Donald Keene Center Events Calendar
Spring 1999
|
• Please check this site for calendar updates.
• All events at Columbia are free and open to the public.
• Unless otherwise indicated, all of the programs listed below take
place at Columbia University, 116th Street between Broadway and
Amsterdam Ave.
• To view a campus map,
click here. |
January 21 (Thursday)
Lecture: Rimpa Painting
Professor Masamoto Kawai (Professor
of Japanese Art History, Keio University)
403 Kent Hall, Columbia University (116th St. & Amsterdam
Ave.)
6:00 PM - 7:30 PM
Prof. Kawai, currently a visiting scholar at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, is a specialist in Edo-period
painting and has written extensively on the work of Kaiho
Yusho and other painters in the Rimpa style.
His talk will be in Japanese with English translation.
January 27 (Wednesday)
Lecture:Imitations,
Interpretations, and Revivals: Re-examining the Impact of
China on Edo-Period Japanese Porcelains
Professor Nicole Coolidge Rousmaniere
(Professor of Japanese Art History, University of East
Anglia, Norwich, England)
4:00 PM - 6:00 PM
403 Kent Hall, Columbia University (116 th St. & Amsterdam
Ave.)
Prof. Rousmaniere, a specialist on decorative art of the Edo
period, is a co-author of the catalog for the Edo Art
Exhibition currently on view at the National Gallery,
Washington DC.
February 2 - March 2
Film Series: Kurosawa
Remembered
Miller Theatre, Columbia University (116th St. &
Broadway)
6:00 PM
Beginning
on Tuesday, February 2, and continuing until
March 2, 1999, the Donald Keene Center of
Japanese Culture will present a series of
eight films by one of the world's most
celebrated directors, Akira Kurosawa.
Intended as a memorial to this cinematic
giant, who died in September 1998, the
series consists of eight of Kurosawa's
finest films, as well as panel discussions
with noted American film artists and
critics.
• All are welcome.
• Films will be screened at Columbia
University's Miller Theatre (Broadway at
116th Street).
• Tickets for each evening are $10.00 ($5.00
for students with ID and senior citizens)
and can be purchased at the Miller Theatre
Box Office in the theatre lobby. A
subscription to the entire series is also
available for $30.00 Tickets may also be
purchased in advance by telephone, fax, or
mail using a major credit card.
• For more information, please contact
Miller Theatre Box Office, 2960 Broadway,
Columbia University, New York, NY 10027
(TEL: 212-854-7799).
|
|
February 2
(Tuesday)
Panel Discussion:
Lumet on Kurosawa
Miller Theatre,
Columbia University (116th St. &
Broadway)
6:00 PM
A panel discussion with American film
artists, including director Sidney
Lumet, about the influence of Akira
Kurosawa.
Film: Ikiru
Director: Akira
Kurosawa. (1952, 140 min.)
With Tadashi Shimura, Nobuo Nakamura,
Kamatari Fujiwara, Miki Odagiri, Bokuzen
Hidari, and Minoru Chiakii
Miller Theatre, Columbia University
(116th St. & Broadway)
8:30 PM
A petty official in a city ward office
learns that he is dying of cancer. Told
that he has only six months to live, he
struggles to give meaning to his life.
Kurosawa combines poetic imagery and
complex flashbacks to tell the story of
a man's despair in the face of his own
mortality. Takashi Shimura gives one of
world cinema's finest performances as
the lonely protagonist. In scene after
scene, his barely audible grunts,
shuffling walk, and almost imperceptible
gestures form a characterization that
cannot be shaken from memory.
|
Kurosawa
Remembered
|
2/2 |
6:00 pm |
Panel Discussion: Lumet on
Kurosawa |
| |
8:30 pm |
Film: Ikiru [1952] |
|
2/9 |
6:00 pm |
Panel Discussion with
Film Critics |
| |
8:30 pm |
Film: Seven Samurai
[1954] |
|
2/16 |
6:00 pm |
Film: Drunken Angel
[1948] |
| |
8:30 pm |
Film: Rashomon [1950] |
|
2/23 |
6:00 pm |
Film: Yojimbo [1961] |
| |
8:30 pm |
Film: The Bad Sleep Well
[1960] |
|
3/2 |
6:00 pm |
Film:Throne of Blood
[1957] |
| |
8:30 pm |
Film: High and Low [1963] |
+ A ll are welcome.
