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X-WR-CALNAME:IMJS: Japanese Cultural Heritage Initiatives&lt;br /&gt;Columbia University
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for IMJS: Japanese Cultural Heritage Initiatives&lt;br /&gt;Columbia University
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DTSTART:20031026T060000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20021003
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20021005
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180223T180515Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200630T152601Z
UID:122-1033603200-1033775999@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Shinto Symposium: "New Perspectives in the Study of Shinto"
DESCRIPTION:Two-day Symposium and workshop. \nOctober 3 2:00-6:00pm Symposium: “New Perspectives in the Study of Shinto”\nOctober 4 9:00am-5:30pm Workshop \nCoordinated by Professor Ryuichi Abe (Kao Associate Professor of Religion and Department Chair\, as well as Deputy Director of the Institute for Medieval Japanese Studies\, Columbia University). This two-day workshop with scholars from Japan\, Europe and the U.S. will also be sponsored by the Donald Keene Center of Japanese Culture (DKC) and the International Shinto Foundation (ISF). \n(Please note that parts of this workshop will be conducted in Japanese).
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/shinto-symposium-new-perspectives-in-the-study-of-shinto/
LOCATION:403 Kent Hall\, 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20021001T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20021001T190000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180223T180354Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200707T175515Z
UID:120-1033491600-1033498800@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Film screening and discussion: "Enmyōin"
DESCRIPTION:“Enmyoin”: Screening and Discussion of the documentary “Enmyoin” by movie directors and producers Reiko Tahara and Max Uesugi of MRex Productions. “Enmyoin” gives the life story of Ogawa Teijun\, a 95-year-old Abbess of the Shingon convent Enmyoin in Okayama and then follows the modern-day life of her young successor Baba Seijun\, and the trials she undergoes to be accepted as Abbess.
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/enmyoin/
LOCATION:403 Kent Hall\, 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20020305
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20020307
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180223T180235Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200630T152403Z
UID:117-1015286400-1015459199@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Program with Chief Abbot Keido Fukushima\, Tofukuji Monastery\, Kyoto
DESCRIPTION:The Institute for Medieval Japanese Studies is honored to welcome \n \nChief Abbot Keido Fukushima\nTofukuji Monastery\, Kyoto\, Japan \nTuesday\, March 5th\n1:45 – 2:00 pm: Offering of Sutras for Abbess Mugai Nyodai\n2:00 – 3:30 pm: Lecture and Discussion:\n“Zen Master Joshu’s Zen (Part 2)”\n(In Japanese with consecutive translation) \nWednesday\, March 6th\n4:30 – 6:00 pm: Zen Calligraphy Demonstration\n6:30 – 8:00 pm: Zazen Meditation Session\n(Led by Abbot Fukushima for both newcomers and advanced sitters)
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/chief-abbot-keido-fukushima/
LOCATION:403 Kent Hall (Student Lounge)\, 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20010306T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20010306T180000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180223T175839Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200630T152315Z
UID:115-983894400-983901600@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Lecture by Prof. Cecilia Segawa Seigle\, "In Her Own Words: The Diary of Imperial Princess Shinanomiya"
DESCRIPTION:Professor Emerita Cecilia Segawa Seigle\, University of Pennsylvania \n“In Her Own Words: The Diary of Imperial Princess Shinanomiya (1642-1702)\, mother of Hiroko\, wife of the sixth shogun Tokugawa Ienobu”
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/in-her-own-words-the-diary-of-imperial-princess-shinanomiya/
LOCATION:403 Kent Hall\, 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20010226T121500
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20010226T183000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180223T175712Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200707T175448Z
UID:112-983189700-983212200@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Program with Chief Abbot Keido Fukushima\, Tofukuji Monastery\, Kyoto
DESCRIPTION:Lecture and Calligraphy Demonstration
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/abbot-keido-fukushima-lecture-and-demonstration/
LOCATION:403 Kent Hall\, 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20001110T171500
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20001110T193000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180223T174856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200630T152143Z
UID:106-973876500-973884600@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Symposium: "Aesthetics in Contemporary Japanese Sound"
