Showing posts with label japanese studies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label japanese studies. Show all posts

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Global Market Information Database Available

http://micro189.lib3.hawaii.edu/ezproxy/details.php?dbId=51826

We now have access to the Global Market Information Database (often called "gee-mid" GMID) from Euromonitor. Country coverage includes Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bangledesh, Bhutan, Brunei, Cambodia, China and Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Macau, Malaysia, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, North Korea, Pakistan, Phillipines, Singapore, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Tajikistan, Thailand, Turkmenistan and Vietnam.

Data and narratives will include consumer/lifestyle/market analysis, industry and country information, demographics and other statistics, compiled by Euromonitor staff in the field.

Please note that this database is licensed only for UH students, faculty and staff (and East West fellows). Walk-ins and other visitors will not be able to access the database on their own while in the library because each user has to first go through the proxy server (even while in the building) and then create and use a personal account with Euromonitor.

Though the interface just recently changed, it still has room for improvement... but, once you get the feel for it, there is a lot of primary information that is often hard to find in one package. This should be a good compliment to the EIU reports and profiles.

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Nippon Culture Day

IRASSHAI! Welcome to Nippon Culture Day!

We invite you to join us as we celebrate Culture Day on the UH-Manoa
campus.

The Japanese section of the Dept. of East Asian Languages and Literatures, University of Hawaii at Manoa, will be holding its annual Nippon Culture Day on Thursday, November 1, 2007 at the East-West Center's Imin Center Wailana Rooms, from 9:00 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.

The event coincides with BUNKA NO HI (Culture Day) in Japan. Culture Day is a national holiday held annually in Japan on November 3 for the purpose of promoting culture, the arts, and academic endeavour. Festivities typically include art exhibitions, parades, and award ceremonies for distinguished artists and scholars.

Nippon Culture Day will feature seven different hands-on workshops, which will be held simultaneously throughout the day. They include: art flower, shodo (calligraphy), ikebana (flower arrangement), omusubi making, advanced origami, Japanese-style gift wrapping, and Japanese tea ceremony. Most of the workshops will be led by faculty members within the Japanese section at UH-Manoa.

Students who are currently taking Japanese at UH-Manoa are given priority and can pre-register for any or all of the workshops, however, visitors may participate on a space-available basis and are welcome to observe any of the activities.

In addition to the workshops, Japanese bookstore Hakubundo and representatives from the UH-Manoa Study Abroad Center and the Consulate-General of Japan will be present. Door prizes donated by Hakubundo will be given away hourly.

This event is organized by the Japanese section of the Dept. of East Asian Languages and Literatures with support from the Center for Japanese Studies and the Soshitsu Sen Way of Tea Center. Contact CJS if you have questions about parking.

Saturday, October 6, 2007

"The Case Study of Chujohime"

CENTER FOR JAPANESE STUDIES SEMINAR SERIES

The Crossing of Boundaries between the Religious and Social Constructions of Gender in Medieval Japanese Buddhist Narratives: The Case Study of Ch•ujohime

By Dr. Monika Dix
Visiting Assistant Professor of Japanese Literature
EALL, University of Hawai'i at Manoa

DATE: Thursday, October 25, 2007
TIME: 3:00 - 4:30PM
PLACE: Tokioka Room (Moore Hall 319)
The story of the legendary eighth-century young noblewoman, Chujohime, is one of the
extensive body of late medieval short stories - collectively called otogi zÿshi -which are preserved in written form from the Muromachi period (1392-1573) onward and are generally considered the earliest works of popular literature in Japan.

One of the key stories in the Chujohime legend is her journey to Hibariyama - a fantastic textual, physical, and spiritual transcendent travel which played a key role in the popularization of Ch•ujohime's legend and her cult from the fifteenth to seventeenth century.

This paper focuses on the significance of Chujohime's transcendent journey to Hibariyama and explores how it constitutes a crossing of boundaries between the religious and social constructions of gender in this Buddhist tale of female salvation, presenting Chujohime as religious outcast - not being able to attain enlightenment in her female body due to her sex - and as social outcast - transgressing the bounds of her role of filial daughter vis-à-vis her father.

Dr. Dix suggests that Chujohime's forced journey to Hibariyama - her exile - not only triggers her religious awakening (hosshin) but also indicates a constant renegotiation of gender-power imbalance between Pure Land Buddhist ideology and social customs which mutually influenced each other in casting transgressing women as religious outcasts in late medieval Japanese society.

Friday, September 21, 2007

East-West Center to feature traditional Japanese music

What: A program of koto and shakuhachi
Where: Imin Center at Jefferson Hall, East-West Center
When: 8 p.m. Oct.13, 4 p.m. Oct. 14

"The show, titled "Music Masters from Japan: Koto and Shakuhachi," will feature Masateru Ando, principal koto master at Tokyo University of the Arts, and his daughter, Tamaki Ando.

Christopher Yomei Blasdel, a veteran performer and teacher in Japan, will be the featured shakuhachi artist.

Tickets are $15 ($12 military, students and seniors), available at the University of Hawaii-Manoa Campus Center box office, at via the Honolulu Box Office, phone 550-8457, or online at www.honoluluboxoffice.com." - from The Advertiser