+ All showings will be at Columbia
University's
Miller Theatre (Broadway at
116th Street).
+Tickets for each evening are $10.00
($5.00 for students with ID and
senior citizens) and can be
purchased at the Miller Theatre Box
Office in the theatre lobby. A
subscription to the entire series is
also available for $30.00
+ Tickets may also be purchased in
advance by telephone, fax, or mail
using a major credit card.
+ For more information, please
contact Miller Theatre Box Office,
2960 Broadway, Columbia University,
New York, NY 10027 (TEL:
212-854-7799) |
|
|
February 9 (Tuesday)
Panel Discussion
Miller
Theatre, Columbia University (116th St. &
Broadway)
6:00 PM
Panel discussion with film critics Andrew Sarris and Stanley
Kauffmann, Columbia professors Paul Anderer and Lewis Cole,
and Donald Keene Center director Peter Grilli about Akira
Kurosawa's life and legacy.
Film: Seven Samurai (Shichinin no
Samurai)
Director: Akira Kurosawa. (1954,
208min.)
With Tadashi Shimura, Toshiro Mifune, Seiji Miyaguchi,
Kamatari Fujiwara, Daisuke Kato, Isao Kimura, Kuninori Kodo,
and Minoru Chiakii.
Miller
Theatre, Columbia University (116th St. &
Broadway)
8:30 PM
One
of the enduring classics of world cinema, Seven Samurai
is regularly named to "best ever" lists by international
film critics. In a 1979 poll of Japanese critics, it was
selected as the best Japanese film ever made (Ikiru
was voted No. 2, Rashomon No. 9, and Yojimbo
No. 11). Seven Samurai is the apotheosis of the
action film, and moviegoers everywhere have reacted
enthusiastically to its elemental plot. A small band of
good, strong men come to the aid of a farm village besieged
by marauding bandits. They do so because it is the right
and honorable thing to do, even thought they receive little
tangible award and even less thanks. This film inspired an
American re-make called The Magnificent Seven, as
well as several sequences of Star Wars.
Part of
"Kurosawa Remembered"
Film Series
February 10 (Wednesday)
Screening of the Documemtary and
Discussion: The Making of Kagemusha
702 Hamilton Hall, Columbia University (116th St. &
Amsterdam Ave.)
7:00 - 9:00 PM
Columbia University's Nihon Benkyokai and the Donald Keene
Center are cosponsoring a special screening of the
documentary The Making of Kagemusha about the
shooting of Akira Kurosawa's classic 1980 film. The
screening will be followed by a discussion with Peter
Grilli, Director of the Donald Keene Center of Japanese
Culture. Mr. Grilli has produced a number of award-winning
documentaries, including Shinto: Nature, Gods, and Man in
Japan, Dream Window: Reflections on the Japanese
Garden, and Music for the Movies: Toru Takemitsu,
a film portrait of the great Japanese film composer. Grilli,
who was a close friend with Kurosawa for nearly twenty-five
years, produced the first complete retrospective of Kurosawa
films and was the Japanese language coach for Richard Gere
in Kurosawa's Rhapsody in August.
Co-sponsored by
Nihon Benkyokai
February 11 (Thursday)
Lecture: The Construction of
'Japanese' and 'Oriental' Art History in Meiji Japan
Prof. Shigemi Inaga (Associate
Professor, International Research Center for Japanese
Studies)
101 Kress Room, C.V. Starr East Asian Library, Columbia
University (116th St. & Amsterdam Ave.)
6:00 - 8:00 PM
Professor Inaga is a member of the International Research
Center for Japanese Studies (Kyoto) and currently a Visiting
Scholar at Columbia in the Department of East Asian
Languages and Cultures. He holds degrees from both Tokyo
University and the University of Paris. An art historian and
specialist in French art and culture, he has published
numerous books and articles on French art of the 19th
century, including his recent prize-winning book on Manet’s
paintings, Kaiga no tasogare: Edouard Manet botsugo. He
has also written extensively on Japanese art, literature,
and comparative culture.