DESCRIPTION:Demonstration on the Traditional Japanese Shō\nPanel Discussion \nCo-sponsored with the Donald Keene Center for Japanese Culture and Music from Japan. \nFEATURING\nJohn Rockwell\, Music Critic\, The New York Times\nMayumi Miyata\, Shō Performer\nToshio Hosokawa\, Composer\nKaren Tanaka\, Composer\nLois V Vierk\, Composer\nSharon Ann Nakazato\, Moderator & Interpreter \n\nJOHN ROCKWELL\, KEYNOTE SPEAKER\nJohn Rockwell is the editor of the Arts and Leisure section of The New York Times. A writer\, critic\, arts administrator and journalist\, he was born in Washington\, D.C. in 1940 and raised in San Francisco. He attended Phillips Academy in Andover\, Massachusetts; Harvard College; the University of Munich; and the University of California at Berkeley\, from which he holds a Ph.D. in German cultural history. Following extensive freelance activity in California\, he worked for the Oakland Tribune (California) and the Los Angeles Times as a classical music and dance critic before joining The New York Times in 1972. From then until 1991\, Mr. Rockwell was a classical music critic for the Times (music editor\, 1980-1991)\, and from 1974 to 1980 he also served as chief rock critic. Between 1992 and 1994\, he was based in Paris as the Times’s European cultural correspondent\, covering all the arts\, as well as serving as the paper’s principal reviewer of classical recordings. In the fall of 1994\, Mr. Rockwell left the Times to become the first director of the Lincoln Center Festival\, an annual international performing arts festival. He rejoined The New York Times as Arts and Leisure editor in early 1998\, having already programmed the 1998 edition of the festival. \nMr. Rockwell has published two books\, All American Music: Composition in the Late Twentieth Century\, a study of American music from classical to jazz and rock that was nominated for a National Book Critics Circle Award\, and Sinatra: An American Classic. He has contributed widely to magazines\, anthologies and encyclopedias\, among them The New Grove Dictionary of American Music\, The New Grove Dictionary of Opera\, The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock and Roll and The Virgil Thomson Reader\, which he co-edited. \nHe is a Chevalier of the French Order of Arts and Letters and a member of the Executive Board of the College of Letters and Sciences of the University of California at Berkeley and of the Board of Overseers of Harvard University. \n\n\nMAYUMI MIYATA\, SHO PERFORMER\nMayumi Miyata\, Japan’s foremost contemporary sho soloist\, was first introduced to the United States at a 1987 recital presented by Music From Japan\, and she has since received international acclaim for her artistry. Her instrument\, the sho;\, is a mouth organ introduced from China in the Nara period (A.D. 710-784) and is associated with gagaku\, Japan’s court music. Ms. Miyata is active in promoting new gagaku pieces by Takemitsu\, Ichiyanagi\, Ishii\, Eloy\, Cage\, Mefano\, Yuasa\, Hosokawa\, Artaud\, Staebler and Giuliano\, many of which have been written especially for her. \nIn 1986\, Ms. Miyata was the featured artist in Eloy’s four-hour work\, “Anahata” (Creation)\, commissioned for the Festival d’Automne de Paris\, and that same year was introduced in a concert series entitled\, “Today’s Performer Series IV” in Japan. She is a member of the Tokyo Gakuso and Reigakusha and since 1979\, has been taking part in gagaku performances at the National Theatre in Tokyo. In 1983\, she was invited to perform as a soloist in the Japanese Arts Festival in six major European cities and also presented her first solo recital in Tokyo. She has given recitals throughout the world\, at events including Darmstadt Summer Course\, Frankfurt Festival\, Donaueschinger Musiktage and Akiyoshidai International Contemporary Music Seminar & Festival. In addition to her appearance in 1987\, Ms. Miyata participated in Music From Japan’s 1995 season as a featured performer in New York\, Toronto\, and Washington\, D.C. and also appeared with Reigakusha in the Lincoln Center Festival in 1996. \nMayumi Miyata was born in Tokyo and began learning gagaku after studying as a piano major at Kunitachi College of Music. While still a student\, she started to study the sho under Ono Tadamaro of the Imperial Household Agency. Since her debut as a soloist\, she has continued to present the distinctive and scintillating sounds of the sho; to an appreciative and ever-growing audience. \n\n\nTHE MODERATOR & INTERPRETER\nSharon Ann Nakazato\, who holds Bachelor’s and Master’s Degrees from the University of Michigan\, spent eight years studying and working in Japan. She worked for three years as English editor of The East\, and has also published articles in both English and Japanese. Her specialties as translator include arts and cultural history\, literature and Buddhist studies. She is a licensed teacher of shodo; (Japanese brush calligraphy) and has lectured on many topics in both English and Japanese. She is presently writing and teaching American language and culture to Japanese people and also Japanese language to Americans. \n\n\nTHE COMPOSERS\nToshio Hosokawa\, composer\, lecturer\, and essayist in high repute throughout Europe and Japan\, has been credited for creating “a dashing glossary of avant-garde techniques.” He was Composer-in-Residence at the Salzburg Mozarteum and has been a guest composer and lecturer at numerous contemporary music festivals in Europe. \nThe New York Times recently lauded Karen Tanaka as one of the outstanding young Japanese composers of our time\, and also described her work as “dynamic and atmospheric.” A Paris-based composer\, she is the recipient of commissions from the BBC Symphony Orchestra and Radio France. She studied composition with Miyoshi Akira in Tokyo\, with Tristan Murail in Paris\, and with Luciano Berio in Florence. \nLois V Vierk‘s new CD “River Beneath the River” was released by Tzadik Records earlier this year. While she has spent most of her career in New York City\, her music has achieved an impressive international reputation. Ms. Vierk was commissioned by the Lincoln Center Festival to compose “Silversword” for the gagaku orchestra\, Reigakusha of Tokyo\, and by the Barbican Center to compose “River Beneath the River” for the Kronos Quartet. This piece has been performed by the Quartet many times. Music From Japan also commissioned her to compose for percussion and gagaku flute\, ryuteki. Among the many other performers and presenters who have commissioned her are Bang On A Can Festival\, Ensemble Modern\, L’Art Pour L’Art\, the Relâche Ensemble\, pianists Ursula Oppens\, Frederic Rzewski\, Aki Takahashi\, and Margaret Leng Tan\, and accordionist Guy Klucevsek. Ms. Vierk studied gagaku for 10 years in Los Angeles with Mr. Suenobu Togi\, formerly of Japan’s Gagaku Imperial Court Orchestra (Kunaicho; gakubu)\, and in Tokyo for two years with Mr. Sukeyasu Shiba of the same ensemble.
