Online Book Workshop

Minority Literatures of East Asia: Diversity and Difference Workshop Series - Tibetan Literature

 

 

 March 27, 2025

6:00pm - 7:30pm (Eastern Time)

 

Join NCTA facilitator Dr. Shawn Bender (Dickinson College) and Dr. Christopher Peacock (Dickinson College) for a K-12 Educator focused workshop and discussion on Tibetan literature. 

Great works of literature like The Tale of Genji and Dream of the Red Chamber have influenced the way that many of us think about the culture, history, politics, and traditions of China and Japan. Yet these and other canonical works are largely the products of highly educated social elites. What might culture, history, politics, and tradition look like when viewed from the vantage point of marginalized or disempowered populations within those countries? This is the question that underlies this thematically linked series of book workshops on minority literatures of East Asia. The series will introduce teacher-participants to literary works by members of Tibetan and Uyghur populations in China as well as members of Zainichi (or resident) Korean and Okinawan communities in Japan. Each workshop will feature a presentation by an expert in the field on several focal short stories or chapter excerpts, in addition to time for Q&A and facilitated dialogue on potential classroom adaptation. Teacher-participants will be asked to prepare select materials in advance.

Educators can register for individual workshops or choose to register for the entire series. For each workshop in the series that an educator attends, they will receive a complementary book recommended by our expert presenters and a certificate of completion at the conclusion of the entire workshop series. PA teachers will also receive Act 48 hours.

 

After you register, we will send you a confirmation email. Educators who attend and participate in a workshop will receive a Certificate Completion and a copy of a book recommended by our speakers focusing on the literature of that minority group.  

 
You will also receive information on accessing the Zoom meeting for the mini-course after registering.
 
If you have any questions, please contact Dr. Shawn Bender as benders@dickinson.edu
 
 
 
Learn More About Our Other Sessions in this Workshop Series

All Workshop Sessions will take place on Zoom from 6:00pm - 7:30pm (Eastern Time)

  • March 27, 2025: Tibetan Literature (feat. Dr. Christopher Peacock, Dickinson College)

  • April 22, 2025: Uyghur Literature (feat. Dr. Darren Byler, Simon Fraser University)

  • May 15, 2025: Zainichi Korean Literature (feat. Dr. Cindi Textor, University of Utah)

  • June 17, 2025: Okinawan Literature (feat. Davinder Bhowmik, University of Washington)

 
 

Learn More About our Presenters & Facilitator

 
 

 

 

Moderator/Organizer: Dr. Shawn Bender is Associate Professor of East Asian Studies at Dickinson College. Trained as a cultural anthropologist, Dr. Bender teaches courses on contemporary Japan, cultures of care and the family, and the social effects of digital technology. His research examines the use of robotics in fields as diverse as eldercare and agriculture. He is the author of Taiko Boom: Japanese Drumming in Place and Motion (California, 2012). His most recent book monograph Feeling Machines: Japanese Robotics and the Global Entanglements of More-Than-Human Care is under review at Stanford University Press. 

 

 

 

 

 
 
Featured Presenter: Davinder L. Bhowmik is an associate professor of Japanese at the University of Washington, Seattle. She teaches and publishes research in the field of modern Japanese literature with a specialization in prose fiction from Okinawa, where she was born and lived until the age of 18. Other scholarly interests include regional fiction, the atomic bombings, and Japanese film. Her publications include Islands of Protest: Japanese Literature from Okinawa (co-edited with Steve Rabson, 2016); Writing Okinawa: Narratives of Identity and Resistance (2008); and “Temporal Discontinuity in the Atomic Bomb Fiction of Hayashi Kyōko" (in Ōe and Beyond: Fiction in Contemporary Japan, 1999). Currently she is writing a manuscript on military basetown fiction in Japan.
 
 
 
 
 
Featured Presenter: Darren Byler is Assistant Professor of International Studies at Simon Fraser University. He is a sociocultural anthropologist whose teaching and research examines the dispossession of stateless populations through forms of contemporary capitalism and colonialism in China, Central Asia, and Southeast Asia. He is the author of In the Camps: China’s High-Tech Penal Colony (Columbia Global Reports, 2021) and an ethnographic monograph titled Terror Capitalism: Uyghur Dispossession and Masculinity in a Chinese City (Duke University Press, 2022). His current research interests are focused on infrastructure development and global China in the context of Xinjiang and Malaysia.
 