February 16 (Tuesday)
Film: Drunken Angel (Yoidore
Tenshi)
Director: Akira Kurosawa. (1948, 98
min.)
With Takashi Shimura, Toshiro Mifune, Michiyo Kogure,
Reizaburo Yamamoto, Noriko Sengoku, and Eitaro Shindo
Miller
Theatre, Columbia University (116th St. & Broadway)
6:00 PM
A dedicated doctor confronts both his own alcoholism and the
sinister underworld as he tries to rehabilitate a young
gangster. Working with Toshiro Mifune for the first time,
Kurosawa later wrote: "...I could not restrain the
overpowering force of Mifune’s acting. The doctor was
supposed to be the film’s hero, but what a shame it would
have been to stifle Mifune’s vitality. He reacts so swiftly
to direction: if I say one thing, he understands ten. I
decided to turn him loose in this film..." Drunken Angel
captures perfectly the spirit of postwar Japan: a society in
ruins, full of fears and hopes, virtue faced with
degradation, idealism with the gloom of reality.
Film: Rashomon
Director: Akira Kurosawa. (1950, 88
min.)
With Toshiro Mifune, Machiko Kyo, Masayuki Mori, and
Takashi Shimura
Miller
Theatre, Columbia University (116th St. & Broadway)
8:30 PM
Kurosawa’s Oscar-winning film statement on the relativity
(or unknowability) of Truth. A crime is witnessed by four
individuals, and each later presents a version of the facts
that is colored by self-interest and deception. Winning the
Grand Prize of the Venice Film Festival, Rashomon was
the film that introduced Western critics both to a brilliant
new director and to a national cinema of great artistry and
sophistication.
Part of
"Kurosawa Remembered" Film Series
February 20 (Saturday)
One-Day Workshop: Expanding Edo
Art
Kent Hall, Columbia University (116th St. & Amsterdam
Ave.)
9:00 AM - 6:00 PM
» Click here for the complete final report
In order to take advantage of the interest generated by the
major exhibition "Edo: Art in Japan 1615-1868" at the
National Gallery of Art (Washington DC), the Donald Keene
Center is sponsoring a one-day workshop to discuss new
directions in the study of Edo art. "Expanding Edo Art" will
consist of of five 90 minute sessions led by a moderator and
three presenters who will offer provocative opening
statements of ten minutes or less.
|
THE PANNELS
|
| Session 1 |
The Canon of "Edo Art" in
Present and Past Perspective |
|
Moderator |
Melanie
Trede (Columbia University) |
|
Provacateurs |
Yoshiaki Shimizu (Princeton University),
John Carpenter (Vanderbilt
Univeristy), Lawrence Marceau
(University of Delaware) |
| Session 2 |
The Temporal and Spatial
Borders of "Edo Art" |
Moderator
|
Henry
Smith (Columbia University) |
|
Provacateurs |
Lee
Butler (Brigham Young University),
Matthew McKelway (University of
Pittsburgh), Tamaki Maeda (University
of Washington) |
| Session
3 |
Stages,
Bodies, Gender |
Moderator
|
Christine Guth (Independent Scholar) |
|
Provacateurs |
David
Pollack (University of Rochester),
Timon Screech (SOAS, University of
London), Mara Miller (Agnes Scott
College) |
| Session
4 |
China
Holland, and Other Others |
Moderator
|
Mimi
Yiengpruksawan (Yale University) |
|
Provacateurs |
Nicole
Rousmaniere (Sainsbury Institute),
Allen Hockley (Dartmouth College),
Robert Eskildsen (Smith College) |
| Session 5 |
Wrap-up Session |
|
February 22 (Monday)
Lecture: Four Japanese Novelists:
Yasunari Kawabata
Prof. Donald Keene (University
Professor Emeritus and Shincho Professor Emeritus, Columbia
University)
GSAS Lounge, Philosophy Hall, Columbia University (116th St.
& Amsterdam Ave.)
6:00 PM
| Donald
Keene, the Western world's most celebrated scholar
of Japanese literature and culture, will relate
personal reminiscences about Yasunari Kawabata and
comment on his literary legacy. Awarded the Nobel
prize for Literature in 1968, Kawabata wrote of
impossible love and fragility of human life. His
works include "The Izu Dancer" ("Izu no Odoriko,"
1955), Snow Country (Yukiguni, 1956), A
Thousand Cranes (Sembazuru, 1959), and The
Sound of the Mountain (Yama no Oto, 1970).
