Study Abroad in Japan: Bridging Scholarships

aatjbridging
From The American Association of Teachers of Japanese:

The Bridging Project offers scholarships to American undergraduate students participating in study-abroad programs in Japan. Funding from private foundations and major U.S. corporations, through donations to the nonprofit US-Japan Bridging Foundation, makes it possible to award about 100 scholarships each year to assist students with the travel and living expenses they will incur while studying abroad in Japan for a semester or an academic year. Applications are accepted twice a year for Bridging Scholarships.

Qualifications, Instructions, Application Forms
Deadline for Fall 2016: April 8

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Meijo University Summer School 2016

meijoMeijo University (Nagoya, Japan) offers the summer program (from June 27 – July 9th) during the summer of 2016.

Two professors–Dr. Yasumi Murata and Dr. Mami Futagami–from Meijo University visited Baruch College and gave an information session on March 3rd, 2016.

The summer program comes with several fee waivers and a scholarship for covering the expense for accommodation. Still, you need to cover the rest of the expenses (see below).

As the Baruch Japan Program, we will be able to send 3 students for the program. If you are interested in the program and seriously consider applying to the program, please familiarize yourself with the program first. And, then, please notify Professor Suzuki of your interest ASAP: [email protected].

The brochure is downloadable here:
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/11898266/Meijo_Summer_Program.pdf

This is the website for the 2015 Summer Program (last year). The website will be renewed very soon:
http://www.meijo-u.ac.jp/english/news/detail.html?id=NF4RXk

You are responsible for finding out the final amount of the expenses, but the estimated expenses for an individual student will be the followings:

  1. Transportation (Air tickets + domestic transportation in Japan)
  2. The accommodation: 30,000 yen (approx. $270 dollars). The accommodation expense is 80,000 yen (approx. $710) but the scholarship covers the amount of 50,000 yen (approx. $ 440). Therefore, you are responsible for the rest: 30,000 yen (approx. $270).
  3. 2-week travel insurance (mandatory)
  4. Several meals (lunch and dinner), although some meals are provided (see the brochure) + your private expenses for free time (souvenir, exploring the city, and others)

 

 

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Baruch Japan Club: Japanese Conversation Class # 2

Dear Members,

We hope you all enjoyed our study abroad session last week. This Thursday during club hours in room 11-165, we will be having our second Japanese Conversation Class with the Japanese Anime Asylum. As you may know, JCC is an event designed to help introduce students to the Japanese language as well as to help them improve their Japanese speaking skills. For this JCC, we will be collaborating with the Japanese Anime Asylum to teach you about anime phrases. Refreshments will be served as well. We hope to see you all there!

Event Information

Event: Japanese Conversation Class #2

Date: Thursday, March 10th

Time & Place: 12:45-2:05pm, VC11-165

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Ozu’s Late Spring at Film Forum

ozulatespring

From Film Forum: The late, great Setsuko Hara in Late Spring.

Film Forum is screening Yasujiiro Ozu’s 1949 family drama Late Spring (晩春)until March 10.

Details | Tickets (Members $8, General $14)
Screening Times:
DAILY (except SUN/MON) 12:30  2:50  5:10  7:30  9:50
SUN 3:00  5:20  7:30  9:45
MON 12:30  2:40  4:50  8:45
Location:
Film Forum
209 West Houston St. west of 6th Ave.

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SYMPOSIUM New Directions in Japanese Art & Architecture after 3/11

New Directions in Japanese Art & Architecture after 3/11

SYMPOSIUM

New Directions in Japanese Art & Architecture after 3/11

Architechure after 3/11

Friday, March 11, 5:30 PM

Buy Tickets

2013.3.31 Takata Matsubara from the seriesRikuzentakata, 2013 Hatakeyama Naoya (b. 1958) Photograph, chromogenic print © Naoya Hatakeyama, Courtesy of Taka Ishii Gallery Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

5:30–7:30 PM

As the human loss and material devastation of 3/11 remain urgent issues five years on, this symposium focuses on innovations in art and architecture that have arisen in the aftermath of the disaster, and considers the ongoing efforts at rebuilding from new perspectives. Leading artists, practitioners and scholars discuss the emergence of local community as a determining factor of creative expression, and its potential as a model for art and architecture globally. Participants include architectural historian and ArchiAid co-founder Prof. Taro Igarashi (Tohoku University), exhibition artists Lieko Shiga and Tomoko Yoneda, and In the Wake co-curator Anne Nishimura Morse (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston). Refreshments and free gallery admission provided.

Tickets: $35/$25 Japan Society members, seniors & students (includes exhibition admission)

Part of Commemorating the 5th Anniversary of 3/11, an institution-wide series of programming that examines the post-3/11 recovery and reconstruction process and the tremendous challenges that remain.

