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Temple University, Japan Campus Pacific Rim Lecture
Series
Dogs and Demons: Tales from the Dark Side of Japan
For Immediate Release
Tokyo, July 1, 2003—Temple University, Japan Campus (TUJ)
is pleased to announce that it will host a free, public lecture
by Alex Kerr on Monday, July 7, from 7 p.m. in room 207 as part
of its Pacific Rim Lecture Series.
Alex Kerr is a renowned cultural critic whose work deals with modernization
and its effects on Japanese culture and aesthetics. His most recent
book, Dogs and Demons: Tales from the Dark Side of Japan,
is a provocative study of doken kokka, a source of social
change that renders traditional culture irrelevant and subservient
to the demands of construction companies and political interest
groups and of a political system dependent on largesse.
Kerr, who became a resident in Japan in 1964, at one time managed
the school of traditional Japanese arts at the Oomoto Foundation
in Kyoto, where he trained in calligraphy, kabuki, and tea ceremony.
This experience formed the basis for Kerr’s Lost Japan,
a nonfiction book published in Japan. Lost Japan documents
Kerr’s experience as an art scholar, teacher, antique dealer,
and critic in the small village of Kameoka just outside Kyoto, and
with it Kerr became the first foreigner to win the Shincho Gakugei
Literary Prize.
Kerr’s books have been well received internationally, with
reviews in the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal,
among others. In Japan, Kerr lectures extensively and frequently
appears on NHK television and radio. He continues to attempt to
reclaim traditional culture through the Chiiori Project, the revitalization
of a mountain village in Iya Valley, Shikoku, which was featured
in Architectural Digest (August 2002). Kerr also continues
to live in Kyoto, Japan, but now spreads his time between a second
home in Bangkok, Thailand.
Reservations for and information about Alex Kerr’s lecture
are available through TUJ’s Information Center, at Tel. 0120-86-1026.
For further information about the Pacific Rim Lecture Series, contact
Kyle Cleveland in the Student Services office. E-mail kyle@tuj.ac.jp,
or Tel. 03-5441-9800, ext. 709.
For all media-related inquiries, please contact: Communications & Marketing Support
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