This lecture is the first in a series of four by
Prof. Keene. In the coming weeks, Prof. Keene will
also lecture about Jun'ichiro Tanizaki (3/8), Kobo
Abe (4/5), and Yukio Mishima (4/19). |
Four Japanese
NovelistsA Series of Lectures by Donald
Keene
| 2/22 |
Yasunari Kawabata |
| 3/8 |
Jun'ichiro Tanizaki |
| 4/5 |
Kobo Abe |
| 4/19 |
Yukio Mishima |
+ Tickets are $15.00 per lecture and
series admission can be purchased for
$50.00.
+ Columbia students are admitted free
with an ID.
+ Tickets are available at the door and
can also be purchased in advance by
sending a check payable to The Donald
Keene Center of Japanese Culture and
a self-addressed stamped envelope to:
The Donald Keene Center, 507 Kent Hall,
Columbia University, New York, NY 10027.
|
|
February 23 (Tuesday)
Film: Yojimbo
Director: Akira Kurosawa. (1961, 110
min.)
With Toshiro Mifune, Eijiro Tono, Kamatari Fujiwara, Isuzu
Yamada, Takashi Shimura, Tatsuya Nakadai, and Daisuke Kato
Miller
Theatre, Columbia University (116th St. & Broadway)
6:00 PM
Kurosawa’s darkly humorous film is a biting satire on greed,
violence, and human weakness. A wandering samurai-for-hire
turns a feud between two merchant families to his own
advantage. One of the most popular Japanese films in
international release, Yojimbo inspired Sergio Leone’s A
Fistful of Dollars (starring Clint Eastwood) and the
genre of "spaghetti-Westerns" that followed. Since
Yojimbo was itself inspired by American westerns,
Kurosawa was not at all surprised by this "reverse
imitation."
Film: The Bad Sleep Well (Warui
Yatsu Hodo Yoku Nemuru)
Director: Akira Kurosawa. (1960, 151
min.)
With Toshiro Mifune, Takeshi Kato, Masayuki Mori, Takashi
Shimura, Kamatari Fujiwara, Kyoko Kagawa
Miller
Theatre, Columbia University (116th St. & Broadway)
8:30 PM
In Kurosawa’s powerful commentary on corruption in big
business, a young man takes revenge for his father’s murder
on powerful corporate and political leaders. Kurosawa’s
fascination with the plays of Shakespeare resulted in
powerful adaptations of Macbeth (Throne of Blood)
and King Lear (Ran). In this film, the
parallels with Hamlet are clear, but Kurosawa sets
his mythic drama in the boardrooms of 20th-century Japan.
Part of
"Kurosawa Remembered"
Film Series
February 24 (Wednesday)
Lecture: Edouard Manet's Posthumous
Struggle for Glory: Scandal, Japonisme, and the Atelier
Auction of 1884
Prof. Shigemi Inaga (Associate
Professor, International Research Center for Japanese
Studies)
930 Schermerhorn, Columbia University (116th St. & Amsterdam
Ave.)
6:00 - 8:00 PM
Professor Inaga will speak about Manet and Japonisme in his
second public lecture as a Visiting Scholar at Columbia
University's Department of East Asian Languages and
Cultures. He is a member of the International Research
Center for Japanese Studies (Kyoto) and holds degrees from
both Tokyo University and the University of Paris. An art
historian and specialist in French art and culture, Prof.
Inaga has published numerous books and articles on French
art of the 19th century, including his recent prize-winning
book on Manet’s paintings, Kaiga no tasogare: Edouard
Manet botsugo. He has also written extensively on
Japanese art, literature, and comparative culture.
March 1 (Monday)
Shakuhachi Master Class with
Teruhisa Fukuda
Prof. Shigemi Inaga (Associate
Professor, International Research Center for Japanese
Studies)
403 Kent Hall, Columbia University (116th St. & Amsterdam
Ave.)
6:00 - 8:00 PM
Teruhisa Fukuda will finish up his American Debut Tour with
Music From Japan by teaching a Shakuhachi Master Class at
Columbia University. For reservations, please call the
Institute for Medieval Japanese Studies at (212) 854-7403.
