Abstracts
Keynote Speech
Professor Christine Marran, "Literature Without Us: Theorizing the Human in Contemporary Japanese Fiction"
Professor Christine Marran, "Literature Without Us: Theorizing the Human in Contemporary Japanese Fiction"
Humanists have a new conceptual darling and her name is “Anthropocene.” The term was first introduced by atmospheric chemist Paul Crutzen and has since been a critical framework for analyzing the impact of climate change in a variety of disciplines and media forms. What does this eagerness to herald a new geologic age suggest? Should we engage this term in the humanities or leave it to the geologists? In this paper, I interrogate the concept of the anthropocene for literature and area studies, with a focus on Japanese fiction.
Panel One
Brian Hurley, "Racialized Ecologies: Envisioning Race Politics Through the Works of Novelist Tanizaki Jun’ichirō, Photographer Ken Gonzales-Day and Poet Bob Dylan"
Brian Hurley, "Racialized Ecologies: Envisioning Race Politics Through the Works of Novelist Tanizaki Jun’ichirō, Photographer Ken Gonzales-Day and Poet Bob Dylan"
An oak tree. A fountain pen. A suburban office park. A light bulb.
These seemingly innocuous images appear to have nothing in common. Yet, the aesthetic vision of Japanese novelist Tanizaki Jun’ichirō (1886-1965) and Mexican-American photographer Ken Gonzales-Day (1964-) reveals them to be what I call “racialized ecologies:” dense constellations of human intercourse with cultural space that are charged with race politics, history and violence.
Tanizaki’s famous essay In Praise of Shadows (1933) describes the infiltrations of White hegemony into Japanese daily life in the forms of imported commodities: for Tanizaki, the fountain pen and the light bulb corrode the cultural bonds of non-Whites by covertly inculcating Anglo-European aesthetic standards. In Searching for California’s Hang Trees, Gonzales-Day presents images of trees used for lynchings that still stand in the American West, teaching us to see a natural ecology that is not only the famously scenic material of Ansel Adams’ landscapes, but also a museum of lynch mob history and unspeakable horror.
Bringing together these vastly different critiques of White racism, my presentation considers how the works of Tanizaki and Gonzales-Day envision racialized ecologies in the most mundane objects: a tree, a pen, an office park, a light bulb. This consideration provides a context in which to approach the verbal ecology of Bob Dylan’s Modern Times (2006). On the album, Dylan subtly reanimates the words of poet and Civil War journalist Henry Timrod (1828-1867), whom Alfred Lord Tennyson once called the “Poet Laureate of the Confederacy.” Timrod’s loyalty to the Confederacy authorized the White supremacist ideology that Tanizaki, Gonzales-Day and Dylan all opposed.
On Modern Times, Dylan’s allusions to Timrod are so delicate as to pass for merely Romantic words sung with gravelly grace. With Tanizaki’s and Gonzales-Day’s racialized ecologies in mind, though, the goal of my presentation is to see the history and race politics of Dylan’s seemingly benign poetry, while, at the same time, still feeling the poetic appeal of his and Timrod’s language, whatever the danger.
Rika Hiro, "Space for the Wounded: Tezuka Osamu’s Ode to Kirihito and Japan’s Ecological Crisis"
Kirihito sanka/Ode to Kirihito is a manga by Tezuka Osamu (1928–1989), who is often referred to as “the godfather” of the genre. Originally serialized in a monthly comic magazine from April 1970 to December1971, Ode to Kirihito is a relatively unknown medical drama by this prolific artist. It is a unique work, however, employing the new, cryptic drawing style known as gekiga (“dramatic pictures”), a genre of noir-inspired psychological story targeted at adult readership, and covers broad themes found in Tezuka’s oeuvre, including science fiction, medical science, folklore, religion, urbanization, and other social and political issues. This paper specifically looks at the representations of the environmental crisis, radioactive contamination in particular, in Ode to Kirihito. It explores how Tezuka depicts this politically and socially sensitive issue in a popular pictorial narrative, how he slightly altered the content in a later version, and the possible meaning of this alteration. It also introduces contemporaneous examples of the visuals, which are comparable to Tezuka’s approach.
