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Colloquium Series, 2007-2008Free and open to UCLA faculty, students, staff, and invited guests Modern Arts and Crafts in Kyoto: from Asai Chu to Yagi Kazuo, 1900-1954Colloquium with Shigemi Inaga, International Research Center Colloquium with Yoko Hiraoka, Performer of Japanese Traditional Musical InstrumentsLecture and Biwa performance Disruptions, Failures and Beyond: Two 'Nationalistic' Moments in Japan's PerformanceColloquium with Tadashi Uchino, Theater, University of Tokyo Benjamin Smith Lyman and His LawColloquium with Timothy Vance, East Asian Studies, University of Arizona Reading and Writing Ryoanji: (De)Constructing a Japanese IconColloquium with Kendall Brown, Department of Art, California State University, Long Beach US Bombing Strategy, the Destruction of Japanese Cities, and the American Way of War from the Pacific War to IraqColloquium with Mark Selden, East Asia Program, Cornell University; Coordinator, the Asia Pacific Journal, Japan Focus Blood Into Ink: the Poetry of the Shishi in Nineteenth Century JapanColloquium with Matthew Fraleigh, Asian Languages and Literature, Brandeis University The Stealth Activism of the Japanese Judiciary - How Japanese Judges Surpass American Courts as Social EngineersColloqium with Frank Upham, the Wilf Family Professor of Property Law, New York University School of Law Sendai Kuji Hongi: Imitator or FacilitatorColloquium with John Bentley, Foreign Languages and Literatures, Northern Illinois University Mobilizing Geographic vs. Nationally-Organized Interests in Trade Politics: Evidence from Trade Testimony before the Japanese DietColloquium with Megumi Naoi, Political Science, University of California, San Diego
Berlin and Beyond: Yamada Kosaku and the Beginnings of Western Classical Music in JapanColloquium with Thomas Rimer, Terasaki Chair in U.S.-Japan Relations, UCLA Solitary Warriors of Class Warfare: Kajiwara Ikki's Manga Heroes and Their Violent Quest for Historical AgencyColloquium with Yoshikuni Igarashi, History, Vanderbilt University Power, Play, and Dialogic Imagination in Late Tokugawa JapanColloquium with Katsuya Hirano, History, Cornell University |
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