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“The Nuclear Disaster, Tsunami, and Manga: The Representation of Recent Disasters in Japanese Popular Culture”

Yukari Fujimoto, Professor of Japanese Studies, Meiji University; Visiting Scholar, Columbia University

Moderated by Hikari Hori, Assistant Professor of East Asian Languages and Cultures, Columbia University
12:00 PM – 1:30 PM
International Affairs Building, Room 918
No registration required.

In this drawing released by Kazuto Tatsuta /KODANSHA, the main character in comic-artist Kazuto Tatsuta's comic g1F: The Labor Diary Of Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant" stands against the tsunami-crippled plant's reactor shattered by melt-down. Tatsuta worked at the plant that suffered three meltdowns after the 2011 tsunami from June to December 2012 in part because he was struggling as a manga artist, but g1Fh is his biggest success yet. The opening episode won a newcomer award and was published last year in Morning, a weekly manga magazine with a circulation of 300,000. (AP Photo/Kazuto Tatsuta /KODANSHA)

In this drawing released by Kazuto Tatsuta /KODANSHA, the main character in comic-artist Kazuto Tatsuta’s comic g1F: The Labor Diary Of Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant” stands against the tsunami-crippled plant’s reactor shattered by melt-down. Tatsuta worked at the plant that suffered three meltdowns after the 2011 tsunami from June to December 2012 in part because he was struggling as a manga artist, but g1Fh is his biggest success yet. The opening episode won a newcomer award and was published last year in Morning, a weekly manga magazine with a circulation of 300,000. (AP Photo/Kazuto Tatsuta /KODANSHA)

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Mango Scholarships 2016

Mango, a language-learning service to which the college currently subscribes, is offering three $1000 scholarships to students.
Here are the eligibility requirements:

  • A student who is currently enrolled as an undergraduate or graduate student at a college or university in the US.
  • A student who has plans to continue as an enrolled student in Fall 2016.
  • A student who is at least 18 years of age on or before September 1, 2016.

Announcement & Details
Application
Deadline: March 31, 2016 at 11:59pm EST

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Niponica: Introducing Modern Japan

index_niponica17

from Niponica : “On March 3 every year it is common for families to celebrate their young daughters during the Hina-matsuri festival, by displaying small dolls in the home. In one region in Shizuoka Prefecture, homes are decorated with tsurushi-bina, which are made of cloth and suspended in an ornate display.” (Photo: Aflo)

Niponica is “a web magazine that introduces modern Japan to people all over the world.” It is also a useful resource for Japanese and Japanese Culture Studies students!

The newest issue, No. 17, focuses on miniatures in Japan. It is available on the web and in PDF format.

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Hinamatsuri + Meijō University Summer Program Info. Session by Baruch Japan Club

hinamatsuri

Join us this Thursday during club hours for both a mini study abroad seminar and to celebrate Hinamatsuri Day (Doll Festival)!

Professor Murata and Professor Futagami will be joining us from Nagoya, Japan to tell us about their new summer program. Not only this but they have also agreed to teach us songs and origami specific to the Hinamatsuri! So stop by for a not only informative but fun and interactive event! Refreshments will be served. We hope to see you all there!

Event: Meijō Univ. Study Abroad Seminar + Hinamatsuri
Date: Thursday, March 3rd
Time & Place: VC10-165 12:45-2:20pm

 

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The Alt-Manga Symposium (April 7th, Thursday at Baruch College)

2016 Spring - Alt-Manga Symposium [Web]

The Japanese Program at Baruch College  and Baruch Japan Club will present the “Alt-Manga Symposium” on April 7th (Thursday) at Baruch College.

The “Alt-Manga Symposium” invites scholars, professionals, and artists in and around the city of New York to give lectures and conversations about Japanese comics known as manga. One of the primary objectives of the symposium is to show the rich and diverse world of Japanese comics with a focus on Japanese alternative and non-mainstream manga, and their development in both domestic and transnational contexts. The invited guest lecturers/artists are Akino Kondoh (NY-based manga/visual artist), Erica Friedman (the Founder of Yuricon, ALC Publishing), Professor George Tsouris (professor of Japanese literature and philosophy), and Professor Shige (CJ) Suzuki (organizer). The planned symposium is the successor of last year’s “Shōjo Manga Symposium” held at CUNY, Baruch College, and the “Shōjo Manga Exhibition” (Feb. 7 – Feb 27, 2015).

To reserve a seat for the symposium, please register on the website below.
http://goo.gl/forms/GY5BzKU9KS

Map and Access:
http://www.baruch.cuny.edu/map.html
The Symposium is held at the classroom VC5-165 Building B (The William and Anita Newman Vertical Campus)

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The events are sponsored by the Japan Foundation, New York.

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The event is free of charge and open to public, but attendee discretion is advised since adult content will be presented to facilitate topics of discussion.