When Tezuka wrote Ode to Kirihito in the early 1970s, he positioned radiation-contamination as an example of a man-made pollution along with other industrial pollution-caused diseases. Today, discussions of the atomic bomb and its effects along with environmental pollution are not surprising. However, major publications on environmental pollutions then neither mentioned the atomic bombs nor the studies on aftereffects including leukemia, cataracts, thyroid cancer, and other health complications caused by radiation. In Ode to Kirihito, Tezuka visualizes his interests in radiation and ecological issues as one of the prime social stigmas of the time. However, unlike Minamata or Itai-itai disease, a number of patients with the radiation sickness appear to be healthy. In this respect, Tezuka made radioactive contamination visible in a bizarre and grotesque way: humans became like dogs and were treated as animals.
Shelby Oxenford, "Responding to 3.11: Trauma, Home, and Body in Selected Works of the Tôhoku Earthquake"
The trauma of disaster destroys the frames by which an individual or society gauges meaning and creates narrative. Trauma changes the act of remembrance and what is remembered as established narratives reorient and shift to accommodate the new traumatic event. This creates a space for, in the words of Michael Rothberg, “dialogic interactions” between past and present, “open to continual reconstruction.” Using as my case studies the initial literary responses of Kawakami Hiromi’s “Kamisama2011” [“God Bless You, 2011”], Kawakami Mieko’s “Sangatsu no keito” [“March Yarn”], and Takahashi Gen’ichirô’s Koisuru genpatsu [Nuclear Power Plant in Love], I examine how the trauma of the triple disasters of March 11, 2011 (3.11) is translated into language and narrative through a previously historically established discourse of the body and the loss of the furusato(hometown). By closely linking the body and the furusato, I argue these texts recognize both the body and the furusato as geographically locatable entities subjected to the same events and affected sometimes in similar manner. Loss of the furusatothat cannot be otherwise expressed is expressed through the body. In using and reworking these previously established discourses, the three texts inscribe the traumatic into a narrative form that opens up a multiplicity of meanings and interpretations, and allows for a struggle over meaning. This in turn makes possible a kind of witnessing and remembering as the narratives in each act to rebuild the frames by which meaning is made.
Panel Two
Deirdre Martin, "Explaining Intelligence Trajectories: The Japanese Case"
Deirdre Martin, "Explaining Intelligence Trajectories: The Japanese Case"
Coming soon
Dustin Wright, “Dispossession and Anti-Base Struggle in Cold War Tachikawa”
Since the 1950s, the people living in the western Tokyo suburb of Tachikawa have struggled against militarism. Only one among the many bases that haunt the past and the future of this region, Tachikawa Air Base was originally built by the Japanese Imperial Army but was later absorbed into the American military empire throughout much of the cold war, becoming an important installation for the wars in Korea and Indochina. From the 1950s to the 1970s, the promise of war and dispossession—the hallmarks of any military base—provoked anti-military protests among the communities surrounding Tachikawa Air Base.
There have been multiple phases of local resistance to the Tachikawa base, most famously in the form of the “Sunagawa Struggle,” a series of anti-base expansion protests that began in 1955. Led by local farmers, the Sunagawa Struggle sought to halt the expansion of base runway onto local farmland. The Struggle united ant-base sentiments around Japan and became the most serious critique of the immense American military complex. In later decades, peace groups used the continued presence of the Tachikawa Base as a lodestone for anti-base and anti-Vietnam war protests. Local activists, labor unions, student groups, and politically aligned politicians struggled against the violence that is written into militarized spaces. Through the employment of protest records, activist newsletters, and interviews, this paper highlights the militarized condition that ignited one of the most powerful social movements in post-war Japanese history.