 
 
 
 
Featured Presenter: Christopher Peacock is an Assistant Professor of East Asian Studies at Dickinson College whose research focuses on modern Chinese and Tibetan literatures. His recent work has examined the interactions between Chinese and Tibetan intellectual traditions in the 20th and 21st centuries, considering how concepts of national identity have taken shape in Tibetan literature in the PRC. As a translator, he has published translations of modern Tibetan writing in a range of journals and literary magazines, as well as the book-length publications The Handsome Monk and Other Stories (Columbia University Press, 2019) and The Red Wind Howls (Columbia University Press, forthcoming), both by Tsering Döndrup, and Tsering Yangkyi’s Flowers of Lhasa (Balestier Press, 2022), the first novel by a Tibetan woman writer translated into English and recipient of a PEN Translates award.
 
 
 
 
 
Featured Presenter: Cindi Textor is Associate Professor in the Department of World Languages and Cultures at the University of Utah. She is the author of Intersectional Incoherence: Zainichi Literature and the Ethics of Illegibility (University of California, 2024), which stages an encounter between the critical discourse on intersectionality and texts produced by Korean subjects of the Japanese empire and their postwar descendants in Japan, known as Zainichi Koreans. Her work on the literary production of the Japanese empire and its postcolonial legacies, including Zainichi and Okinawan fiction, has appeared in positions: asia critique, Journal of Korean Studies, and Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus. She is also the translator of several works of Zainichi fiction, most recently Nabi T’aryŏng and Other Stories by Lee Yangji (Seoul Selection, 2022).
 
 
 
Minority Literatures of East Asia: Diversity and Difference Workshop Series - Tibetan Literature
Thursday, March 27, 2025 - 18:00 to 19:30
Online Book Workshop
Event Location: 
Online via Zoom

Great Books of East Asia Series - Revisiting The Book of Tea: Modern Approaches to a Classic Text

 

Great Books of East Asia Series 

Revisiting The Book of Tea: Modern Approaches to a Classic Text

Thursday, June 20, 2024
 
7:00pm - 9:00pm (Eastern Time)
 
Online via Zoom
 

Okakura Kakuzō’s Book of Tea is a classic expression of the philosophy and aesthetics of Japanese tea ceremony. In this online book workshop, teacher-participants will revisit Okakura's text, placing it into historical context and considering it critically in light of new approaches to understanding Japanese approaches to tea ceremony. 

The online workshop will be led by Dr. Shawn Bender, associate professor of East Asian studies at Dickinson College, and feature a critical presentation on The Book of Tea by Dr. Rebecca Corbett, a scholar of Japanese tea ceremony at the University of Southern California. A session with NCTA Master Teacher Michele Beauchamp focused on potential applications of tea ceremony in the classroom will follow Dr. Corbett's presentation. Teacher-participants will come away from the workshop with a renewed appreciation of this text as well as suggested methods for introducing elements of Japanese tea ceremony into classrooms.

Participants will receive a copy of The Book of Tea, in addition to a Japanese matcha tea set.  

Pennsylvania teachers who complete this workshop will receive two Act 48 hours.  For teachers in other states, we can provide you with a certificate of completion. 

After you register, we will send you a confirmation email and will (depending on your response below) a complimentary copies of the books. Educators who complete the program will receive a Certificate Completion; Pennsylvania teachers will receive Act 48 hours.  You will also receive information on accessing the Zoom meeting for the workshop in a follow-up email. 

Registration Deadline is May 31, 2024

 

Learn More About our Presenters

 

 
Featured speaker: Dr. Rebecca Corbett, University of Southern California (USC), received her PhD from the University of Sydney (2009) and was a Postdoctoral Fellow at Stanford University (2013-2015). Her book Cultivating Femininity: Women and Tea Culture in Edo and Meiji Japan (University of Hawai’i Press, 2018) analyses privately circulated and commercially published texts to show how chanoyu tea practice for women was understood, articulated, and promoted from the eighteenth through early twentieth centuries. Her current projects include a study of the Buddhist nun and artist Tagami Kikusha (1753-1826) and the transmission of her work in modern Japan, and a study of early Western involvement in chanoyu tea practice during the Meiji period (1868-1912). 
 
