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UID:20241105T2030Z-1730838643.9569-EO-64161-18@10.19.146.14
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTAMP:20260314T014411Z
CREATED:20241105T173916Z
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20241127T123000
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SUMMARY: Navigating Narratives: Tsurayuki’s Tosa Diary as History and Ficti
 on with Gustav Heldt
DESCRIPTION: JAPAN STUDIES LUNCHTIME SPEAKERS SERIES\, 2024-2025 The Japan 
 Studies Lunchtime Speaker Series welcomes all for a lecture and discussion 
 with Dr. Gustav Heldt on his new monograph\, Navigating Narratives: Tsurayu
 ki’s Tosa Diary as History and Fiction.  Drawing on both contemporaneous hi
 storical sources and modern literary criticism\, Navigating Narratives offe
 rs unique insights into Heian Japan through […]
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <p style="text-align: center\;"><strong>JAPAN
  STUDIES LUNCHTIME SPEAKERS SERIES\, 2024-2025</strong></p><p><img class="a
 ligncenter wp-image-64162 size-full" src="https://asia.cms.arts.ubc.ca/wp-c
 ontent/uploads/sites/18/2024/11/241127_Heldt-book-talk.jpg" alt="" width="1
 280" height="720" /></p><p>The Japan Studies Lunchtime Speaker Series welco
 mes all for a lecture and discussion with Dr. Gustav Heldt on his new monog
 raph\, <i>Navigating Narratives: Tsurayuki’s </i>Tosa Diary<i> as History a
 nd Fiction. </i></p><p>Drawing on both contemporaneous historical sources a
 nd modern literary criticism\, <i>Navigating Narratives</i> offers unique i
 nsights into Heian Japan through a close reading of one of its most enigmat
 ic and consequential texts. Named after the province once governed by its c
 reator\, Ki no Tsurayuki (d. 946)\, <i>Tosa nikki</i> (The Tosa Diary) purp
 orts to be the record of a voyage kept by an anonymous woman in the entoura
 ge of an ex-governor returning to the capital. This split between fictional
  narrator and historical author has usually led readers to place the diary 
 in narratives privileging one of those two figures\, with the result that <
 i>Tosa nikki</i> has been valued primarily as either the first Heian woman’
 s memoir or the last aesthetic manifesto of a man whose writings shaped the
  Japanese poetic tradition for centuries afterward. <i>Navigating Narrative
 s</i> attempts to steer away from the anachronistic assumptions and author-
 centric readings informing these accounts. By focusing instead on the diary
 ’s reception as a parody by its earliest readers\, Heldt argues that it mer
 its attention for the discursive practices\, representational conventions\,
  and non-elite social contexts it illuminates as the world’s first short no
 velistic work of fiction.</p><p>This talk is free and open to the public. N
 o registration is required.</p><p><strong>Date & Time:<br /></strong>Wednes
 day\, November 27\, 2024 | 12:30pm – 2:00pm</p><p><strong>Location:<br /></
 strong>CK Choi Building\, Room 351\, 1855 West Mall\, Vancouver</p><h3>Spea
 ker</h3><p><b>Gustav Heldt </b>is a professor of Japanese literature at the
  University of Virginia. His research focuses on early Japanese mythology\,
  Heian vernacular narratives\, <i>waka </i>poetry and poetics\, and Japan’s
  larger place in early medieval global history. His publications include a 
 monograph on the connections between ritual\, community and authority in ea
 rly Heian <i>waka</i> poetry (<i>The Pursuit of Harmony: Poetry and Power i
 n Early Heian Japan</i>\, Cornell East Asia Program\, 2008)\, a translation
  of the earliest surviving Japanese narrative (<i>The</i> Kojiki:<i> An Acc
 ount of Ancient Matters</i>\, Columbia University Press\, 2014)\, a co-edit
 ed collection of essays about cross-cultural connections in early medieval 
 Eurasia (<i>China and Beyond in the Mediaeval Period: Cultural Crossings an
 d Inter-regional Connections</i>\, Cambria Press\, 2014) and a monograph on
  the earliest extant vernacular Japanese diary (<i>Navigating Narratives: T
 surayuki</i><i>’</i><i>s </i>Tosa Diary<i> as History and Fiction</i>\, Har
 vard Asia Center\, 2024).</p>
CATEGORIES:Featured Events,Featured Japanese
LOCATION:Room 351\, C.K. Choi Building
GEO:49.267266;-123.257944
URL;VALUE=URI:https://asia.ubc.ca/events/event/navigating-narratives-gustav
 -heldt/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://asia.cms.arts.ubc.ca/wp-content/uploads/sites/18/2024/11/241127_Heldt-book-talk.jpg
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DTSTART:20241103T090000
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