Jun Hee Lee 2/11

Music for the Youth: American Folk Song’s Impact on 1960’s Utagoe
Ling to paper: Music for the Youth

Speaker: Jun Hee Lee (PhD Student, Department of History, University of Chicago)

Discussant: Paride Stortini (PhD Student, Department of Divinity, University of Chicago)

Date/Time: Thursday, February 11, 4:15 to 6:00

Venue: John Hope Franklin Room (SSRB), Room 224

Paride Stortini 1/28

East and West of the Tsukiji Honganji
Travel and the Construction of a Japanese Modern Buddhist Temple
Link to Paper: Paride Stortini

Copyright Hirohide Nakahashi https://www.flickr.com/photos/guicho04/8241265610

Speaker: Paride Stortini (PhD Student, Department of Divinity at the University of Chicago), presenting:

Date/Time: Thursday, January 28, 4:15 to 6:00 pm

Venue:  John Hope Franklin Room (SSRB), Room 224

3/17 Zhao Ma

War Remembered, Revolution Forgotten: Envisioning the North Korean Ally in Chinese Documentary Films

Speaker: Zhao MA (Assistant Professor, Washington University in St. Louis)

Discussants: Saul Thomas (PhD Candidate, History/Anthropology) and Ling ZHANG (PhD Candidate, Cinema and Media Studies)

Date/Time: March 17, 4-6 pm

Venue: Gallery X, Smart Museum of Art (for guidelines for entering the museum, please see http://smartmuseum.uchicago.edu/visit/#guidelines)

Micah Auerback

 

Presenter: Micah Auerback
(Asssitant Professor, Asian Languages and Cultures, University of Michigan)


Title: Painting the Biography of the Buddha in Meiji Japan

Date and Time: 12/13 on Friday, 4-6pm
Venue:
Cochrane-Woods Art Center 152

Southern Song dynasty artist Liang Kai’s _Śākyamuni Descending the Mountain_ that is compared with Yamamoto Shunkyo's one in Meiji Japan (Tokyo, Japan, Tokyo National Museum).

Southern Song dynasty artist Liang Kai’s _Śākyamuni Descending the Mountain_ that is compared with Yamamoto Shunkyo’s one in Meiji Japan (Tokyo, Japan, Tokyo National Museum).

11/21: Seong Un Kim

Keeping Television Pure and Clear: the Social Background of the Discourse on “Vulgar” Television in Japan

 

Date and Time: 11/21/2013 (Thu), 4 – 6pm

Venue: John Hope Franklin Room (SS 224)

Discussant: William Feeney (PhD candidate, Anthropology)

 

Anyone with disabilities who needs assistance to access the venue, please get in touch with Guo-Quan at gqseng@uchicago.edu

Feb 14 (Thursday): Peng Xu (Mock Job Talk)

Peng Xu

(PhD Candidate,  East Asian Languages and Civilizations, University of Chicago)

“Courtesans versus Literati: Gendered Soundscapes in Late-Ming Singing Culture (1547-1644)”

Abstract:
 
Drawing upon the recent scholarship on sound studies, particularly cultural musicology and art historical inquiries into sound, I propose a hermeneutic approach to late-Ming singing refracted through the history of auditory experience. What were the sonic features—what the theorist R. Murray Schafer terms “keynote”—of the basic performance models of the time? How did they carry specific gendered implications? With these questions in mind, I probe the dichotomy between the courtesans’ vocal chamber music and the vigorous singing of elite men. The typical late-Ming courtesan’s solo performance took place under relatively quiet acoustic conditions and featured pleasing-sounding soft voice and hyperfeminine vocal production described metaphorically in contemporary criticism as “the midnight oriole.” In contrast, mountain hikers, mostly male, performed solo songs marked by significant sonority and high physical effort in natural landscapes with rich ambient noise, especially the sound of rapid streams and waterfalls

Feb. 14 (Thursday) 4:00-6:00 p.m.

Location: Judd 313