travel Support are November
30, January 31, and March 31 annually.
Monbusho deadlines are April 1 for Japanese Studies Scholarships
for undergraduates and the In-Service Training for Teachers Scholarships.
The interview and language testing will take place on April 8 at
the Japan Consulate in Detroit.
____________________
Announcements
Looking For Article
ii: The Journal of the International Institute (University of
Michigan) looks for articles with an international aspect or focus.
Past articles have ranged from an examination of health issues in
Africa to the debate over whether to prosecute Bosnian war crimes
in international or national courts. The Journal's 10,000-member
readership encompasses both scholars and general readers. Submissions,
therefore, should appeal to a general intellectual audience. Feature
articles should be 2,000 to 4,000 words in length. Contact: Michelle
Harper, Bonnie Brereton, John Ramsburgh, Editors, The Journal of
the International Institute, tel. 734.936.8680, fax 734.763.9154.
Looking for Updates
CJS invites all faculty, associates,
students, and alumni to send in news about what you've been doing.
Additionally, if this newsletter has been forwarded to you, if you
have moved or are planning to move, or if you have not been receiving
a copy of the CJS Newsletter regularly, please let us know:
Newsletter
Center for Japanese Studies
Suite 3603, 1080 S. University
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1106
fax: (001) 734-936-2948
or e-mail Linda Williams at:
e-mail: umcjs@umich.edu
The Center for Japanese Studies wishes to take this
opportunity to thank our donors for their generous contributions
to Center programs.
Center for Japanese Studies
University of Michigan
Suite 3603, 1080 S. University
Director: Robert Sharf
Graduate Secretary: Linda Williams
Program Coordinator: Brett Johnson
Student Assistant: Kevin Martin
Publications Program
Executive Editor: Bruce Willoughby
Assistant Editor: Robert Mory
Design & Illustrations: S2 Design
telephone * 734.764.6307
facsimile * 734.936.2948
e-mail * umcjs@umich.edu
website * http://www.umich.edu/~iinet/cjs/
______________________
1999 Fall Calendar
SEPTEMBER
16 Lecture: Why Read (or Write) Literary Biographies?, Phyllis
Birnbaum, 2nd annual Robert L. Danly Memorial Lecture, Rackham 4th
Floor East Conference Room, 4:00p.m.
16 Lecture: Kobe: Modern Urban Population-Environment Dynamics,
Gayl Ness, Sociology, University of Michigan.
17 Book Signing: Phyllis Birnbaum, Shaman Drum Bookstore,
4:00p.m.
17 Film: The Eel - Unagi, Lorch Hall Auditorium, 7:00p.m.
23 Lecture: Lines of Sight, Lines of Force: The Problem of
Gender in Reading Genji monogatari emaki, Tom Lamarre, Literature,
McGill University.
24 Film: Akira Kurosawa's Dreams - Yume, Lorch Hall Auditorium,
7:00p.m.
30 Lecture: The Historical Development of Japanese Ghosts,
Susan Klein, East Asian Art & Literature, University of California,
Irvine.
OCTOBER
1 Film: When I Close My Eyes - Love Letter, Lorch Hall Auditorium,
7:00p.m.
7 Lecture: Keller Kimbrough, U-M ALC Visiting Professor.
8 Film: Tokyo Fist - Tokyo fuisuto, Lorch Hall Auditorium,
7:00p.m.
14 Lecture: Molding a Culture of Thrift: Promoting Saving
in Modern Japan, Sheldon Garon, History, Princeton University.
15 Film: Bird People of China - Chugoku no chojin, Lorch
Hall Auditorium, 7:00p.m.
21 Lecture: Court, Commoner, and Country: Visual Appropriation
of the Tales of Ise, Joshua Mostow, Professor of Asian Studies,
University of British Columbia.
22 Film: Down the Drain - Hadashi no pikunikku, Lorch Hall
Auditorium, 7:00p.m.
27 Performance: Sankai Juku, Hiyomeki, Power Center, 8:00p.m.
28 Lecture: The Postwar Development of Japanese Studies in
the United States, Helen Hardacre, Harvard University, Reischauer
Institute of Japanese Studies.
29 Film: Film Gamera: Guardian of the Universe - Gamera daikaiju
kuchu kessen. Lorch Hall Auditorium, 7:00p.m.
NOVEMBER
4 Lecture: Against Capitalist Modernity: Tachibana Kôzaburô's
Journey from Pastoralism to Rightwing Revolution, Stephen Vlastos,
History, University of Iowa, TVP, Fall 1999.
5 Film: Minbo or the Gentle Art of Japanese Extortion - Minbo
no onna, Lorch Hall Auditorium, 7:00p.m.
11 Lecture: Japanese Modernism and Consumerism: Forging the
New Artistic Field of Shôgyô Bijitsu, Gennifer Weisenfeld,
Art History, Duke University.
12 Film: Sonatine - Sonatine. Lorch Hall Auditorium, 7:00p.m.
18 Lecture: Why are Japanese Judges So Conservative in Public
Law Cases?, Mark Ramseyer, Law, Harvard.
19 Film: Give It All - Ganbatte ikimasshoi, Lorch Hall Auditorium,
7:00p.m.
DECEMBER
2 Lecture: Rethinking Welfare Capitalism: Japan in Comparative
Perspective, Margarita Estevez-Abe, Political Science, University
of Minnesota.
6 Lecture: T.R. Reid, Foreign Correspondent, The Washington
Post.
12 Film: Dr. Akagi - Kanzo sensei. Lorch Hall Auditorium,
7:00p.m.
HAPPY 2000! AKEMASHITE OMEDETO GOZAIMASU!
JANUARY
13 DEADLINE: Admission to CJS M.A. program application.
14 Lecture: Bernard Faure, Religion, Stanford University.
15 DEADLINE: FLAS APPLICATIONS DUE.
20 Lecture: John Dower, History, MIT, TVP, Winter 2000.
20-21 Conference: 10th Asian Business Conference
27 Lecture: Jim McClain, History, Brown University.
FEBRUARY
1 DEADLINE: Grant Goodman, Endowment, and all NON-FLAS funding
applications due.
Unless otherwise noted, all lectures take place in
Room 1636, 1080 S. University, begin at 12:00p.m., and are part
of the CJS Noon Lecture Series.
*****
Regents of the University of Michigan: Laurence
B. Deitch, Daniel D. Horning, Olivia P. Maynard, Shirley M. McFee,
Rebecca McGowan, Andrea Fischer Newman, Philip H. Power, S. Martin
Taylor, and Lee C. Bollinger, ex officio.
The University of Michigan, as an equal opportunity/affirmative
action employer, complies with all applicable federal and state
laws regarding nondiscrimination and affirmative action, including
Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 and Section 504 of
the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. The University of Michigan is committed
to a policy of nondiscrimination and equal opportunity for all persons
regardless of race, sex, color, religion, creed, national origin
or ancestry, age, marital status, sexual orientation, disability,
or Vietnam-era veteran status in employment, educational programs
and activities, and admissions. Inquiries or complaints may be addressed
to the University's Director of Affirmative Action and Title IX/Section
504 Coordinator, 4005 Wolverine Tower, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1281,
(734) 763-0235, TDD (734) 647-1388. For other University of Michigan
information call (734) 764-1817.
Last update: January 10, 2000 by
C. Thompson
Send comments to: umcjs@umich.edu