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JAPAN 150b: Readings and Discussion in Japanese Social Sciences
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Continuation of Japanese 150a.
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JAPAN 150b - Readings and Discussion in Japanese Social Sciences
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JAPAN Ba: Elementary Japanese
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course aims to develop a basic foundation in modern Japanese leading to proficiency in the four language skills of speaking, listening, reading and writing. Emphasis is placed on the use of these skills to communicate effectively in authentic contexts of daily life. Mastery of hiragana, katakana, and approximately 30 Kanji (Chinese characters).
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JAPAN Ba - Elementary Japanese
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JAPAN Bb: Elementary Japanese
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Continuation of Japanese Ba, with an approximately 150 additional Kanji.
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JAPAN Bb - Elementary Japanese
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JAPNHIST 126: Shinto: Conference Course
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
An examination of Shinto, emphasizing its concepts of deity (kami), patterns of ritual and festival, shrines as religious and social institutions, political culture and interactions with party politics, and its contribution to contemporary youth culture.
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JAPNHIST 126 - Shinto: Conference Course
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JAPNHIST 145: Lady Samurai in Medieval Japan
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course will offer a look at gender representation found in original historical records such as letters and diaries, and examine women's roles in society, ways of life, and sexuality in Japan from the 12th century to the end of 16th century with a comparison to their male contemporaries - the Samurai.
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JAPNHIST 145 - Lady Samurai in Medieval Japan
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JAPNHIST 146: Kyoto: The Capital of Medieval Japan
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Throughout the medieval times, Kyoto remained the capital of Japan. As the residence of emperors, this capital saw a unique set of physical and cultural developments. This course examines the various cultural elements of medieval Kyoto, as well as the conditions and changes in daily life, material productions and consumptions, and religious practices.
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JAPNHIST 146 - Kyoto: The Capital of Medieval Japan
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JAPNHIST 150: Early Modern Japan
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course provides an introduction to the history and culture of Japan in the seventeenth through nineteenth centuries. This was the Tokugawa period, the age of samurai rule, in which many elements of modern Japanese culture took familiar form. It was also the time when the roots of Japan's emergence as a modern state were laid.
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JAPNHIST 150 - Early Modern Japan
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JAPNLIT 133: Gender and Japanese Art
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Examines the role of gender in the production, reception, and interpretation of visual images in Japan from the twelfth through the twenty-first centuries. Topics include Buddhist conceptions of the feminine and Buddhist painting; sexual identity and illustrated narratives of gender reversals; the dynamics of voyeurism in Ukiyo-e woodblock prints; modernization of images of "modern girls" in the 1920s; and the gender dynamics of girl culture in manga and anime.
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JAPNLIT 133 - Gender and Japanese Art
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JAPNLIT 161: Introduction to Japanese Animation
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
This course examines a wide range of contemporary animated films and TV series made in Japan through their generic conventions, formal aesthetics, and narrative themes. Special attention will be paid to the relations between anime and various other commercial as well as non-commercial mediums such as manga, live-action films, video games, pop music, character merchandises, and fanzines.
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JAPNLIT 161 - Introduction to Japanese Animation
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JAPNLIT 162: Girl Culture, Media, and Japan
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
The course examines the ways in which girlhood and girl culture have figured in the construction of gender, nation, and popular medias in modern to contemporary Japan, from the 1920s to the present. We will study visual and textual mediums, including novels, magazines, films, manga, and animation, paying attention to principal transformations that have marked the history of modern girl culture in Japan. No prior knowledge of Japanese language or history is expected.
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JAPNLIT 162 - Girl Culture, Media, and Japan
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