The spaces produced by this militarism—and the related local struggle against dispossession—provide useful and intriguing sites through which to unpack not only the complicated histories of local Japanese protest against militarism, but also to engage in a better understanding of the immense urban and spatial changes that have occurred in Tokyo since the end of World War II. While Tachikawa has been fully absorbed into the Tokyo megalopolis, its militarized character, often rendered invisible by a sense of everydayness, continues nonetheless. I argue that militarization was the main form of urbanization experienced in Tachikawa’s postwar history.
Brad Holland and Chika Ogawa, “Order, Inter-Regional Mobility, and Legalized Vengeance Killing in Tokugawa Japan”
The aim of this paper is to understand why vengeance killing---a private form of retaliation---was institutionalized by the Tokugawa shogunate. We argue against the alternative explanations that the practice was institutionalized by the Tokugawa bakufu as a result of low state capacity (i.e. the inability to control private violence, or the inability to provide judicial and penal institutions), or as a result of blind adherence to Confucian values. Instead, we present an argument that the institutionalization (i.e. legalization and regulation) of vengeance killing was a strategic decision---given the larger political and social context---to promote stability. First, the legalization of private retaliation against a person who murdered or otherwise injured a familial or feudal superior 1) served to reinforce the social order consolidated under the early Tokugawa shoguns; and 2) allowed the bakufu to maintain (i.e. not adjust) the political institutions preventing the actualization of the three, major potential threats political order (i.e. elite infighting, elite collusion, and popular uprising). Second, the legalization of the practice, furthermore, allowed the bakufu to regulate it in a way that would promote the existing order: 1) strict constraints on the identity of the avenger and of the target of the retaliation ensured that private violence would not escalate into collective or other forms of violence that could threaten the regime's stability; and 2) the procedures for legal vengeance killing---which regulated every step of the act---were constructed in such a way as to reinforce the political and social hierarchy that provided the basis for stability throughout the Edo period.
This paper is related to space in that the institutionalization of vengeance killing was in large part a response to the political institutions in place that restricted the geographical mobility of the regional-level, military elites (the daimyo). Legalizing vengeance killing allowed private individuals to go across domains (something that was denied to the daimyo) to seek retribution for unjustified injuries to their familial or feudal superiors.
Panel Three
Michael Craig, “Something Between Geometry and Ecology: Ballistic Spatiality in Japanese ‘Bullet Hell’ (Danmaku) Shooting Games”
Michael Craig, “Something Between Geometry and Ecology: Ballistic Spatiality in Japanese ‘Bullet Hell’ (Danmaku) Shooting Games”
This paper examines the genre of Japanese shooting video game known as “bullet hell” (danmaku, literally “bullet curtain.”) A subset of the overhead 2D shooter genre pioneered by the Cave production studio in the 1990s, danmaku games, as their name implies, take place in environments saturated with enemy projectiles. Pulsing bullets, of diverse shapes and colors, emanate in various geometric patterns from enemies distributed throughout game space, at times threatening to envelop the entire game screen and forcing players to perform minutely tuned dodging maneuvers to survive. The volume of these projectiles, I argue, places suggestive strain on the distinction between object and space often posited as foundational to gaming: the overlapping patterns of bullets can come to seem more like intricately mapped boundaries than operative agents; and the player’s perception of game space can come to fluctuate between hyperawareness of his specific, precarious position in the game world and a more holistic recognition of the “curtain” of interlocking patters as an image.
Cognizant of such dynamics, this paper places danmaku in critical dialogue with the recent ecocriticism of Timothy Morton, as developed in his text Hyperobjects. Morton argues that the multi-scaled phenomenality of climate change, evolution, geological change, and analogous phenomena challenges us to conceive of ecology itself in terms of what he calls “very large finitudes.” For Morton, environmental processes should be understood as quantitatively vast objects interacting in manifold but limited ways with other ecological phenomena, also cognizable as objects, and qualitative ecological notions like “space,” “world,” and “nature” should be discarded as anthropocentric and vague. While danmaku, on one level, seems to highlight the posthuman logic of very large finitudes—the volume of bullets always remains countable to game software, allowing players to register scores in the quadrillions of points—I argue that there remains something intractably spatial about these bullet ecologies—something spurring players to perceive them as “wholes” even in the moment of obsessively safeguarding their place amid their quantitative vastness. In view of such perceptual fluctuations, this paper asks what danmaku may reveal about the possibility of constructing very large finitudes aesthetically.
