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5 December 2006

Perspectives on Work, Employment and Society in Japan

Since the bursting of the ‘Bubble Economy’, and the decade and a half of stagnation which followed, work and employment in Japan have been said on many occasions to have undergone some profound changes. This has been matched with a renewed interest among scholars in the structures, processes and cultures of work in Japan.

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16 November 2006

2006 Daiwa Japan Forum Prize Lecture

In recent years, controversies over the content of Japanese history textbooks and visits to Yasukuni Shrine by Prime Minister Koizumi and other senior government officials have placed the international spotlight on the ways that Japanese people remember World War II. The lecture, based on Dr Seaton’s 2005 article in Japan Forum, will provide a critique

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9 November 2006

THE BEATLES IN JAPAN -1966: Photographs by Robert Whittaker

This was a chance to meet photographer Robert Whitaker, the only person allowed to take photographs of the Beatles on their flights and in their hotel room during their 3 intense days performing in Tokyo. His photographs provided a unique record of their three intense days on tour in Tokyo (June 1966).

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7 November 2006

A Japanese Menagerie: animal pictures by Kawanabe Kyōsai

Kawanabe Kyōsai (1831–89) was a highly individualistic painter of the late Edo and early Meiji eras in Japan, his career spanning from the end of the feudal system to the beginnings of rapid modernisation. His first name meant ‘crazy studio’ and in the 1860s he developed a new genre of ‘crazy pictures’ (kyōga).

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18 October 2006

Perspectives on Death and Dying

This seminar provided a rare opportunity to parallel and to explore different cultural approaches to the subject of death. The specific areas of expertise of our speakers and chairperson contributed complementary perspectives on this important theme.

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26 September 2006

BAJS Research Project:Representing the Other in Modern Japanese Literature

In May 2001, under the aegis of the British Association for Japanese Studies (BAJS), a special collaborative research programme was initiated to enhance intellectual exchanges, fill gaps in the existing literature, and develop new academic networks between scholars in the United Kingdom and Japan. Professor Glenn Hook, Professor Mark Williams, and Dr Naoko Shimazu, took

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