Dr. Corbett is Japanese Studies Librarian and Director of Special Projects at the University of Southern California Libraries as well as Senior Lecturer in History in the USC Van Hunnick History Department. Her work at USC includes selecting and managing print and digital collections in Japanese; and providing reference and liaison services to support research, teaching, and learning in Japanese Studies. 

 

 

 

Moderator/Organizer: Dr. Shawn Bender is Associate Professor of East Asian Studies at Dickinson College. Trained as a cultural anthropologist, Dr. Bender teaches courses on contemporary Japan, cultures of care and the family, and the social effects of digital technology. His research examines the use of robotics in fields as diverse as eldercare and agriculture. He is the author of Taiko Boom: Japanese Drumming in Place and Motion (California, 2012). His most recent book monograph Feeling Machines: Japanese Robotics and the Global Entanglements of More-Than-Human Care is under review at Stanford University Press. 

 

 

 

 

 

Master Teacher: Michele Beauchamp is an English teacher at Manheim Township High School in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. She received her MEd from the University of Pittsburgh and for the past 25 years she has taught all levels of secondary English Language Arts. She has participated in two NTCA study tours and has taken advantage of numerous opportunities to study about Asia. In 2019 she trained to lead NCTA seminars and has since conducted several presentations and book discussions on East Asian novels and nonfiction texts.

 

 

 
More About Great Books of East Asia Series
 

The Great Books of East Asia is a free book discussion series that will give K-12 educators a chance to delve deeply into important and foundational books from East Asia that they may know of or even teach about but may have never read in an enriching way.  Some books in the series are significant for understanding East Asia or are well known as important works of world literature. Others may not be familiar outside of a particular country but are a central part of that country’s literature.  Participants will be provided with complimentary copies of the books (in translation). The discussions will be led a faculty expert who will provide content and context on the work, and an NCTA master teacher who will discuss ways to incorporate the work into the classroom.

 

Great Books of East Asia Series - Revisiting The Book of Tea: Modern Approaches to a Classic Text
Thursday, June 20, 2024 - 19:00
Online Book Workshop
Event Location: 
Online via Zoom

NCTA Book Discussion Workshop: Ghosts of the Tsunami

April 8, 2021 6:00 - 8:00 pm (Eastern Time) & April 28, 2021 7:30 - 9:00 pm (Eastern Time)

 
On March 11th, ten years will have passed since one of the world’s strongest earthquakes struck near the coast of northeastern Japan, triggering tsunami and a meltdown at the Fukushima Dai-Ichi Nuclear Plant. The events of 3.11, as they are known in Japan, have had a lasting impact on the politics, environment, and collective psyche of the nation. Richard Lloyd Parry’s book Ghosts of the Tsunami chronicles the immediate impact and lingering effects of the wave on one community in northern Japan. Lloyd Parry, Asia editor and Tokyo bureau chief of The Times of London, spent six years traveling to the village of Okawa where the tsunami took a devastating human toll. Beautifully written and deeply researched, Ghosts of the Tsunami renders a local Japanese story of tragedy into a universal tale of trauma, suffering, remembrance, and activism.  
 
This free two-part online book workshop/discussion group for educators will be led by Dr. Shawn Bender of Dickinson College and Ms. Michele Beauchamp, NCTA alum and literature specialist. In the first session on April 8, Dr. Bender will contextualize the book within the larger discourse of 3.11 in Japan and Ms. Beauchamp will discuss ways of integrating the book’s themes into classroom instruction. In the second part of the workshop/discussion group on April 28, Mr. Lloyd Parry will appear in conversation with Dr. Bender and take questions from participants.
 
Both evenings will be conducted via Zoom. Everyone who registers will receive a complimentary copy of the book. Pennsylvania educators who participate in both nights of the workshop will receive ACT 48 Hours (educators from other states will receive a certificate of completion for professional development.)  
 
This book program is open to K-12 educators in our 11 state region (Alabama, Delaware, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia)
 
To register, please click on the link here: https://forms.gle/xW1faFhtfDNK3dr66
 
NCTA Book Discussion Workshop: Ghosts of the Tsunami
Thursday, April 8, 2021 - 18:00 to 20:00
Online Book Workshop
Event Location: 
Online via Zoom