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Kiyochika’s “Hurrah for Japan! One Hundred Victories, One Hundred Laughs”

February 17, 2016 @ 4:30 pm - 6:00 pm

February 17
MIRIAM WATTLES
Associate Professor, Department of History of Art and Architecture
University of California – Santa Barbara
Kiyochika’s “Hurrah for Japan! One Hundred Victories, One Hundred Laughs”:  Sure Ends, Hybrid Means
4:30-6:00 pm
Duke University
Smith Warehouse Bay 10, Room A266 (114 S. Buchanan Blvd), Durham, NC

 

Miriam Wattles is engaged with grasping cultural transmission. She has worked on the making of an artist’s legend through various media during the Edo period (The Life and Afterlives of Hanabusa Itchô, Artist-Rebel of Edo, 2013) and, recently, on the internet-to-street movement of today’s memes (“Mocking Memes, Protest Memes, Mourning Memes: The Violence of Us & Them”).Her approach is inspired by theories of cultural memory, materiality, media, genre, and parody. Recently, she has been exploring shunga in relation to gender theory. Her next book traces the production and migration of individual copies of six books on manga, Toba-e, and giga originally published from 1720 to 1928, and complicates the present understanding of the history of Japanese comic forms; a related exhibition is planned for 2018. Her early research focused on Yokoyama Taikan and the rise of a Pan-Asian aesthetic that arose within nihonga in the late Meiji: “The 1909 Ryûtô and the Aesthetics of Affectivity,” (Fall 1996). Before doing her graduate study at the Institute of Fine Arts (NYU), she lived for ten years in Japan immersed in the practice of calligraphy. In 2008, she founded Japanese Arts & Globalizations (JAG), an inter-campus research group in California.

Details

Date:
February 17, 2016
Time:
4:30 pm - 6:00 pm
Event Categories:
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Venue

Duke University’s Smith Warehouse
114 S. Buchanan Blvd.
Durham, NC United States
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The Carolina Asia Center supports diverse Asia-related events. However, CAC co-sponsorship of any talk, seminar, documentary screening, film screening, performance or celebration does not constitute endorsement of or agreement with the views presented therein. As an academic institution, we value diverse perspectives that promote dialogue and understanding.

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