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/symposium-japanese-aesthetics-in-contemporary-sound/
LOCATION:301 Philosophy Hall\, 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20001103T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20001103T170000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180223T174341Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180223T175114Z
UID:104-973245600-973270800@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Symposium: New Perspectives on Studying Medieval Japan
DESCRIPTION:Professor Masaharu Imai (Tsukuba University)\nVisiting Professor (Dept. of East Asian Languages and Cultures\, Columbia)\nVisiting Fellow of the Donald Keene Center (under a program sponsored by the U.S.-Japan Foundation) \nSession 1: Defining “Medieval Japan”: New Perspectives\nSession 2: Buddhism\, Shinto\, and Women’s History\nSession 3: History and Art: Dealing with Textual and Nontextual Primary Sources\nSession 4: Formation of “Nihon kenkyu” and US-Japan Intellectual Exchange
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/symposium-new-perspectives-on-studying-medieval-japan/
LOCATION:403 Kent Hall (EALAC Lounge)\, 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20001017T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20001017T180000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180223T174208Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220308T220941Z
UID:101-971805600-971805600@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Satsuma Biwa: Lecture\, Demonstration\, and Concert
DESCRIPTION:Lecture and Demonstration by Professor Hugh De Ferranti (assistant Professor of Asian Languages\, Cultures & Music\, University of Michigan) \nConcert of Satsuma Biwa narratives by the eminent artist Yoshinori Fumon \nCo-sponsored by the Donald Keene Center and the Department of Music (Columbia)
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/satsuma-biwa-lecture-demonstration-and-concert/
LOCATION:301 Philosophy Hall\, 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20000905T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20000905T140000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180223T173951Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220308T220944Z
UID:98-968155200-968162400@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:The Shumei Taiko Drum Ensemble of Japan
DESCRIPTION:Co-sponsored by the Donald Keene Center
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/the-shumei-taiko-drum-ensemble-of-japan/
LOCATION:Low Memorial Library Rotunda\, 116th Street and Broadway\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20000612
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20000627
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180223T173658Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200630T151636Z
UID:92-960768000-962063999@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Photo Exhibition by Abbess Seikan Fushimi
DESCRIPTION:“Meditation at Sunset: Drawn to the Evening Sun of Amida’s Western Paradise” – Photographs by Abbess Seikan Fujimi\, Tokujō Myōin convent\, Kyoto\, Japan \nJune 12 1:30-6:30pm (403 Kent Hall)\nLecture\, Tea Ceremony and Flower Arrangement demonstrations \n\nAbbess Seikan Fushimi \n  \nPhoto by Abbess Fushimi
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/photo-exhibition-by-abbess-seikan-fushimi/
LOCATION:Rotunda Gallery\, Low Library\, 116th Street and Broadway\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20000307T121500
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20000307T174500
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180223T173424Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200630T151532Z
UID:90-952431300-952451100@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Program with Chief Abbot Keido Fukushima\, Tofukuji Monastery\, Kyoto
DESCRIPTION:Keido Fukushima \n12:15-12:30pm\n“Offering of Sutras for abbess Mugai Nyodai” \n12:30-2:00pm\n“Chinese Zen-Master Joshu’s Zen” lecture and discussion \n3:30-4:30pm\nZen Calligraphy Demonstration \n4:45-5:45pm\nZazen Meditation Session led by Abbott Fukushima
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/programs-with-keido-fukushima-chief-abbot-of-tofukuji-monastery/
LOCATION:403 Kent Hall (EALAC Lounge)\, 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20000218T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20000218T180000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180223T173212Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220308T221025Z
UID:88-950889600-950896800@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Distinguished Shinto Lecture by Prof. Karen Smyers\, "Shinto and Shamanism: Multiple Interpretative Worlds at the Fushimi Inari Shrine"
DESCRIPTION:“Shinto and Shamanism: Multiple Interpretative Worlds at the Fushimi Inari Shrine”\nLecture by Professor Karen Smyers\, Department of Religion\, Wesleyan University
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/distinguished-shinto-lecture-by-professor-karen-smyers/
LOCATION:403 Kent Hall (EALAC Lounge)\, 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20000215T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20000215T180000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20190722T204351Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221011T154500Z
UID:823-950630400-950637600@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:A Lecture-Demonstration on Tsugaru Shamisen and Traditional Japanese Music
DESCRIPTION:Featuring Chikuzan Takahashi II (Tsugaru shamisen player) and Tomiko Kojima (Ethnomusicologist)
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/a-lecture-demonstration-on-tsugaru-shamisen-and-traditional-japanese-music-featuring-chikuzan-takahashi-ii-tsugaru-shamisen-player-and-tomiko-kojima-ethnomusicologist/
LOCATION:620 Dodge Hall\, 2960 Broadway\, New York\, NY\, 10027\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20000129T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20000129T163000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180223T173036Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220308T221031Z
UID:86-949136400-949163400@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Rare Books Workshop with Prof. Jun Suzuki (National Institute of Japanese Literature)
DESCRIPTION:Workshop with Professor Jun Suzuki
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/rare-books-workshop/
LOCATION:403 Kent Hall (EALAC Lounge)\, 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Workshop
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:19991119T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:19991119T180000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180223T164953Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180223T175308Z
UID:80-943034400-943034400@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Satsuma Biwa
DESCRIPTION:Yoshinori Fumon sensei \nLecture & Demonstration of the Satsuma Biwa by Prof. Hugh de Ferranti (University of Michigan)\, followed by a concert of Satsuma Biwa narratives by the eminent artist Yoshinori Fumon
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/satsuma-biwa/
LOCATION:555 Lerner Hall\, 115th Street and Broadway\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:19991116T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:19991116T180000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180223T164736Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200707T175405Z
UID:76-942775200-942775200@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Lecture by Jakuchō Setouchi\, "Nunhood and The Tale of Genji"
DESCRIPTION:Jakucho Setouchi \nJakuchō Setouchi\, a Buddhist nun\, is a distinguished novelist and the author of the best-selling translation of the Tale of Genji into the modern Japanese language. She also wrote the novels The End of Summer and Beauty in Disarray.