Fees are $30 for participants (please bring music stands),
$10 for observers, and $5 for student observers. Please
make checks payable to Music from Japan.
Co-sponsored by Music From Japan
and the
Institute for Medieval Japanese Studies
March 2 (Tuesday)
Film: Throne of Blood
(Kumonosu-jo)
Director: Akira Kurosawa. (1957, 110
min.)
With Toshiro Mifune, Isuzu Yamada, Minoru Chiaki, and
Takashi Shimura
Miller
Theatre, Columbia University (116th St. & Broadway)
6:00 PM
In the first of his adaptations of Shakespeare plays to a
Japanese historical context (the other being the 1985 Ran,
based on King Lear), Kurosawa sets Macbeth in
Japan of the 15th or 16th century. The film is full of the
imagery of the Noh drama, and viewers are plunged into an
atmosphere of obsessive madness and supernatural compulsion.
Stylized Noh-like acting and impeccable authenticity of
historical details result in a film of overwhelming power
and beauty. Film stars Toshiro Mifune, as the
Macbeth-figure, and Isuzu Yamada, as his wife, give two of
the most memorable performances of their long, celebrated
careers.
Film: High and Low (Tengoku to
Jigoku)
Director: Akira Kurosawa. (1963, 143
min.)
With Toshiro Mifune, Tatsuya Nakadai, Kyoko Kagawa, Tsutomu
Yamazaki, Takashi Shimura, Susumu Fujita
Miller
Theatre, Columbia University (116th St. & Broadway)
8:30 PM
Well known for the variety of his sources (including
Shakespeare, Dostoyevsky, Gorki, as well as American
Westerns and Kabuki and Noh dramas), Kurosawa here adapts an
American detective thriller (King’s Ransom by Ed
McBain) to contemporary Japan. When the son of a wealthy
executive’s chauffeur is kidnapped by mistake—the
executive’s own son was the target—the businessman is faced
with a moral dilemma. Should he throw away his personal and
corporate fortune to rescue the poor underling’s child? As
might be expected, Kurosawa’s humanism is combined with
dazzling visual style and narrative technique to produce a
drama of unforgettable power.
Part of
"Kurosawa Remembered" Film Series
March 3 (Wednesday)
Lecture: Is There a Chinese
Equivalent of Ukiyo-e? - Urban Studio Paintings in Late
Imperial China
Prof. James Cahill (Professor
Emeritus, U.C. Berkeley, Visiting Professor, Princeton
University)
403 Kent Hall, Columbia University (116th St. & Amsterdam
Ave.)
6:00 - 7:30 PM
James Cahill, a specialist in Chinese and Japanese painting,
is one of America's most distinguished art historians. From
1965 until his retirement in 1994, he was professor of art
history at the University of California, Berkeley. He
currently teaches at Princeton University. Prof. Cahill is
the author of many books on Chinese painting, a great number
of which have been translated into Chinese, Japanese, and
Korean, as well as several European languages. His 1979
Norton Lectures at Harvard were published in 1982 as The
Compelling Image: Nature and Style in 17th-Century Chinese
Painting, a work which was awarded the College Art
Association's Morey Prize as the best art history book of
the year.
This lecture is sponsored by the
Ukiyo-e Society of America and cosponsored by the Donald
Keene Center and the Department of Art History and
Archaeology, Columbia University
March 8 (Monday)
Lecture: Four Japanese Novelists:
Jun'ichiro Tanizaki
Prof. Donald Keene (University
Professor Emeritus and Shincho Professor Emeritus, Columbia
University)
GSAS Lounge, Philosophy Hall, Columbia University (116th St.
& Amsterdam Ave.)
6:00 PM
Donald Keene, the Western world's most celebrated scholar of
Japanese literature and culture, will relate personal
reminiscences about Jun'ichiro Tanizaki (1886-1965) and his
literary contributions. Jun'ichiro Tanizaki's writings
include such masterpieces as The Makioka Sisters (Sasameyuki,
1957), The Key (Kagi, 1956), and Diary of a
Mad Old Man (Futen rojin nikki, 1962).