Xindi Qin, “The Super-Feminine and the Feminine-Masculine Mixture: An Examination of Pleasure and Desire of Male Anime Consumer in Japan”
When female are depicted as something that epitomize men’s fantasies and meet desires both unconscious and explicit, they have ascended to a level of perfection and abstraction that there are virtually no equivalence of them in the real world. This means that people would not be able to find ventilation or an alternative in the real life that could assuage their mania for the “perfect” female image created and marketed by producers of anime, video games, movies, and even advertisements. In this sense, the idea of female or feminine has been fragmented, extracted and reconstructed into a posthuman existence that caters for the needs of its audiences. In this paper, I intend to examine two archetypes of female embodiment in anime. The “super-feminine” one that features extreme traditional female traits – both biologically and psychologically; and the “mixture” one in which elements typically perceived as feminine are combined with masculine ones. By contextualizing them respectively in the social-cultural backgrounds of post-war Japan -- where bubble economy and its burst promoted the transformation of social ideology, and a myriad of sub-culture are gradually rising into power and help to shape Japanese society in unprecedented ways -- I will try to explore the particular setting that lead to the consumers’ preferences and desire, which in turn constitute a counter-wave that generate impact on the production of pleasure in anime.
Aaron Jasny, “A Folklore of the Feminine: Nature, Folklore, and Community in Ohba Minako and Tsushima Yūko”
Nature often plays an important role in Japanese women’s writing, either as the location of a primordial female essence or as a place for self-discovery. Maryellen T. Mori has shown how “[n]ature and primitive locales are posited as sites of innocence and renewal” in narratives of liberation in both western and Japanese women’s writing.[1] Folklore, too, has provided Japanese women writers with an abundance of subject matter. Rebecca Copeland notes how “the male privilege to name and control has acted against original female power,” and how what has been perceived as mysterious or threatening in women has been marginalized through figures such as the serpent and the crone.[2] By recasting mythical and folk figures, traditionally defined in terms of a patriarchal order, writers have been able to highlight the historical objectification of women and to explore new forms of female subjectivity and agency. In this paper, I will look at the way that nature and folklore are used in stories by two Japanese women writers, Tsushima Yūko’s (b. 1947) “The Marsh” and Ohba Minako’s (1930-2007) “Candle Fish.” By comparing and contrasting the two, I hope to highlight some of the ways that natural and folkloric themes can be used to forge new forms of literary expression.
[1] Mori, Maryellen T. “The Liminal Male as Liberatory Figure in Japanese Women’s Fiction.” Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 60, no. 2. (2000): 540.
[2] Copeland, Rebecca. “Mythical Bad Girls: The Corpse, the Crone, and the Snake.” In Bad Girls of Japan, edited by Laura Miller and Jan Bardsley. Palgrave Macmillan, 2005: 16.
Panel Four
John Leisure, “Vertical Resilience: High-Rise Structures and Resource Network Interaction at Nishi-Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan”
John Leisure, “Vertical Resilience: High-Rise Structures and Resource Network Interaction at Nishi-Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan”
Adjacent to Shinjuku Station, Nishi-Shinjuku is known as Tokyo’s “skyscraper district.” It holds some of Japan’s tallest buildings including the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building (242m) and the Shinjuku Park Tower (235m). Nishi-Shinjuku is a highly visible area within Tokyo’s built environment, representing not only the vertical city, but also high concentrations of human, material and financial resources. As Nishi-Shinjuku rises, it continues to be supplied by transportation, communication, water, and energy networks, which exist above and below ground levels.
What are the advantages and risks that arise from the convergence of these multiple networks at Nishi-Shinjuku? Much attention has been given to earthquake proofing buildings, but how disaster proof are these feeder networks and circulatory systems? How are other areas that service Nishi-Shinjuku affected by increased consumption? Nishi-Shinjuku requires power generated off-site; but, how will power generating areas on the periphery be influenced by verticality at the core?
