Department of Comparative Cultural Studies
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  • Anime: an old way to tell new stories

Faculty Research

Anime: an old way to tell new stories

Posted by jp48 on October 24, 2023

The popularity of anime television shows like Naruto (2002-2007) and Demon Slayer (2019) highlight the longevity and continued impact of anime across the globe. So, it might come as a bit of surprise to discover that the origins of anime are in the centuries old practice of kabuki theater in Japan, an influence that still informs anime today.

Incredible showmanship, elaborate costumes, and exaggerated performances are long standing characteristics of kabuki theater and manifest in the the bright colors, high… Read more

Filed Under: Asian Studies, CCS events, Comparative Study of Religions, Faculty Research, Public Humanities

Faculty news: new publication by Dr. Gioia Woods in California Italian Studies

Posted by Rebekah Pratt-Sturges on October 18, 2023

Professor of Humanities Dr. Gioia Woods published the article “‘The Scope of an Epigram’: Quickness, Magic, and Marcovaldo’s Environmental Eye” in California Italian Studies volume 12 on October 15. The special issue on Italo Calvino marks the centenary of his birth. Read the article.

Abstract: “Quickness”, the second lecture collected in Six Memos for the New Millenium, is an essential value linking the… Read more

Filed Under: Faculty news, Faculty Research, Public Humanities

Faculty news: Dr. Anabel Galindo presentation at the 63rd Annual Western History Association Conference this month

Posted by Rebekah Pratt-Sturges on October 16, 2023

This image depicts a woman with long dark hair wearing a black shirt and multicolored scarf.CCS Assistant Professor of Humanities Dr. Anabel Galindo will present her paper In The Land of Sunshine: Yaqui Mobility, 1770-1920 at the end of October as part of the 63rd Annual Western History Association Conference in Los Angeles.

Abstract: Little is… Read more

Filed Under: Faculty Research, Public Humanities

CCS Professor Dr. Jason BeDuhn will present a public lecture at The Catholic University of America on Oct. 11

Posted by Rebekah Pratt-Sturges on October 6, 2023

Professor of the Comparative Study of Religions Dr. Jason BeDuhn will present an invited public lecture, “Rethinking Asceticism through the Example of the Manichaeans” at The Catholic University of America on Oct. 11, 2023.

Abstract: Manichaeans and Christians share many ascetic practices and common ideals of the disciplined, perfected body.  Yet the respective motivations and purposes of these… Read more

Filed Under: Comparative Study of Religions, Faculty news, Faculty Research, Public Humanities

CCS Assistant Professor Dr. Dunja Jelesijevic recently presented at the Midwest Conference on Asian Affairs in September

Posted by Rebekah Pratt-Sturges on October 5, 2023

Assistant Professor of Asian Studies and the Comparative Study of Religions Dr. Dunja Jelesijevic recently presented the paper “Implements of Dissent: Resisting Family Structures in the Noh” at the Midwest Conference on Asian Affairs in September.

Abstract: The 14th century Nō plays Kanawa and Kinuta take as the subject matter marital relationships, betrayal, and abandonment. In Kanawa, husband takes a mistress, upon which his wife seeks to exact revenge by ritually transforming into… Read more

Filed Under: Asian Studies, Comparative Study of Religions, Faculty news, Faculty Research

Assistant Professor of Asian Studies and the Comparative Study of Religions Dr. Dunja Jelesijevic recently presented the paper “Walking the Suffering: Travel Sequence as Path to Enlightenment in Onnamonogurui Plays” at the European Association for Japanese Studies

Posted by Rebekah Pratt-Sturges on

Assistant Professor of Asian Studies and the Comparative Study of Religions Dr. Dunja Jelesijevic recently presented the paper “Walking the Suffering: Travel Sequence as Path to Enlightenment in Onnamonogurui Plays” at the European Association for Japanese Studies in August. Her paper analyzed michiyuki – travel sequences – in two “mad women” Noh plays arguing that depictions of travel and landscapes create symbolic language which articulates the protagonists’ frantic wandering as a… Read more

Filed Under: Asian Studies, Comparative Study of Religions, Faculty news, Faculty Research

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Department of Comparative Cultural Studies
Location
Room 104 Main Office Building 15
Riles
317 W Tormey Dr.
Flagstaff, Arizona 86011
Mailing Address
P.O. Box 6031
Flagstaff, Arizona 86011
Email
ComparativeCulturalStudies@nau.edu
Phone
928-523-3881
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