学部後期課程
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過去(2020年度)の授業の情報です
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最終更新日:2024年4月1日

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世界歴史と東アジアI(3)

The Politics of Space: An Urban History of Tokyo
This course looks at the history of Tokyo to examine issues related to the production and organization of space in the context of the city. It will introduce critical approaches to the study of urban history to understand how space is defined and marked by structures of power. Although the overall framework is historical, the course will cover topics relating to the creation of public and private spaces; space and identity through the everyday; political economy and the built environment; and representations of space in literature, maps and films. The class content will briefly cover the Edo period before examining various moments of Tokyo’s history up until the early 2010s.
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時間割/共通科目コード
コース名
教員
学期
時限
08F150803
FAS-FA4F08L3
世界歴史と東アジアI(3)
バクスター,ジョシュア
S1 S2
木曜3限
マイリストに追加
マイリストから削除
講義使用言語
英語
単位
2
実務経験のある教員による授業科目
NO
他学部履修
開講所属
教養学部
授業計画
Week 1: Introduction (Please view this before April 23) Week 2 (April 23): Thinking about the Politics of Space David Harvey, “The Right to the City,” in Rebel Cities (Verso, 2013), 3-25. Neil Brenner, “What is Critical Urban Theory?” City Vol. 13, No. 2-3 (June-September 2009): 198-207. Week 3 (April 30): Edo 1 Mark Teeuwen, “Townspeople” and “Lower Townspeople,” Lust, commerce, and corruption: an account of what I have seen and heard, by an Edo Samurai (New York: Columbia University Press, 2014), 232-308. Week 4 (May 7): Edo 2 Hidenobu Jinnai, "Cosmology of a city of Water," Tokyo: A Spatial Anthropology, trans. Kimiko Nakamura (Univ. of California Press, 1995), 66-119. Katō Takashi, “Governing Edo,” in Edo and Paris: Urban Life and the State in the Early Modern Era (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 194), 41-67. Week 5 (May 14): Edo-Tokyo Edward Seidensticker, “The End and the Beginning,” Low City, High City: Tokyo from Edo to the Earthquake (Alfred A. Knopf, 1983), 1-25. Tristan R. Grunow, “Paving Power: Western Urban Planning and Imperial Space from the Streets of Meiji Tokyo to Colonial Seoul,” Journal of Urban History 2016, Vol. 42(3): 506-556. Week 6 (May 21): Meiji 1 James A. Fujii, “Intimate Alienation: Japanese Urban Rail and the Commodification of Urban Subjects,” in differences: A Journal of Feminist Cultural Studies 11, Issue 2 (Summer, 1999): 106-133. Kafū Nagai, “The River Sumida”, in Edward Seidensticker’s Kafū the Scribbler: The Life and Writings of Nagai Kafū, 1879-1959 (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1965), 181-218. Week 7 (June 4): Meiji 2 Maeda Ai, “Utopia of the Prisonhouse: A Reading of In Darkest Tokyo,” Text and the City: Essays on Japanese Modernity, 21-64. Takashi Fujitani, “War Rites and Visual Domination,” Splendid Monarchy: Power and Pageantry in Modern Japan (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996), 121-145. Week 8 (June 11): Taisho Andrew Gordon, “The Urban Crowd and Politics, 1905-18,” Labour and Imperial Democracy in Prewar Japan (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991), 26-62. Katja Schmidtpott, “Indifferent Communities: Neighbourhood Associations, class and community consciousness in pre-war Tokyo,” Urban Spaces in Japan, 125-147. Week 9 (June 18): Showa 1 Miriam Silverberg, “Asakusa Eroticism,” Erotic Grotesque Nonsense, 177-202. Alisa Freedman, “Shinjuku Station sketches: constructing an icon of modern daily life,” Tokyo in Transit: Japanese culture on the rails and road (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2011), Week 10 (June 25): Showa 2 Ann Waswo, “Housing policy in Early Postwar Japan,” Housing in Postwar Japan: A Social History (London: RoutledgeCurzon, 2002), 39-61. Yoshikuni Igarashi, “From the Anti-Security Treaty Movement to the Tokyo Olympics: Transforming the Body, the Metropolis, and Memory,” in Bodies of Memory: Narratives of War in Postwar Japanese Culture, 1945-1970 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2000), 131-163. Week 11 (July 2): Showa 3 Jordan Sand, “Hiroba: The Public Square and the Boundaries of the Commons,” Tokyo Vernacular: Common Spaces, Local Histories, Found Objects (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2013), 25-53. View parts of Adachi Masao’s A.K.A. Serial Killer (1969) Week 12 (July 9): Heisei 1 Animal Insurrection Committee, “In the Streets We Become Cattle: Towards a Theory of Demonstrations” View parts of Kurosawa Kiyoshi’s Tokyo Sonata (2008)
授業の方法
**Online Class System**: Due to the regulations stipulated by the university in light of the COVID-19 outbreak, all classes will be conducted online. The lectures will be pre-recorded and uploaded to ITC-LMS. Students should view it prior to the scheduled class time. The class time itself will be devoted to answering questions from the lecture, discussing the readings, and for in-class assignments. The online discussion will be conducted using Zoom and will generally run for 30-45 minutes.
成績評価方法
15% Response Papers 25% Group Assignments 60% Research Project
教科書
none
参考書
none
履修上の注意
Classes are conducted entirely in English. Please self-enroll on ITC-LMS so that you can access the class material and receive regular course updates. The Zoom URL will be uploaded shortly.