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Dynamic Projection Mapping on Multiple Non-rigid Moving Objects for Stage Performance Applications
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In: Lecture Notes in Computer Science ; 17th International Conference on Entertainment Computing (ICEC) ; https://hal.inria.fr/hal-02128612 ; 17th International Conference on Entertainment Computing (ICEC), Sep 2018, Poznan, Poland. pp.3-15, ⟨10.1007/978-3-319-99426-0_1⟩ (2018)
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Perceptual attention as the locus of transfer to nonnative speech perception
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Orthographic Effects on the Perception and Production of Certain Japanese Phones by L2 Learners
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The comparative study of the Japonic languages
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In: Approaches to endangered languages in Japan and Northeast Asia: Description, documentation and revitalization ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01856152 ; Approaches to endangered languages in Japan and Northeast Asia: Description, documentation and revitalization, National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics, Aug 2018, Tachikawa, Japan ; http://www2.ninjal.ac.jp/ael (2018)
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Atlas Novus: Kawada Kikuji's Chizu (The Map) and Postwar Japanese Photography
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Governing Shōnan: The Japanese Administration of Wartime Singapore
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15 |
The Tree of Life: The Politics of Kinship in Meiji Japan (1870-1915)
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Abstract:
This dissertation examines writings by transnational Japanese literary writers around the turn of the 20th century, showing how they drew upon the languages of the Victorian sciences in order to imagine broader forms of literary kinship outside the framework of a single national canon. I define “transnational Japanese writers” as writers who were registered by the state as Japanese citizens, but whose peripatetic careers and multilingual streams of influence make a compelling case for positioning their work outside of the frame of a single national literary canon.The primary argument of this dissertation is that Japan’s transition from nation to empire during the late 19th and early 20th centuries depended heavily upon the conflation of nationalist and familial rhetoric; yet, simultaneously, Japanese writers and thinkers were bound up in a transnational circuit of Victorian scientific discourse that posed serious challenges to the naturalness of the nuclear family form. From anthropological accounts of alternative kinship systems in the colonies, to Marxist critiques of the nuclear family as an upholder of private property, to Galtonian technologies of eugenics, Japan’s encounter with the British empire deeply challenged traditional notions of family, as well as the equation of family and state. The four chapters of this dissertation follow the writings of Natsume Sōseki (1867-1916) and Koizumi Yakumo, né Lafcadio Hearn (1850-1904), whose ambiguous position as Japanese subjects caught between the borders of nations afforded them a unique vantage point from which to criticize the language of kinship invoked by the state. By showing how these writers employed literary language to forge bonds of belonging between distant subjects not necessarily related by blood, my dissertation reveals how literary writing itself was imagined by these writers to constitute its own form of reproduction that ensured the continuity of one’s identity across space and time.
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Keyword:
Comparative literature; hearn; japanese literature; kinship; Literature; soseki; transnational
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URL: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9qp3p76z
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Investigating Multidimensional Interoceptive Awareness in a Japanese Population: Validation of the Japanese MAIA-J.
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Japanese-American Heritage/Community Language Learner Reflections: Key Themes for Informing Bicultural Student Educational Experience
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In: Triest, Mary Ann. (2018). Japanese-American Heritage/Community Language Learner Reflections: Key Themes for Informing Bicultural Student Educational Experience. UCLA: Education 0249. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/3vc13093 (2018)
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The Lyric Forms of the Literati Mind: Yosa Buson, Ema Saikō, Masaoka Shiki and Natsume Sōseki
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Requests for clarification in conversation between Japanese and non-Japanese
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Ozaki, Akito. - : Dept. of Linguistics, Research School of Pacific Studies, The Australian National University, 2018
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