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/nunhood-and-the-tale-of-genji/
LOCATION:Philosophy Hall Lounge\, 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:19990921T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:19990921T180000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180223T164314Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200630T151309Z
UID:73-937936800-937936800@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Lecture by Hiroaki Sato\, "Sexuality in Modern Japanese Women's Poetry"
DESCRIPTION:Lecture by the eminent poet and translator Hiroaki Sato
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/sexuality-in-modern-japanese-womens-poetry/
LOCATION:403 Kent Hall (EALAC Lounge)\, 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:19990916
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:19990918
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20200630T151222Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200707T175307Z
UID:5930-937440000-937612799@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Programs with Chief Abbot Keido Fukushima\, Tofukuji Monastery\, Kyoto - “Zen of the Sixth Patriarch Eno”
DESCRIPTION:Chief Abbot Keido Fukushima\, Tofukuji Monastery\, Kyoto\, Japan. \nAbbott Keido Fukushima \nSeptember 16\n12:00-1:15pm Lecture: “Zen of the Sixth Patriarch Eno” (Lecture in Japanese)\n1:15-1:45pm Open discussion\n4:00-5:45pm Zen calligraphy demonstration \nSeptember 17\n3:00-5:00pm Instructional Zazen Meditation Session (workshop for both newcomers and advanced sitters) \n\nZen Calligraphy Demonstration \n\n 
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/programs-with-chief-abbot-keido-fukushima-tofukuji-monastery-zen-of-the-sixth-patriarch-eno/
LOCATION:403 Kent Hall\, 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:19990301
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:19990302
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20200604T223955Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200707T175236Z
UID:5612-920246400-920332799@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Shakuhachi Master Class with Teruhisa Fukuda
DESCRIPTION:Co-sponsored with Music From Japan
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/shakuhachi-master-class-with-teruhis-fukuda-co-sponsored-with-music-from-japan/
LOCATION:403 Kent Hall\, 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Masterclass
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:19981121T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:19981121T120000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20200630T150203Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200630T150203Z
UID:5925-911642400-911649600@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:30th Anniversary Event: The 700th Anniversary Memorial Service for the Zen Abbess Mugai Nyodai (1223－1298)
DESCRIPTION:無外如大禅尼 (1223－1298) 700年遠忌法要 \n700th Anniversary Memorial Service in honor of the Zen Abbess Mugai Nyodai (1223-1298)\nCommemorating the thirtieth anniversary of its founding in 1968\, the Institute held a series of events November 21-23\, 1998 on The Culture of Convents in Japanese History at Columbia University. \nNuns from the few remaining Imperial Buddhist Convents of Japan now being studied by the Institute visited the United States for the first time to conduct a rare Buddhist ceremony in St. Paul’s Chapel in memory of their spiritual leader\, Zen Abbess Mugai Nyodai\, who is known as the first female Zen master in Japan. The seven-hundredth anniversary of her death in November 1298 was commemorated as part of the Institute’s thirtieth anniversary. \nDuring the memorial service\, nuns from Kyoto\, Osaka\, Nara and Tokyo conducted Buddhist rituals never before seen outside Japan\, and never viewed by the general public even in Japan. Chief Abbot Keido Fukushima of Tofukuji monastery performed a special incense burning and poetic invocation. \nUnprecedented musical offerings were conducted in honor of Abbess Mugai Nyodai\, including not only a world premier of Mind in Mirror: Nyodai’s Dream composed by Yuriko Hase Kojima for shakuhachi\, pipa and bass koto\, but also an offering of songs composed by the medieval German Catholic nun\, Hildegard von Bingen\, performed by members of Columbia’s Collegium Musicum. \nDr. Peter Haskel (First Zen Institute of America) chanted The Heart Sutra\, and words and poetry were offered by Prof. Barbara Ruch (Institute Director); Dr. George Rupp (Columbia University President); Ambassador Seiichiro Otsuka (Consul General of Japan in New York); Rev. T. Kenjitsu Nakagaki (Buddhist Council of New York); The Very Rev. James Parks Morton (Interfaith Center of New York); and High Priest Shunsho Manabe (Kanagawa Prefectural Kanazawa Bunko Museum). (The full text of these remarks can be seen in the Program of the Memorial Service.) \nThe entire ceremony took place in front of a Buddhist altar arranged before an exact replica of the thirteenth-century chinso portrait statue of Abbess Mugai Nyodai. The replica\, the original of which is designated an Important Cultural Treasure and enshrined in a Kyoto convent\, was lent to the memorial service by its owner\, the Kanagawa Prefectural Kanazawa Bunko Museum. \nLed by Abbess Shozui Rokujo of Domyoji Convent\, the nuns’ rituals included a rare performance of the scattering of paper lotus petals in a circumambulation to gagaku music. \nAt the conclusion of the two-hour service\, more than 200 guests from around the world offered incense at the altar in honor of Abbess Mugai. Following the memorial service\, the Buddhist clergy and special memorial service guests participated in a traditional tea ceremony provided by the Urasenke Chanoyu Center of New York in the Rotunda Gallery of Low Memorial Library.