Tickets are $15.00 per lecture.
Columbia students are admitted free with an ID.
Tickets are available at the door and can also be purchased
in advance by sending a check payable to The Donald Keene
Center of Japanese Culture and a self-addressed stamped
envelope to The Donald Keene Center, 507 Kent Hall, Columbia
University, New York, NY 10027.
Part of Four Japanese Novelists
Lecture Series
March 11 (Thursday)
Lecture and Demonstration:
Memories of the Founder, Memories of Doshu
Mary Heiny (6th Dan, Hombu Aikido
Dojo)
Altschul Auditorium, School of International and Public
Affairs, Columbia University (118th St. & Amsterdam Ave.)
3:00 - 5:00 PM

Mary Heiny, one of North America's senior practitioners of
the modern Japanese martial art of Aikido, will relate
personal reminiscences about Ueshiba Morihei, the founder of
Aikido, and his son, Ueshiba Kisshomaru, the recently
deceased Doshu, as well as share her insights and
experiences as a key figure in the transmission of this art
to the West. Heiny began her training in 1965. She has
studied at the Aikikai Hombu Dojo in Tokyo and also
underwent intensive training as a student of Hikitsuchi
Michio, 10th Dan, at the Shingu-Kumano Dojo, which places
special emphasis on the spiritual aspects of aikido
training.
Following a thirty minute lecture, Heiny will teach a
one-hour master-class, demonstrating the training
methodology and distinctive movements of modern aikido. The
program will conclude with an open question and answer
period. Aikido practitioners of ikkyu and above who wish to
participate in Heiny's master-class should contact
Aikido
of the Hudson Valley, the cosponsor of this event, for
urther details.
Co-sponsored by Aikido of the
Hudson Valley
March 18 (Thursday)
Book Reading: Modern Girls,
Shining Stars, The Skies of Tokyo: Five Japanese Women
Phyllis Birnbaum (Writer)
403 Kent Hall, Columbia University (116th St. & Amsterdam
Ave.)
6:00 PM
| The Columbia University
Press and the Donald Keene Center host Phyllis
Birnbaum as she reads from her new book Modern
Girls, Shining Stars, The Skies of Tokyo: Five
Japanese Women. Ms. Birnbaum's work explores
the lives of five strong-minded women who challenged
the status quo of Japanese society through the
fearlessness of their art and their private lives.
These women include two actresses, Matsui Sumako and
Takamine Hideko, poet Yanagiwara Byakuren, novelist
Uno Chiyo, and painter Takamura Chieko. Phyllis
Birnbaum has also authored the novel An Eastern
Tradition and translated Rabbits, Crabs,
Etc.: Stories by Japanese Women and Uno Chiyo's
Confessions of Love, for which she was
awarded the 1989
Japan-U.S Friendship Commission Japanese Literary
Translation Prize. |
April 5 (Monday)
Lecture: Four Japanese Novelists:
Kobo Abe
Prof. Donald Keene (University
Professor Emeritus and Shincho Professor Emeritus, Columbia
University)
GSAS Lounge, Philosophy Hall, Columbia University (116th St.
& Amsterdam Ave.)
6:00 PM
Donald Keene, the Western world's most celebrated scholar of
Japanese literature and culture, will relate personal
reminiscences about Kobo Abe and comment on his literary
achievements. A novelist and playwright, Kobo Abe is one of
the most accomplished figures in Japanese postwar
literature. Often writing about the alienation of modern
life, Abe's most famous works include The Woman in the
Dunes (Suna no onna, 1962), The Box Man (Hako
otoko, 1973), The Ruined Map (Moetsukita chizu,
1967) and Friends (Tomodachi, 1967). Several
of his works have been translated into English by Donald
Keene.
Tickets are $15.00 per lecture.
Columbia students are admitted free with an ID.
Tickets are available at the door and can also be purchased
in advance by sending a check payable to The Donald Keene
Center of Japanese Culture and a self-addressed stamped
envelope to The Donald Keene Center, 507 Kent Hall, Columbia
University, New York, NY 10027.
