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DTSTART:20231105T020000
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DTSTART:20240310T020000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:calendar.1555.events_uoft_date.0@www.eas.utoronto.ca
CREATED:20230830T141738Z
DESCRIPTION:\nWhen and Where: \nTuesday, November 07, 2023 3:00 pm to 4:3
 0 pm \n EAS Lounge - 14th Floor \n Robarts Library Building \n 130 St Geor
 ge Street \n\nSpeakers \nDavid Lurie, Associate Professor, Department of
  East Asian Languages and Cultures, Columbia University \n\nDescription: 
 \nEarly Japanese histories are filled with stories of the violent exploits
  of deities and human heroes dispatched to peripheral regions to quell unr
 uly indigenes. Their settings are mythic but derive from, and also ideolo
 gically underwrite, the imperial terrain of the Nara period (710-792 CE).
  And yet the same stories, and the works that contain them, also inhabit
  another, abstract terrain: that of Sinitic textual culture, in which Ja
 pan itself plays the role of barbarous periphery.This presentation explore
 s the complex, often incoherent logics that enabled these two terrains to
  coexist in 8th century works such as the Kojiki (712), Nihon shoki (720)
 , and the fudoki gazetteers.Part of the Indigeneity Across East Asian Lit
 eratures Speaker Series. Curated by Assistant Professor Nathan Vedal, Dep
 artment of East Asian Studies \n\nSponsors \nCentre for Comparative Litera
 ture University of Toronto \n130 St George Street \n\nCategories \n Lectur
 es \n\nAudiences \n Alumni and FriendsCommunityFacultyFirst-Year StudentsG
 raduate StudentsGraduating StudentsProspective Graduate StudentsProspectiv
 e Undergraduate StudentsStaffUndergraduate Students
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231107T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20231107T163000
LAST-MODIFIED:20230831T175603Z
LOCATION:130 St George Street
SUMMARY:Indigeneity Across East Asian Literatures: Stuck in the Middle: Vio
 lence and the Geopolitics of Culture in Japanese Mythology
URL;TYPE=URI:https://www.eas.utoronto.ca/events/indigeneity-across-east-asi
 an-literatures-stuck-middle-violence-and-geopolitics-culture
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