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/30th-anniversary-event-the-700th-anniversary-memorial-service-for-the-zen-abbess-mugai-nyodai-1223%ef%bc%8d1298/
LOCATION:St. Paul’s Chapel\, Columbia University\, 1160 Amsterdam Ave\, New York\, NY\, 10027\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:19981121
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:19981124
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20190722T204522Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200630T145755Z
UID:826-911606400-911865599@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:30th Anniversary Event: International Symposium "The Culture of Convents in Japanese History"
DESCRIPTION:国際シンポジウム『日本史の中の尼寺文化』 \nInternational Symposium: “The Culture of Convents in Japanese History”\nSince the 6th century royal women have played key roles in the establishment of Buddhism and the founding of monasteries and convents in Japan. They continued to do so during medieval times when Buddhism\, combined with native Shinto beliefs\, became virtually universal. Then\, from the 13th century until the overthrow of the Tokugawa Shogunate in 1868\, daughters of emperors and shoguns became the abbesses of an elite network of Buddhist convents that came to be known as monzeki amadera or imperial convents. \nWhen these women took the tonsure and assumed leadership of these religious institutions\, they brought with them\, as if a dowry to a marriage\, the highest cultural products of their age – superb furnishings\, libraries of books\, secular and religious scrolls\, paintings\, screens\, lacquer ware\, utensils for the spiritual disciplines of tea and flower arrangement\, and multitudinous other works of art—so much so that these convents over the centuries became known as bikuni gosho or “nun’s palaces.” Once a woman took the tonsure\, her magnificent secular robes remained treasures of the convent. If she had entered as a child\, her exquisite toys and dolls\, likewise\, were treated with great care and preserved. In short\, these convents are today like small\, locked jewel boxes filled with the pearls and precious stones of historic data\, somehow forgotten\, waiting to be rediscovered. \nIn 1868 the Japanese government established a policy of separation between the Shinto and Buddhist faiths and banished Buddhism from the court. Royal women were forbidden to become Buddhist nuns\, and these historical convents at once lost not only imperial and shogunal patronage but also an extraordinary pool of highly educated aristocratic women to serve as abbesses. Postwar land reform undermined their existence further by depriving the convents of the income-producing estates that had been willed to them by believers. Historically\, they have had no “congregations” to rely upon. \nIn Japan\, where culture is so carefully treasured\, it is amazing to discover that these extraordinary\, unique convents became the victim of 19th-century politics\, were divested of imperial patronage\, and as institutions for women\, were ignored by male scholars. Yet the convents represent not only one of Japan’s most extraordinary historic monuments\, but also institutions unique in all of world history. Today\, each of these convents is a private temple-residence with only one or two nuns\, and those with only tenuous ties to the former aristocracy. Unlike most famed monastery-temples for monks in Kyoto today\, therefore\, the imperial convents are not open to the public except on very rare occasions. \nThe women now who have decided to become Buddhist nuns and devote themselves to life careers in the imperial convents that have survived are vital spiritual and cultural guardians of one of the most extraordinary of institutions in Japanese history. Their challenge is to preserve the great treasures and traditions left to them by royal women of the past – and they must do so having been deprived\, by dint of 19th-and 20th-century politics\, of the intellectual and financial patronage of Japan’s elite. We are deeply grateful\, therefore\, for the privilege extended to the Institute for Medieval Japanese Studies that has allowed us to begin to examine their great store of records and view the treasures of Japanese cultural history related to the generations of powerful women who became nuns there. \nIt was in 1993 that the Institute for Medieval Japanese Studies became aware of the severely threatened state of these extraordinary temple-convents and was privileged to obtain the permission of the abbesses to begin to examine their great store of unstudied records and to view their treasures. The problems of photography and restoration proved to be extremely urgent. Her Majesty Empress Michiko learned of the Institute’s work and its severe financial constraints and in 1999 gave personal support to the work\, enlisting as well the expertise and assistance of the eminent artist Ikuo Hirayama\, head of the Foundation for Cultural Heritage. \nWith that Foundation’s support we began the delicate task of assisting the abbesses of the thirteen remaining imperial convents to preserve and restore their precious treasures. \nIn 2000 the World Monuments Fund of New York\, which has worked for nearly four decades on over 400 important and imperiled works of art and architecture in over 80 countries\, joined hands with us in support of the restoration of the convents’ historically unique architectural structures and gardens. On display in the Rotunda of Low Memorial Library are “before and after” photographs of our first architectural restoration\, that of the Amida Chapel at Hōkyōji Imperial Convent\, which was the private worship chapel of Hōkyōji’s abbess\, Princess Kin no Miya\, daughter of Emperor Kōkaku (1774-1840). Our long-term goal is to repair and restore all thirteen of the remaining imperial Buddhist convents\, which are one of Japan’s rare “endangered species.” \nHōkyōji Imperial Convent \nHōkyōji convent traces its history back to its status as a tatchū or sub-temple\, then called Fukuniji\, belonging to the great temple-convent Keiaiji\, which had been founded in the 13th century by the