1st Edition

The Japanese and Europe Images and Perceptions

By Bert Edstrom Copyright 2000
    300 Pages
    by Routledge

    300 Pages
    by Routledge

    Not another 'misunderstandings and misconceptions' volume, but a wide-ranging review of intellectual traditions, mutual and alternative images, and case studies of people and events that mirror the focus of this book.

    Jill Fields, Introduction Section I: Emerging--Views from the Periphery 1. Gail Levin, Feminist Class, edited by Melissa Morris 2. Laura Meyer and Faith Wilding, Collaboration and Conflict in the Fresno Feminist Art Program: An Experiment in Feminist Pedagogy 3. Nancy Youdelman and Karen LeCocq, Reflections on the First Feminist Art Program 4. Moira Roth, Interview with Suzanne Lacy, edited by Laura Meyer 5. Paula Harper,The First Feminist Art Program: A View from the 1980s 6. Judy Chicago, Feminist Art Education: Made in California Section II: Re-Centering--Theory and Practice 7. Valerie Smith, Abundant Evidence: Black Women Artists of the 1960s and 1970s 8. Jennie Klein, 'Teaching to Transgress:' Rita Yokoi and the Fresno Feminist Art Program 9. Lillian Faderman, Joyce Aiken: Thirty Years of Feminist Art and Pedagogy in Fresno 10. Phranc, Your Vagina Smells Fine Now Naturally 11. Terezita Romo, Collective History: Las Mujeres Muralistas 12. Joanna Gardner-Huggett, The Woman's Art Cooperative Space as a Site for Social Change: Artemisia Gallery, Chicago (1973-1979) 13. Gloria Orenstein, Salon Women of the Second Wave: Honoring the Great Matrilineage of Creators of Culture 14. Katie Cercone, The New York Feminist Art Institute, 1979-1990 15. Nancy Azara and Darla Bjork, Our Journey to the New York Feminist Art Institute Section III: Picturing: Transformation 16. Sylvia Savala, How I Became a Chicana Feminist Artist 17. Lydia Nakashima Degarrod, Searching for Catalyst and Empowerment: The Asian American Women Artists Association, 1989-Present 18. Miriam Schaer, Notes of a Dubious Daughter: My Unfinished Journey Towards Feminism 19. Tressa Berman and Nancy Mithlo, 'The Way Things Are:' Curating Place as Feminist Practice in American Indian Women's Art 20. Ying-Ying Chien, Marginal Discourse and Pacific Rim Women's Art 21. Jo Anna Isaak, Gaia Cianfanelli and Caterina Iaquinta, Curatorial Practice as Collaboration in the U.S. and Italy 22. Beverly Naidus, Feminist Activist Art Pedagogy

    Biography

    Bert Edstrom

    'The present volume takes a broadly interdisciplinary approach. Many of the papers are interesting and provocative, some indeed are excellent, and all contribute to a highly desirable broadening of the study of the history of Japanese foreign relations.' Japanese Studies

    'This volume is timely and should be of considerable interest to academics with a concern for the historical and contemporary development of Japan's international relations.' - Asian Studies Review