Part of Four Japanese Novelists
Lecture Series
April 12 (Monday)
The 1999 Soshitsu Sen XV
Distinguished Lecture on Japanese Culture: Japan: The
Magic of Mountains
Fosco Maraini (Professor, University
of Florence)
The Teatro, Casa Italiana, 1161 Amsterdam Ave. (adjacent to
Columbia University's School of International and Public
Affairs); RSVP REQUIRED
» See photographs of Fosco Maraini
Writer, photographer, scholar, and mountaineer, Fosco
Maraini has gained distinction in numerous fields. He is one
of the most accomplished scholars of things Japanese. In
1938, Prof. Maraini first visited Japan to undertake
research on the Ainu, Japan's aboriginal people. This led to
a doctorate in anthropology and a book on the Ainu religion
and customs. Subsequently, he was appointed lecturer at
Kyoto University and returned to Japan. From 1943 to 1945,
Prof. Maraini was interned with his family as a war prisoner
in a Buddhist temple near Nagoya.
Following the war, Prof. Maraini returned to Italy and in
the 1950s worked in the Italian film industry. He revisited
Japan in 1953 to produce a documentary film and to gather
material for his well-known book Meeting with Japan. In
addition to Japan, Prof. Maraini has pursued studies of
other Eastern cultures and religions at the University of
Florence, at Oxford University, and on his frequent and
extensive travels in Asia. Prof. Maraini's other works
include: Secret Tibet, published after a series of
expeditions to the Himalayas; Where Four Worlds Meet,
an account of leading an Italian Alpine Club expedition to
the Hindu Kush; Jerusalem: Rock of the Ages; and
Japan: Patterns of Continuity.
In addition to his writings about Japan and Asia, Prof.
Maraini is well known as a photographer. Exhibitions of his
photographs have been held in Italy and Japan.
Beginning April 13, an exhibition of Prof. Maraini's
photographs will open at the
Tenri
Gallery in Soho (575 Broadway, 4th Floor; TEL:
212-925-8500).
Professor Maraini's lecture will be followed by a reception
in his honor. Seating is limited, so those wishing to attend
the lecture are requested to make reservations by calling
the Donald Keene Center at (212) 854-5036.
Cosponsored by
The Italian Academy for Advanced Studies in America
April 15 (Thursday)
Lecture: Mysterious Women,
Mythical Beasts, and Medieval Buddhism
Prof. Bernard Faure (Professor of
Religious Studies, Stanford University)
403 Kent Hall, Columbia University (116th St. & Amsterdam
Ave.)
8:00 - 9:30 PM
Professor of Religious Studies at Stanford University and
co-director of the Stanford Buddhist Studies Center, Bernard
Faure is one of the world's leading scholars of Buddhism. He
has won numerous awards for his books and articles. His
works include: The Red Thread: Buddhist Approaches to
Sexuality (1998), Chan Insights and Oversights: An
Epistemological Critique of the Chan/Zen Tradition
(1993), and The Rhetoric of Immediacy: A Cultural
Critique of Chan/Zen Buddhism (1991).
Co-sponsored by The University
Seminar on Buddhist Studies
April 16 (Friday)
Benefit Concert: Tokyo String Quartet
with Clarinetist Richard Stoltzman
Miller Theatre, Columbia University (116th St. &
Broadway)
8:00 PM
Benefit tickets can be purchased for $100 each by credit
card over the telephone [TEl: 212- 854-5036], or by check
mailed to the Donald Keene Center, 507 Kent Hall, Columbia
University, New York, NY 10027.
The Tokyo String Quartet will be joined by clarinetist
Richard Stoltzman for a performance to benefit the Donald
Keene Center. The concert will begin at 8:00 p.m. and will
be followed by a reception.
The Tokyo String Quartet is one of the supreme chamber
ensembles of the world. It performs on the renowned
Stradivarius instruments known as "The Paganini Quartet,"
and its recordings have earned it such honors as the Grand
Prix du Disque Montreux, seven Grammy nominations, and "Best
Chamber Music Recording of the Year" awards from both
Gramophone and Stereo Review magazines.
Richard Stoltzman's virtuosity, musicianship, and sheer
personal magnetism have catapulted him to the highest ranks
of international acclaim, making him one of today's most
sought-after concert artists. As soloist with more than a
hundred orchestras, as a captivating recitalist and chamber
music performer, and as an innovative jazz artist, two-time
Grammy award winner Stoltzman defies categorization and
dazzles critics and audiences alike in his performances of
all genres of music.
