Spring 2024 Art History BC3868 section 001

Tokyo

Call Number 00159
Day & Time
Location
M 2:10pm-4:00pm
501 Diana Center
Points 4
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required Instructor
Instructor Jonathan Reynolds
Type SEMINAR
Course Description

This seminar will take an interdisciplinary approach to the history of the complex and dynamic city of Tokyo from the mid-19th century to the present. The class will discuss the impact that industrialization and sustained migration have had on the city’s housing and infrastructure and will examine the often equivocal and incomplete urban planning projects that have attempted to address these changes from the Ginza Brick Town of the 1870s, to the reconstruction efforts after the Great Kanto Earthquake. We will examine the impact of and response to natural disasters and war. We will discuss the emergence of so-called “new town” suburban developments since the 1960s and the ways in which these new urban forms reshaped daily life. We will discuss the bucolic prints of the 1910s through the 1930s that obscured the crowding, pollution and political violence and compare them with the more politically engaged prints and journalistic photographs of the era. We will also consider the apocalyptic imagery that is so pervasive in the treatment of Tokyo in post-war film and anime. There are no prerequisites, but coursework in modern art history, urban studies, and modern Japanese history are highly recommended.

Web Site Vergil
Department Art History @Barnard
Enrollment 15 students (15 max) as of 9:05PM Wednesday, December 11, 2024
Status Full
Subject Art History
Number BC3868
Section 001
Division Barnard College
Note Link to Apply: due 11/8 https://forms.gle/s1ZHva7xeEAgfC5t9
Section key 20241AHIS3868X001