2014-12-26

oral narratives - Tohoku

Voices from Tohoku, http://tohokukaranokoe.org/

 

Over the past 3+ years, we have collected video oral narratives from more than 10 communities in Iwate, Miyagi and Fukushima. We have more than 500 hours in total, making it one of the largest such archives we know of. Most of the interviewing has been done by undergraduates at the Faculty of Liberal Arts, Sophia University, Tokyo. 

 

"Voices of Tohoku" is a Japanese website that features a collection of clips taken from our full archive, each with Japanese transcriptions and thematic tags. These clips were first provided to our primary audience--the Tohoku informants themselves--as some record of how people felt during the unfolding of events within community life in post 3.11 Tohoku. The stories are not always happy but one informant suggested that we make them available to the public. "After all," she said, "we only told you these stories so you would tell the world what really happened." The website is not fancy but it is functional, a work in progress. (Of course, we have full release forms for all material.) 

 

During the data collection, we returned to each site for repeated visits for at least a year, always doing volunteer work to better understand the specifics of the community. Rather than focusing on the often horrific tales of destruction on "the day of," we tried to give our informants a more expansive chance to talk about their lives in more detail. Wanting minimal interruption, we often asked only three questions during our interviews: what was your community like before 3.11; how has it been from the disaster until today; what is your vision of the future? 

 

We are not collecting any more Tohoku narratives, not because the situation is in any sense "over"--it is not--but because we do not have any more money to send people into Tohoku. We are currently translating the interviews into English and looking for a way to make the full archive open to other scholars in a responsible and effective way. 

 

We gratefully acknowledge support from Sophia University, the Toyota Foundation and a JSPS grant from the Japanese government. Also, we thank the many graduate students, post-grad scholars, colleagues, NPO leaders and of course, our many interviewees and collaborators in Tohoku, who have helped us make the archive what it is so far. 

[cross-post from H-Japan, 26 Dec 2014; D. Slater]

2014-12-13

annual Trend Words in the Japanese language

from 2014 流行語大賞: ダメよ〜、ダメダメ (top 1, but not suitable for younger kids?)、ありのままで、and 壁ドン。 

2014 流行語大賞 http://singo.jiyu.co.jp/ 

2014 流行語大賞 with more explanation http://matome.naver.jp/odai/2139591219654639001 


Interesting 壁ドン examples

カップヌードルCM壁ドン編, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8FLY8xeW3Ps 

壁ドン プロモーション at GU, http://www.japantrends.com/gu-kabe-don-ginza-event/ 

2014-10-29

art in the 1950s - Japan's protest painters

http://japanfocus.org/-Linda-Hoaglund/4203 is connected to the MIT Visualizing Cultures project and includes video and many images.
For teachers of Japanese this rich visual material tells about important times in Japan. For students of Japanese, as well, this chapter of Japanese life is worth knowing.
 [excerpt from the introduction in the article itself]

The image-driven VC explorations of protest in Japan begin in 1905 and end with the massive "Ampō" demonstrations against revision of the U.S.-Japan mutual security treaty in 1960. The four treatments that will be reproduced in The Asia-Pacific Journal beginning in this issue are as follows:

1. Social Protest in Imperial Japan: The Hibiya Riot of 1905, by Andrew Gordon. We reprint this article with this introduction. Other articles will follow in the coming months.

2. Political Protest in Interwar Japan: Posters & Handbills from the Ohara Collection (1920s~1930s), by Christopher Gerteis (in two units).

3. Protest Art in 1950s Japan: The Forgotten Reportage Painters, by Linda Hoaglund.

4. Tokyo 1960: Days of Rage & Grief: Hamaya Hiroshi's Photos of the Anti-Security-Treaty Protests, by Justin Jesty.

2014-10-13

online segments (science news)

Good listening practice; cross-posting from Senseionline (yahoo groups), thanks to Mio T.

series of science news for children on you tube. There are 45 episodes. 
One of them is 「紅葉の季節がはじまる。」   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Tr4PjdjK9s 

Program list at the science channel, http://sc-smn.jst.go.jp/M100002/ 

2014-07-19

mooc - Visualizing Japan (starts Sept. 3); Harvard

cross-posting from www.h-net.org > H-Japan electronic list: tell others or try this experience yourself!

A first-time MIT/Harvard MOOC (Massive Open Online Course), Visualizing Japan opens windows on Japan's transition into the modern world through the historical visual record. Teachers include John Dower (MIT), Andrew Gordon (Harvard), and Gennifer Weisenfeld (Duke). Begins September 3, 2014. 

This MOOC will be followed by Visualizing Postwar Tokyo by Shunya Yoshimi of the University of Tokyo.


REGISTER FROM THE edX COURSE SITES BELOW:

https://www.edx.org/course/harvardx-mitx/harvardx-mitx-vjx-visualizing-japan-2331


OR SEE http://harvardx.harvard.edu/visualizing-japan

2014-06-29

Tokyo statues

Public art on the streets of Seoul is diverse and numerous, but Tokyo has some notable statues, too, according to this article from AtlasObscura.com where an eclectic mix of stories appear with the search term     japan.

2014-01-21

all about Soba

The morning radio show "Morning Edition" carried a nice story about making and eating soba.


[opening excerpt]

Traditional Japanese cuisine, known as washoku, is now an Intangible Cultural Heritage, according to the United Nations.
     
Tofu, mochi and miso are a few examples, but it's the buckwheat noodle, or soba, that many consider the humble jewel of Japanese cuisine. It's not easy to find in the U.S., but one Los Angeles woman is helping preserve the craft of making soba.

     In a cooking classroom off a busy street in L.A., Sonoko Sakai is teaching about the simplicity of making buckwheat noodles.

     "Basically, soba is only two things: flour and water," Sakai explains.

     A handful of students gather around the slender Sakai as she shows them how to mix the flour and water together.


=-=-=-=-= added comment

While teaching English in rural west Japan (Takefu city, merged and renamed Echizen city in 2005) I was introduced to the local pride, cold soba with grated daikon radish: Oroshi Soba. One aficionado credited the soba to Saracens in Central Asia. And since the 30-40 km radius to Takefu boasts uniquely chewy and flavorful soba tradition, they claim the True Tradition of Soba. In recent years they opened the "soba dojo" or practice hall where busloads of day trippers and area school children, elderly day-center people and others learn all about the varieties of the noodle. There is a restaurant, museum and gift counter as well, all dedicated to celebrate the humble and sincere treat. See panoramas of the display case diorama showing soba making in miniature, http://tinyurl.com/sobadojo1 and http://tinyurl.com/sobadojo2

2014-01-20

origami - show me the money

spotted at restaurant wall in Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105