Date: April 7th (Thursday)
Time: 12:40 to 2:00 pm
Place: VC5-165 (see the map below)

Speakers:

  1. Professor Shige (CJ) Suzuki
    Professor CJ Suzuki (PhD, University of California Santa Cruz) is an assistant professor who specializes in comparative literature, film, and popular culture, teaching courses on Japanese literature, film, and culture, as well as the Japanese language. Dr. Suzuki has published several articles and book chapters on Japanese comics, including  “Tatsumi Yoshihiro’s Gekiga and the Global Sixties: Aspiring for an Alternative” inManga’sCulturalCrossroads, edited by Jaqueline Berndt and Bettina Kümmerling-Meibauer (2013), “Traversing Art and Manga: Ishiko Junzō’s Writings on Manga/Gekiga” on Comics Forum (2014), and “Autism and Manga: Comics for Women, Disability, and Tobe Keiko’sWith the Light” in International Perspectives on Shojo and Shojo Manga: The Influence of Girl Culture, edited by Masami Toku (2015). http://www.baruch.cuny.edu/wsas/academics/modern_languages/SSuzuki.htm
  1. Ms. Akino Kondoh, Manga-ka/Artist
    Ms. Akino Kondoh graduated from Tama Art University, Tokyo, with a BA in Graphic Design in 2003. Her work spans various media—animation, manga, drawing, and painting—and has been exhibited internationally. She was awarded a residency at International Studio & Curatorial Program, New York, and has lived and worked in the city since 2008. Kondoh’s work has been presented in solo and group exhibitions at international venues including MoCA Shanghai; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Guangdong Museum of Art; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, The National Art Center, Tokyo; Centre Pompidou, Paris; New York; Mizuma Art Gallery, Tokyo; Mori Art Museum, Tokyo.
    Kondoh’s website: http://akinokondoh.com/
  1. Professor George Tsouris
    Professor Goerge Tsouris is a professor of Japanese literature and philosophy at City University of New York. He earned a master’s degree in philosophy from Columbia University in 2002. After living in Japan, his academic interests have focused on ethics and justice, especially as applied to post-war Japanese contexts in literature, manga, butoh and the arts. In addition to academics, Professor Tsouris has also composed and directed the opera Ektor (2010), and the dance piece Death of the Buddha (2011), while also directing several repertoire and contemporary operettas. He also creates animation for short films and video games.
  1. Erica Friedman, the Founder of Yuricon, ALC Publishing
    Ms. Erica Friedman holds a Masters Degree in Library Science and a B.A. in Comparative Literature, and is a full-time researcher for a Fortune 100 company. She has lectured at dozens of conventions and presented at film festivals, notably the San Francisco Lesbian and Gay Film Festival and the London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. She has participated in an academic lecture series at MIT, University of Illinois, Harvard University, Kanagawa University and others. Erica has written about Yuri for Japanese literary journal EurekaAnimerica magazine, the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, Dark Horse, and contributed to ForbesSlate, Huffington Post, Hooded Utilitarian, Afterellen and The Mary Sue online. She writes news and event reports, interviews Yuri creators and reviews Yuri anime, manga and related media on her blog Okazu, since 2002.
    Friedman’s website: http://okazu.yuricon.com/

 

Abstracts:

1.“Gekiga and Japanese Counterculture: Garo and COM” by Shige (CJ) Suzuki)

This talk explores the socio-historical and cultural context of the development of gekiga by examining the shifting media ecology of Japanese comics industry, important comics artists and their works, and the impact of gekiga on other artistic and cultural practices. The focus will be on two major “alternative” magazines: Garo (1964 – 2002) and COM (1967-1972), both of which offered an outlet for innovative, unorthodox, and transgressive artists. Both comics magazines not only expanded comics expressions but also pushed the conceptual horizon of “manga,” attempting to legitimize the artistic value of comics while maintaining a sense of unruly proclivity by being “alternative.” This opening talk traces the emergence and development of gekiga as Japanese alternative comics in the context of postwar Japanese visual culture, mainly from mid-1950s to early 1970s, illustrating how both these comics magazines played a role in shaping the visual culture of Japanese counterculture.

 

  1. “A Conversation with Akino Kondoh” presented by George Touris

The discussion between George Tsouris and Akino Kondoh explores the manga, animation, and visual artworks of Ms. Kondoh. Special attention will be paid to how her works express feelings of isolation felt as a female in America and Japan. We will also examine how her works represent the feminine immigrant experience in New York City, and compare and contrast her experiences in America and Japan as an artist who works across different media. In this context, we will also discuss how Ms. Kondoh manages a successful art career in today’s world.

 

  1. “Alt-Manga, Queer Manga” by Erica Friedman

This talk establishes the social and political landscape and market forces that brought about a rise in manga by and for gender and sexual minorities, both in Japan and the west. Starting with the days before the Internet, as fan communities developed and digressed, through contemporary political shifts, this talk contextualizes the complex interplay of fan, creator and industry needs in regards to identification with and representation of sexual and gender minorities in manga.

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