Rinzai Zen Abbess Mugai Nyodai. Keiaiji subsequently enjoyed a reputation as the highest-ranking “Five Mountain” Zen convent in medieval Kyoto. Fukuniji had fallen into disrepair in the 14th century and is believed to have been restored by Princess Karin no Miya\, daughter of Emperor Kōgon (1313-1364)\, who had become the nun Egon there. A statue of the bodhisattva Kannon holding a mirror that had been caught up in fishing nets in Ise bay was donated to the convent\, and as a result Egon renamed the convent Hōkyōji (Temple of the Treasured Mirror). \nHōkyōji subsequently had close ties to the Ashikaga shogunal house and was led by women from the shogunal family. From the 17th century on\, however\, beginning with the nun Kyūgon\, daughter of Emperor Gomizuno’o\, the position of abbess was held by a succession of imperial princesses. Although Keiaiji burned in the late medieval wars\, many of its sub-temples preserved its treasures\, and under Hōkyōji’s abbess Richū-ni\, another daughter of Emperor Gomizuno’o\, an upsurge in the veneration of Keiaiji\, Abbess Mugai Nyodai occurred. \nHōkyōji houses many decorative court dolls as well as many toy dolls cherished by emperors\, empresses and princesses. In spring and fall it holds a public exhibition of these treasured dolls and has gained the affectionate nickname “The Doll Temple” (Ningyō-dera). Every October it also holds an annual Buddhist funeral service for dolls that during the year have suffered fatal mishaps and are brought to the convent by their children-owners. \nThe convent is also famous for its flowering fruit trees\, lawns of hair moss\, and seasonal gardens unique to the convent. For a century and a half each abbess has gathered the seeds and hand-cultivated a rare variety of ribboned pinks that were presented to the convent by Emperor Kōkaku during the 18th century\, and yearly they still bloom anew. \nThe World Monuments Fund has joined hands with the Institute so as to actualize the restoration of Japan’s thirteen remaining imperial convents whose existence\, little known even in Japan\, hovers on the edge of extinction. These world heritage historical treasures of architecture and gardens are cursed with the present-day dual burden of being\, on the one hand\, institutions by and for women and\, on the other hand\, having been politically and economically amputated by 19th-century government fiat from their imperial base. \nThe Amida Chapel at at Hōkyōji imperial convent was selected as a pilot architectural and interior restoration project in our partnership with World Monument Fund. This restoration\, which was completed in August of 2003\, is the first milestone in the journey to preserve these jewel-like treasures. We hope the reader of these words will help to fund us on this journey. \nThe Amida Imperial Chapel at Hōkyōji \nIt was the tradition of Japanese courts for many centuries not only to give over private villas to be dedicated as monastic temple convents\, but in some cases\, to have an entire building or a room dismantled from the imperial palace complex itself and to donate it to an existing temple-convent. It is sometimes referred to as a “Moving” Architectural Tradition. This symbolic relationship between court and convent means that in some cases historic rooms used by emperors or empresses in the palace can be viewed and appreciated now only in their present convent setting\, since subsequent fires destroyed the palace itself. \nThis is true of the Amida Chapel at Hōkyōji. In 1847 this Imperial Chapel was installed in Hōkyōji\, having been dismantled from its original location in the Imperial Palace\, Kyoto. It was transferred to the convent under imperial order\, the dying wish of Emperor Ninkō\, whose sister\, Princess Kin no miya had taken the tonsure at Hōkyōji as the nun Rikin. The Emperor’s Imperial Chapel became her private chapel. It houses an image of Amida that had been created by or commissioned by their father\, Emperor Kōkaku (reigned 1779-1817)\, who was a devout practitioner of Buddhism. After his father’s death\, Emperor Ninkō\, likewise\, a fervent believer\, had worshipped before this image in his own private quarters of the palace until his death. \nWith Profound Gratitude \nWe announce the names of major funders of our Imperial Buddhist Convent Research and Restoration Projects \nHer Majesty\, Empress Michiko of Japan \nand \n(in alphabetical order) \nBussho gonenkai\nThe Freeman Foundation\nChief Abbot Keidō Fukushima\nKajima Corporation\nMs. Izumi Koishi\nKyoto Lions Club\nMedieval Japanese Studies Foundation\nMr. Takashi Saitō\nShibunkaku Group\nShiseido Company\, Ltd.\nShinji Shūmeikai\nShoyeido Corporation\nTaiko Trading Company\, Ltd.\nProf. Toshikazu Shiokawa\nMs. Shizuko Tani\nTides Foundation\nToraya Confectionery\, Ltd.\nToshiba International Foundation for the Arts\nThe World Monuments Fund
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/international-symposium-the-culture-of-convents-in-japanese-history/
LOCATION:The Kellogg Center\, School of International and Public Affairs\, 420 West 118th St.\, 15th Floor\, New York\, NY\, 10027\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:19981113
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:19990201
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20190722T204614Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200630T150623Z
UID:829-910915200-917827199@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:30th Anniversary Event: Exhibition "Images of the Dharma: Buddhist Art from Columbia University Collections"
