<div dir="ltr">I take the liberty to post the following, as music is often part of cinema as well, and the defender's topic especially might touch issues some on the list are researching in relation to Japanese film history.<br>---<br><p> Public examination of doctoral thesis, April 20</p><div class="gmail-text_exposed_show"><p>
Thesis title: "'March from the Age of Imitation to the Age of
Creation:' Musical Representations of Japan in the Work and Thought of
Shinkō sakkyokuka renmei, 1930-1940"<br> Respondent: Lasse Lehtonen (University of Helsinki)<br> Opponent: Professor Emerita Bonnie C. Wade (University of California, Berkeley)<br> Time: Friday, April 20th, 2018 at 12:15 p.m.<br> Place: University of Helsinki Main Building (Fabianinkatu 33), lecture room 12</p><p> Short description:<br>
Japan in the 1930s was a culturally complex land combining various
syntheses and juxtapositions of Western and Japanese culture and
thought. One phenomenon that exemplifies this is Japanese-style
composition—here defined as music based on Western principles of
composition but adopting elements from Japanese music and culture—which
became a notable and debated new trend among Japanese composers in the
late 1930s. Through the analysis of the work and thought of the composer
group Shinkō sakkyokuka renmei (Federation of Emerging Composers), this
thesis examines Japanese-style composition as a phenomenon in the
1930s: what it was musically, why it emerged, and how it related to the
social developments of the time.<br></p></div><div>-- <br><div class="gmail_signature">Eija Niskanen<br></div><div class="gmail_signature">University of Helsinki<br><br></div>
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