Anthropology 204 - Anthropology of Modern Japan

Fall
2017
01
4.00
Joshua Roth
TTH 02:40PM-03:55PM
Mount Holyoke College
100952
Kendade 305
jroth@mtholyoke.edu
Since the mid-nineteenth century, Americans have viewed Japan as the Orient's most exotic and mysterious recess, alternately enticing and frightening in its difference. Intense economic relations and cultural exchange between Japan and the U.S. have not dispelled the image of Japanese society and culture as fundamentally different from our own. In this course, we will strive for greater understanding of shared experiences as well as historical particularities. Issues covered may vary from one semester to another, but frequently focus on work, women, minorities, and popular culture. Films and anthropological works provide ethnographic examples of some key concepts.
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.