DESCRIPTION:『仏法の具現 －コロンビア大楽蔵の仏教美術展－』 \nImages of the Dharma: Buddhist Art from Columbia University Collections\nThe Institute for Medieval Japanese Studies\, founded in 1968\, celebrated its thirtieth anniversary with a wide range of activities commemorating the seven-hundredth anniversary of the death\, in November 1298\, of Abbess Mugai Nyodai\, the Zen master whose life and legacy have been the inspiration for much of the work of the Institute during the past decade. \nAbbess Mugai Nyodai (1223-1298) was a disciple and spiritual heir of the Chinese Rinzai Zen Monk Wu-hsüeh Tsü-yuan (known in Japan as Mugaku Sogen) [Bukkô Kokushi]); the founding Abbess of Keiaiji Convent\, the head temple-complex of the Five Mountain Rinzai Zen Convent Association; and the spiritual matriarch of many of the remaining Imperial Convents today. The discovery of the magnificent life-size thirteenth-century chinsô portrait sculpture of Abbess Mugai Nyodai was one of the initial revelatory events that drew scholarly attention to the wholly ignored female side of Buddhist institutional history and\, more broadly\, to the role of women in Japanese religious history. In many ways\, therefore\, she has been the Institute’s ‘patro-saint’. \nWe invite you to celebrate with us our past thirty years and to share in our ongoing goals and aspirations. As we approach the millennium\, we hope you will join us and support our innovative programs so as to bring to the center stage of world culture those extraordinary areas of Japanese culture which remain too often neglected.
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/images-of-the-dharma-buddhist-art-from-columbia-university-collections/
LOCATION:Rotunda Gallery\, Low Library\, 116th Street and Broadway\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:19981106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:19981205
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20190722T204641Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200630T150516Z
UID:831-910310400-912815999@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:30th Anniversary Event: Exhibition "Days of Discipline and Grace: Treasures from the Imperial Buddhist Convents of Kyoto"
DESCRIPTION:『尼門跡寺院の秘宝 －修業と優しみの日々－』 \nDays of Discipline and Grace: Treasures from the Imperial Buddhist Convents of Kyoto\nDisciple and spiritual heir of the Chinese Rinzai Zen monk Wu-hsueh Tsu-yuan (known in Japan as Mugaku Sogen [Bukko Kokushi]); founding Abbess of Keiaiji Convent\, head temple-complex of the Five Mountain Rinzai Zen Convent Association; and spiritual matriarch of many of the remaining Imperial Convents today. \nIn the thirteenth century an extraordinarily realistic portrait statue (chinso chokoku) was carved depicting Abbess Mugai Nyodai in her seventies. Chinso statues are a category of remarkably realistic life-sized statues of the seated figures of historical Zen masters made as substitutes for the living person to convey the essence of the Zen master to his disciples after his death. This statue\, the only thirteenth-century portrait statue of a female Zen master extant\, has been declared an “Important Cultural Treasure” by the Japanese government. The original is an object of veneration in a Kyoto convent\, but for protection\, an exact replica was made and is kept by the Kanagawa Prefectural Kanazawa Bunko Museum. \nThe Institute for Medieval Japanese Studies is profoundly grateful to the Kanazawa Bunko for having lent to us the statue for the Abbess’s 700th anniversary memorial service. The service was conducted in front of the statue and it was then displayed in the exhibition “Days of Discipline and Grace:  Treasures from the Imperial Buddhist Convents of Kyoto” in the C. V. Starr East Asian Library.
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/days-of-discipline-and-grace-treasures-from-the-imperial-buddhist-convents-of-kyoto/
LOCATION:Kress Room and Rare Book Gallery\, CV. Starr East Asian Library\, 300 Kent Hall\, 1140 Amsterdam Ave\, New York\, NY\, 10027\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:19981019T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:19981019T180000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20190722T204729Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200707T175120Z
UID:833-908820000-908820000@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Lecture by Prof. Kazuaki Komine\, "Medieval Japanese Prophetic Writing (miraiki)"
DESCRIPTION:Professor Kazuaki Komine\, Rikkyō University\, Tokyo (Lecture in Japanese)\n小峯和明先生　立教大学教授\n「中世の未来記をめぐって」
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/professor-kazuaki-komine-rikkyo-university-tokyo-medieval-japanese-profetic-writing-miraiki/
LOCATION:403 Kent Hall\, 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:19980305
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:19980307
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180222T220933Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200708T210957Z
UID:50-889056000-889228799@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Workshop - "SHINTO STUDIES IN THE WEST: Toward a Re-examination of University Curricula and Future Research Directions"
DESCRIPTION:The Institute for Medieval Japanese Studies will host an informal workshop on \nSHINTO STUDIES IN THE WEST:\nToward a Re-examination of University Curricula and Future Research Directions \nOpening Session: \nThursday\, March 5\, 1998\n7:30 pm \nIllustrated Lecture (in Japanese) by Shunshō Manabe \, Director\nKanagawa Prefectural Kanazawa Bunko\n“Kanazawa bunko no mikkyō to chūsei shinto shiryô”\n真鍋俊照先生　神奈川県立金沢文庫長\n「金沢文庫の密教と中世神道資料」 \nWorkshop (in English): \nFriday\, March 6\, 1998\n10:00 am – 5:00 pm \nExcept for the keynote presentation by Professor Manabe\, there will be no formal papers\, but participants are free to prepare oral presentations on issues related to the theme of the workshop so that we may discuss them fully. It is hoped that the workshop will review the state of the field and will bring to the fore the problems that now hinder advancement of this field. Some areas for discussion will include the political and strategic difficulties of doing research in Japan on Shinto; women and Shinto in pre-modern Japan; Shinto and the Japanese literary canon; art historical problems; anthropological problems; and theoretical conflicts in Western academia. We hope to be able to make recommendations for future research projects and set up a network for the exchange of information and support. Graduate students too are warmly welcomed. \nFunding is not available for participants’ transportation or lodging except for those who will definitely be making a presentation.