Nishi-Shinjuku serves as a site to examine the present verticality of the built environment and the influences that have contributed to its formation over time. To contemplate the significance of historical, existing, and emerging networks we propose to use resilience as a lens through which to study and weigh these network behaviors.
In the field of ecology in the 1970s, resilience was originally proposed to describe a complex systems ability to absorb significant change or disturbance. Keys to resilience are a systems ability to maintain critical relationships that enable the system to function. In the case of Nishi-Shinjuku, we are particularly interested in identifying the extent to which the built environment supports and maintains an extended number of networks and the degree to which these networks respond to changing circumstances, shocks or stresses.
Finally, inherent to the notion of resilience is the acceptance that disruption may occur and result in significant change—in the instance of Nishi-Shinjuku we examine how networks and the city fabric adapt to disruption. In addition, we project a set of speculative futures for Nishi-Shinjuku that takes into consideration the increased presence of one or more
Bonnie McClure, “Religious Cosmologies in Heian and Medieval Waka”
With the rise of a new Japanese tradition of recluse literature in the early medieval period came a decentralization of literary production, which up to this point had been mostly confined to the capital of Heian-kyō. Where the deep mountains had been largely depicted either as a distant backdrop or as an idealized environment filtered through the poetic imagination, they now became places described in vivid and intimate detail and a realm associated both literally and metaphorically with the poet-monk’s commitment to his practice of literature and Buddhism.
Saigyō (1118-1190), Japan’s first major recluse poet, repeatedly describes the deep mountains in terms that carry a multitude of metaphysical overtones. This paper will explore the roots of the cosmological mapping of mountains in Saigyō’s day by tracing how waka portrayals of mountains develop from the early days of Japanese poetry to the transition point between the late Heian era and the early medieval period. Elements of imported Chinese cosmology can be seen mixing increasingly with indigenous Japanese elements, resulting in a unique convergence of systems in the mapping of the mountain realm within the physical and metaphysical universe.
The indigenous cosmology of Japan, in which mountains are seen as the domain of the kami and boundaries between mountain and village realms are carefully honored, has been described as horizontal because it views the world in terms of a single plane marked out into territory controlled by different entities. Influences from Chinese cosmology, on the other hand, are colored by the dualistic systems of Taoism and Buddhism. In these dualistic cosmologies, which can be described as vertical since they involve the concept of other and higher planes of existence, mountains again hold a special place as the closest possible point to the divine. I will trace the interaction of these two systems by first briefly introducing some precedents from the Chinese recluse poetry tradition, then tracing how the portrayal of mountains in Japanese poetry changes over time from the Man'yōshū through Saigyō.
Panel Five
Justus Watt, “Woodblock Prints and Spatial Imagination: Meiji Popular Culture and the Re-imagination of East Asian Geo-Political Conceptions”
Justus Watt, “Woodblock Prints and Spatial Imagination: Meiji Popular Culture and the Re-imagination of East Asian Geo-Political Conceptions”
Japanese aggression toward China in the 19th and 20th centuries has been thoroughly documented and widely acknowledged. Less generally recognized, however, is the corresponding transformation in Japan of the Sino-centric conceptual order that positioned China as the civilizational center around which regional states revolved. The paradigm shift that accompanied the reformulation of this imagined space proved to be a critical element in the transfiguration of East Asia’s political, economic, and social reality, as it served as a precursor of and in many ways a prerequisite to Japan’s continental advances.
This reconceptualization was based largely in the realm of material culture. Therefore, rather than focusing on the dynamics of power politics, economic conquest, and military adventurism in an analysis of Sino-Japanese relations, this paper suggests a less dramatic, though certainly no less consequential, process. In an analysis of Meiji-era woodblock prints, I argue that the emergence of a previously unarticulated anti-Chinese public discourse contributed to an altered Japanese public consciousness that was incompatible with the long-standing notion of China as a civilizational model.