April 19 (Monday)
Lecture: Four Japanese Novelists:
Yukio Mishima
Prof. Donald Keene (University
Professor Emeritus and Shincho Professor Emeritus, Columbia
University)
**NOTE** LOCATION CHANGED TO: Altschul Auditorium on the 4th
floor of the International Affairs Building (118th St. &
Amsterdam Ave.), Columbia University
6:00 PM
| Donald Keene, the Western world's
most celebrated scholar of Japanese literature and
culture, will relate personal reminiscences about
Yukio Mishima and comment on his literary
achievements. One of the most talented writers to
emerge in postwar Japan, Yukio Mishima completed his
first novel the year he entered the University of
Tokyo. Twenty three more followed, along with more
than forty plays, over ninety short stories, several
poetry and travel volumes, and hundreds of essays.
In 1970, at the peak of a brilliant literary career,
he shocked the world with his suicide. His death
brought an irreparable loss to the world of Japanese
letters. |

Yukio Mishima with Prof. Keene
|
Tickets are $15.00 per lecture.
Columbia students are admitted free with an ID.
Tickets are available at the door and can also be purchased
in advance by sending a check payable to The Donald Keene
Center of Japanese Culture and a self-addressed stamped
envelope to The Donald Keene Center, 507 Kent Hall, Columbia
University, New York, NY 10027.
Part of
Four Japanese Novelists Lecture Series
April 26 (Monday)
Booktalk: Embracing Defeat: Japan
in the Wake of World War II
Prof. John Dower(Elting E. Morrison
Professor of History, the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology)
GSAS Lounge, Philosophy Hall), Columbia University (116th
St. & Amsterdam Ave.)
6:30 PM
Professor John Dower, one of the most distinguished
historians of modern Japan, will speak about his newly
published book
Embracing Defeat: Japan in the Wake of World War II,
a study of the aftermath of Japan's defeat in World War
II. Prof. Dower has gained preeminence in the field of
Japanese studies with his analyses of modern Japanese
history and US-Japan relations, breaking new ground through
his scholarly use of visual materials and various
manifestations of popular culture. His War Without Mercy:
Race and Power in the Pacific War (1987), won the
National Book Critics Circle Award and the Ohira Masayoshi
Memorial Prize, and was hailed by The New Republic as
"the most important study of the Pacific War ever
published." Other scholarly publications include: Empire
and Aftermath: Yoshida Shigeru and the Japanese Experience
(1979) and Japan in War and Peace: Selected Essays
(1993). Prof. Dower has also done a great deal of work in
other fields, publishing The Elements of Japanese Design
(1971); A Century of Japanese Photography (1980);
The Hiroshima Murals (1985), an examination of the
political art of the painters Maruki Iri and Maruki Toshi;
and garnering an Academy Award nomination for his production
of Hellfire—A Journey from Hiroshima, a documentary
film on the work of the Marukis.
May 4 (Tuesday)
Lecture: Miho Museum
Tim Culbert (Architect)
Ware Lounge, Architecture Building (6th Floor), Columbia
University (116th St. & Amsterdam Ave.)
6:00 PM
Award-winning architect Tim Culbert will speak about the
construction of the Miho Museum in Shigaraki, Japan.
From 1992 to 1997, Mr. Culbert worked with I.M. Pei as
project architect during the construction of the Miho Museum
in Shigaraki, Japan. The new museum is set in a mountaintop
nature preserve outside Kyoto and its revolutionary design
has drawn attention from around the globe. Designed to house
the Shumei Family Collection of ancient art, much of the
building is buried beneath 7,000 newly planted trees,
leaving only a network of glass-paneled rooftops exposed.
Mr. Culbert has won recognition in various national and
international architectural competitions. In 1987, he
received the young Architects Prize (Album de la Juene
Architecture) awarded by the French Ministry for
Architecture and Urban Development. He has also received
prizes for his submissions for the Paris-Bastille Opera
House Competition, the Fourteenth Session PAN-Housing
Competition, France and for the European Museum of
Photography Competition (MEP), Paris.
Co-sponsored by the
Columbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and
Preservation
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