Visualizing Postwar Tokyo, Part 1 - University of Tokyo

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Course

Online

Free

Description

  • Type

    Course

  • Methodology

    Online

  • Start date

    Different dates available

Analyze the history of change and development in postwar Tokyo from different perspectives using archived photographs, films, and TV programs.

Facilities

Location

Start date

Online

Start date

Different dates availableEnrolment now open

About this course

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2017

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Subjects

  • Postwar Tokyo
  • Tokyo
  • Japan War
  • Americanism
  • Tokyo city

Course programme

Tokyo emerged out of the ruins of war to become a large city of 10 million people in only a quarter of a century. During this process of change, the capital of a military empire that once invaded East Asia experienced occupation by the U.S. armed forces, hosted the Olympic Games, and transformed into a consumer hub where young people could enjoy economic “wealth.” It is important to know that this process was recorded in countless photographs, documentary films, TV programs, and so on. We will retrieve many of these archived pictures and videos and analyze what happened in postwar Tokyo from different perspectives. In Part 1, you will look at the changes that occurred in postwar Tokyo over a quarter of a century from four different perspectives: 1) occupation and Americanism; 2) imperial gaze and royal wedding; 3) The Olympic city; and 4) economic-cultural clash in Shinjuku. This examination of urban history will provide you with the insights necessary when considering changes in other large cities in Asia, such as Seoul, Beijing, and Bangkok, at the end of the twentieth century.

What you'll learn
  • Noteworthy factors which promoted the development and change of Tokyo in the postwar period
  • The impact of the U.S. occupation on the people and city of Tokyo
  • The change of “gazing” relationship between the emperor and people in Japan
  • The impact of Tokyo Olympic Games on the landscape of Tokyo
  • How Shinjuku achieved its development in the 1960s and the factors which led to its economic-cultural clash

Additional information

Shunya Yoshimi Shunya Yoshimi is a Professor of Sociology, Cultural Studies, and Media Studies. He is the author of many books on cultural theory, urban culture, international exposition, media culture, information technology, the emperor system, and Americanization in modern Japan and East Asia. He has been a leading scholar in the field of Media and Cultural Studies in contemporary Japan. He has been a visiting fellow of El Colegio de Mexico (1993), Ecole des Hautes Etudes Sciences Sociales (1998), University of Western Sydney (1999), and Queensland University (2000). 

Visualizing Postwar Tokyo, Part 1 - University of Tokyo

Free