A distinct change in the form and function of Japanese woodblock prints contributed to this larger process of re-imagination. With the momentous changes of the Meiji period, including the emergence of the mass media, woodblock prints shifted thematic focus, moving away from fantasy and memorial, the long-established conventions of the medium, to a journalistic presentation and re-presentation of contemporary reality. It was in this context that woodblock prints, along with other elements of material culture, were called to service in constructing an image of Qing China as a weak and backward society incapable of competing in the modern world of powerful nation-states; a society that required the guidance of a more advanced and enlightened civilization as it proceeded along the path of modernization. This representation came to define an acceptable public interpretation of the bilateral relationship and thus served as a normative discourse invested in a process of inversion. It was this discourse that helped legitimate Japan’s imperial aggression by enveloping it in a narrative of progress and benevolent paternalism, thus preparing it for public consumption.
Jooyeon Hahm, “Pleasure Quarters: Creation of the Ambiguous Colonial Frontier in Korea, 1876—1945”
Pleasure quarters (Japanese. yūkaku, Korean. yukwak), the once self-contained world of art and entertainment, became an integral part of the modern city. An influx of male laborers and commercial booms expanded the sex trade. When Japanese settlers migrated to Korea, prostitutes came along to satisfy the demand for recreation by the largely single male population. By 1905, red-light districts of considerable size emerged in five colonial cities: Keijo, Fuzan, Jinsen, Chinnanpo, and Genzen. In 1910, the year of formal annexation, there were four thousand Japanese licensed prostitutes operating in Korea. This number remained relatively stable throughout the colonial period, but the total number of licensed prostitutes more than tripled as Korean women joined the trade.
This paper examines the role of pleasure quarters in creating an ambiguous colonial frontier in Korea. First, this space was a frontier, because it was where Japanese and Koreans came into (intimate) contact. Moreover, these red-light districts served as the entrance and exit of colonial ports and cities, where merchants, sailors, soldiers, and migrant workers paid routine visits as they arrived and departed. Second, this space was colonial, because colonial power established authority through regulations and taxations. Third, this space was ambiguous, because the relations between the colonist and the colonized remained equivocal in spite of the clear gender hierarchy; a Korean man could enjoy the company of a Japanese prostitute. Finally, pleasure quarters manifested both macroscopic control of the space and microscopic control of the body.
The control of brothels and prostitutes is a useful case study through which to understand the larger colonial governance. This paper examines this topic by analyzing statistical data and documents produced by the residents’ associations (kyoryū mindan), the Residency-General of Korea (Chōsen tōkanfu), and the Government-General of Korea (Chōsen sōtokufu). These sources will shed light upon distinct characteristics of modern pleasure quarters in colonial Korea.
Michael Thornton, “A Capitol Orchard: Botanical Networks and the Production of Urban Space in Meiji Sapporo”
The environmental historiography of the colonization of Hokkaido in the Meiji period largely focuses on the transfer of science, technology and knowledge; the extraction of natural resources; and the exploitation of the indigenous Ainu as factors in the agricultural settlement of the island. Few works have focused on the environmental history of Sapporo, the newly built capital of Hokkaido. In my paper, I will explore the establishment of orchards and other botanical sites in the center of Sapporo during the first two decades of the Meiji period. In these botanical spaces, agronomists imported new varieties of fruits, vegetables and grains from other parts of Japan, East Asia, Europe and the United States. They then raised and distributed these plants throughout the city, Hokkaido and Japan. Moreover, these sites overlapped with the administrative and political geography of Sapporo, most notably in the grounds of the Hokkaido Capitol, and were often blocked off from the surrounding town. I argue that these botanical sites demonstrate that the production of Sapporo’s urban space depended upon and in turn created regional, national and transnational networks of botanical exchange, scientific and physical labor, and political contests between state authorities, intellectual elites and city residents. Viewed through the lens of fruit trees, the particular history of Sapporo prompts us to reconsider the meaning of urbanization in nineteenth century Japan.