Rutgers Meets Japan: Revisiting Early U.S.-Japan Encounters

01:090:295:H3
Professor Haruko Wakabayashi
T F 11:30A - 12:50
Honors College E128 | College Avenue Campus

Index # 08968

 

Will Count Towards Asian Languages & Cultures MAJOR
Will Count Towards Asian Languages & Cultures MINOR


[course description]

 

About Professor Wakabayashi

Haruko Wakabayashi is a cultural historian of 12th-16th century Japan. Her interest lies in the social, cultural, and intellectual development of medieval Japan, and the use of visual sources in the study of history. She is currently working on medieval Japanese perceptions of natural disasters, and how these views were framed to serve various social and political circumstances in the late twelfth century.  Her recent publications include The Seven Tengu Scrolls: Evil and the Rhetoric of Legitimacy in Medieval Japanese Buddhism (2012, University of Hawai’i Press) and “Disaster in the Making: Taira no Kiyomori’s Move of the Capital to Fukuhara” (2015, Monumenta Nipponica, Vol. 70, No. 1). She has taught Japanese history, religion, and art history at Princeton University, the University of Alabama, and at Sophia University, International Christian University, Meiji Gakuin University, and the University of Tokyo in Japan.