CONTEMPORARY JAPANESE SOCIETY
- Academic year
- 2019/2020 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- SOCIETA' GIAPPONESE CONTEMPORANEA
- Course code
- LT2730 (AF:315538 AR:136764)
- Modality
- On campus classes
- ECTS credits
- 6
- Degree level
- Bachelor's Degree Programme
- Educational sector code
- L-OR/22
- Period
- 1st Semester
- Course year
- 3
- Where
- VENEZIA
- Moodle
- Go to Moodle page
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
The course contributes to attain the teaching goals of the Bachelor's Degree Programme in the field of cultural and humanistic skills.
The main goals of the course are: to offer interpretative tools for an introductory comprehension of cultural and social studies; to provide knowledge on issues of identity and alterity in modern and contemporary Japan in relation to notions of civilization (the 'West', the 'East'), nation (Italy, Japan) and 'race' (whiteness, yellowness); to develop judgement faculty and skills to produce and communicate a piece of interpretative discourse on the topics of the course within a comparative and global perspective..
Expected learning outcomes
- to know and understand main aspects of issues related to collective alterity and identity in modern and contemporary Japan (1868-today).
- to know and understand concepts and tools from the fields of cultural and social studies within an inter-disciplinary perspective (cultural anthropology, socioogy of culture, intellectual history, postcolonial studies)
- to critically link the topics of the course to knowledge and understanding of Japanese contexts, that may have already been studied in other teachings from different points of view (e.g. historical, artistic, religious, etc.)
Applying knowledge and understanding:
- to analyze and interpret literary topics of the course by employing concepts from the fields of cultural and social studies
- to apply concepts of critical theory within an interdisciplinary perspective
Making judgements:
- to produce critical judgments on cultural and social issues that are part of the program by using informed and solid arguments
- to subject various types of sources (statistic, academic, alternative) to critical examination within a comparative, trans-cultural and global prespective
- to refine the capacity to criticize essentialist and stereotypical discourses on "Japanese culture" or "Japanese society"
Communication:
- to express and elaborate the contents of the program in written form, in a synthetic and effective way, without depending on automatic, schematic and mnemonic study.
Lifelong learning skills:
- to know how to take notes in an effective way
- to know how to critically integrate the study of different materials (notes, slides, manuals, academic articles, alternative sources)
- to be able to independently study materials and topics not covered during the lectures
- to refine the ability to study materials in English
- to refine the ability to use the online teaching platform
Pre-requirements
Moreover, a basic knowledge of modern and contemporary history of Japan is advisable, acquired through (however not exclusively) attending the "Japanese History 1/2" classes.
Contents
- occidentalism, orientalism, self-orientalism, 'Japan', essentialism and nihonjinron (theories about the Japanese)
II. Introduction to strategical concepts to understand modern and contemporary society of Japan:
- modernity, invention of tradition, nation-state, society, social stratification, race/ethnicity,
III. Identity and alterity in modern and contemporary Japan:
- 'the West' and 'Westerners', 'Italy' and 'Italians'
All slides of the lessons will be available on the moodle platform dedicated to the course,
Referral texts
Readings.
I. Sakai, Naoki (2018), “La fine e i fini degli studi di area. Sul problema della teoria e della differenza antropologica”, in M. Cestari, G. Coci, D. Moro, A. Specchio (a cura di), Orizzonti giapponesi, pp. 33- 66 [lezioni 1-15].
II. Vlastos, Stephen (1998), “Tradition: Past/Present Culture and Modern Japanese History”, in S. Vlastos (ed.), Mirror of Modernity: Invented Traditions of Japan, Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 1-17 [lezioni 6, 7, 8, 9].
III. Weiner, Michael (1997), “The Invention of Identity: Race and Nation in Pre-war Japan”, in F. Dikotter (ed.), The Construction of Racial Identities in China and Japan: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives, Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, pp. 96-117 [lezioni 7, 8, 10, 12, 13].
IV. Miyake, Toshio (2014), “Occidentalismo, orientalismo, auto-orientalismo, doppio orientalismo del Giappone”, in T. Miyake, Mostri del Giappone. Narrative, figure, egemonie della dis-locazione identitaria, Venezia: Edizioni Ca' Foscari, pp. 31-37, 120-130 [lezioni 1-15].
V. Sugimoto, Yoshio (2010), “1 The Japan Phenomenon and the Social Sciences”, in Y. Sugimoto, An Introduction to Japanese Society, New York: Cambridge University Press (III° ed.), pp. 1-23 [lezioni 9, 11, 12].
VI. Sugimoto, Yoshio (2010), “2 Class and Stratification: An Overview”, in Y. Sugimoto, An Introduction to Japanese Society, ibidem,, pp. 37-60 [lezioni 9, 11, 12].
VII. Sugimoto, Yoshio (2010), “7 ‘Japaneseness’, Ethnicity, and Minority Groups”, in Y. Sugimoto, An
Introduction to Japanese Society, ibidem, pp. 189-218 [lezioni 10, 12, 13].
VIII. Coates, Jamie (bozza 2019), “Japan as an ‘erotic paradise’ in the Sino-Japanese mobility context:
ethnographic encounters” [lezione 10].
IX. Miyake, Toshio (2013), “Italian Transnational Spaces in Japan Doing Racialised, Gendered and
Sexualised Occidentalism”, in M. Marinelli, F. Ricatti (eds.), Emotional Geographies of the Uncanny: Reinterpreting Italian Transnational Spaces, special issue of Cultral Studies Review, vol. 19 (2), pp. 99-124 [lezioni 14, 15].
X. Miyake, Toshio (2013), “Doing Occidentalism in contemporary Japan: Nation anthropomorphism and sexualized parody in Axis Powers Hetalia, in Transnational Boys' Love Fan Studies, K. Nagaike- K. Suganuma (eds.), special issue, Transformative Works and Cultures, no. 12. [lezioni 14, 15].
XI. Concetti chiave: “critique” [lezioni 1-15], “critical theory” [lezioni 1-15], “essentialism” (lezioni 1- 15), “bias di conferma” [lezioni 1-15], “modernity” [lezioni 8, 9], “society” [lezioni 9, 12], “social stratification” [lezioni 9, 11, 12], “race and society” [lezioni 10, 12, 13, 14, 15], “whiteness theory” [lezioni 13, 14, 15 ], “sexual racism” [lezioni 14, 15].
Assessment methods
- part I: 6 multiple-choice questions
- part II: 4 open-ended questions
- part III: 1 extended open-ended question
Part I is aimed at verifying knowledge and understanding. It doesn't assign a score, but requires that students provide at least 4 correct answers in order to be evaluated in part II and III.
Part II is aimed at verifying ability to apply knowledge and understanding of interpretative tools to the issues of the course, ability to learn in autonomy and the ability to comunicate in an argued, rigorous and concise way.
Part III is aimed at verifying the ability to apply understanding in order to critically discuss and formulate self-directed judgments in relation to the issues of the course, and to comunicate in an argued, rigorous and concise way.
All open-ended questions each receive a score in 30/30. The overall grade is given by the average of part II and III.
Teaching methods
Bibliography, presentations/slides and further readings are available on the moodle platform.
Teaching language
Further information
This exam (with this syllabus) will be available only for the 4 "appelli" of the 2019-20 academic year. Starting from 2020-21 a new syllabus will be in use.
Type of exam
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development Goals
This subject deals with topics related to the macro-area "Poverty and inequalities" and contributes to the achievement of one or more goals of U. N. Agenda for Sustainable Development