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/shinto-studies-in-the-west/
LOCATION:403 Kent Hall (EALAC Lounge)\, 116th Street and Amsterdam Avenue\, New York\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Workshop
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:19980227T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:19980227T190000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20180222T220256Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230427T192450Z
UID:46-888595200-888606000@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:A Celebration of the Life and Music of Leonard C. Holvik (1918-1996)
DESCRIPTION:In gratitude for receipt of the \nLeonard C. Holvik Traditional Japanese Music Collection\n(Japanese instruments\, scores\, books\, audio and video tapes\, and manuscripts) \nThe Institute for Medieval Japanese Studies will hold a \nCELEBRATION OF THE LIFE AND MUSIC OF LEONARD C. HOLVIK (1918 – 1996) \nProfessor Emeritus of Music and Choral Director\, Earlham College\, Richmond\, Indiana\, and Teacher and Composer of Traditional Japanese Music at Columbia University\, New York City \nAll are welcome. \nCommemoration: St. Paul’s Chapel Columbia University 117th Street & Amsterdam Avenue 4:00 – 5:30 pm *Offerings of Words and Music \nReception: Gabe M. Weiner Music & Arts Library Columbia University\, Dodge Hall\, 7th Floor 116th Street & Broadway 5:30 – 7:00 pm \n\nExhibition of selected items from the Collection\nInstrumental demonstrations on the koto and shakuhachi\n\nThe Japanese musical instruments\, scores\, audio and video tapes\, records\, books and other materials received from the estate of Professor Holvik will be used to develop a curriculum in Japanese music both historically and in performance. \nIn Commemoration of the Receipt of the Leonard C. Holvik Japanese Music Collection.\nProgram and Reception with shakuhachi and koto solos and duets
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/celebration-of-the-life-and-music-of-leonard-c-holvik/
LOCATION:St. Paul’s Chapel\, Columbia University\, 1160 Amsterdam Ave\, New York\, NY\, 10027\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:19980224
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:19980225
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20200624T142739Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200707T175052Z
UID:5871-888278400-888364799@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Program with Chief Abbot Keido Fukushima\, Tofukuji Monastery\, Kyoto - "Bodhidharma’s Zen"
DESCRIPTION:Chief Abbot Keido Fukushima\, Tofukuji Monastery\, Kyoto\, Japan. \nFebruary 24\nLecture: “Bodhidharma’s Zen” (Lecture in Japanese) \nFebruary 25\nZen calligraphy demonstration and Zazen workshop
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/chief-abbot-keido-fukushima-tofukuji-monastery-kyoto-bodhidharmas-zen/
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:19971114T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:19971114T180000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20190722T204757Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200630T145008Z
UID:835-879530400-879530400@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Lecture by Prof. Paula Arai\, "Soto Zen Nuns: Contemporary Rituals and Practices; One Perspective on Gender and Religion"
DESCRIPTION:Professor Paula Arai\, Religious Studies Department\, Vanderbilt University
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/professor-paula-arai-religious-studies-department-vanderbilt-university-soto-zen-nuns-contemporary-rituals-and-practices-one-perspective-on-gender-and-religion/
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:19971017T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:19971017T180000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20190722T204827Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200630T144947Z
UID:837-877111200-877111200@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Lecture by Barbara Ambros\, "Shogunal Prodigies: Zenkōji Nuns during the Early Modern Period"
DESCRIPTION:Barbara Ambros\, Department of Religion\, Harvard University
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/ms-barbara-ambros-department-of-religion-havard-university-shogunal-prodigies-zenkoji-nuns-during-the-early-modern-period/
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:19971009T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:19971009T193000
DTSTAMP:20260406T111715
CREATED:20190722T204853Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200630T144924Z
UID:839-876425400-876425400@www.imjs-jchi.org
SUMMARY:Lecture by Prof. James Dobbins\, "Women\, Sexuality and Pure Land Buddhism"
DESCRIPTION:Professor James Dobbins\, Department of Religion\, Oberlin College\, Ohio
URL:https://www.imjs-jchi.org/event/professor-james-dobbins-department-of-religion-oberlin-college-ohio-women-sexuality-and-pure-land-buddhism/
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR