Descubra a los Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/es/journal/author/akiyama-kaori/

Kaori Akiyama


Kaori Akiyama es una investigadora y profesional de museos que nació en la prefectura de Nagano, Japón. Vivió en Hawai'i de 1999 a 2009 y obtuvo una licenciatura en Antropología y un Certificado de Posgrado en Estudios de Museos de la Universidad de Hawai'i en Manoa. Durante ese tiempo, también trabajó en tres museos, incluido el Centro Cultural Japonés de Hawai'i (como investigadora) y el Museo Bernice Pauahi Bishop (como asistente de conservación).

Actualmente, trabaja en el Museo de la ciudad de Matsumoto. En su tiempo libre, escribe artículos en japonés e inglés sobre la cultura y la gente de Hawai'i. Su objetivo es familiarizar a los japoneses con el Hawai'i "real" y su gente, y mejorar la conciencia global sobre las conexiones culturales entre Hawai'i y Japón.

Actualizado en febrero de 2011


Historias de Este Autor

An Exhibit That Brings Japanese Americans Into Japanese History - Part 3 of 3

30 de noviembre de 2011 • Kaori Akiyama

Read part 2 >>Section 3: A Cross Cultural View: The View From People Between Countries To me, the most confusing section of the exhibit was the one entitled “Foreign Correspondents in Occupied Japan,” although it also tried to express the theme of “people who were moving between countries” in the war era. Having no permission for residence in wartime, these correspondents were similar to Japanese in the U.S. at that time. However, the sudden change of the protagonists from “Japanese …

An Exhibit That Brings Japanese Americans Into Japanese History - Part 2 of 3

23 de noviembre de 2011 • Kaori Akiyama

Read part 1 >>Section 2: Repatriation The second section featured a major drama of the exhibition, from the time when the relationship between the U.S. and Japan began to decline until the end of WW2, entitled “Immigrants and the Outbreak of War Between the U.S. and Japan —Anti-Japanese Movements, Incarceration and Repatriation.” Although the section covers a long period with important historical events, the narrative relied on the presence of the Repatriation Ships to show the dynamism of the movement …

An Exhibit That Brings Japanese Americans Into Japanese History - part 1 of 3

16 de noviembre de 2011 • Kaori Akiyama

IntroductionThe exhibit entitled Japanese Immigrants in the United States and the War Era at the National Museum of Japanese History, Chiba, Japan closed on April 3, 2011 after a year-long opening to the public. It was a special exhibit to commemorate the opening of the Sixth Exhibit Room of the museum in March 2010, which displays contemporary history. Some might think that this national museum mainly focuses on Japanese history, meaning events that took place in Japan. However, this project …

Searching the Home of Mujina: For Glen Grant - Part 3

4 de marzo de 2011 • Kaori Akiyama

Read Part 2 >>During the Edo Period (1603-1868), there was a great flowering of ghost stories in many areas ranging from art to entertainment. Reider (2000) explains the psychology of the Edo people: because travel abroad was forbidden, there was a heightened perception of foreign lands, particularly China, as exotic places where mysterious things were believed to happen (p. 278). The parents of the issei grew up in late Edo culture and passed its longing for the cultural other to …

Searching the Home of Mujina: For Glen Grant - Part 2

25 de febrero de 2011 • Kaori Akiyama

Read Part 1 >>>The theme of the revengeful female spirit is still alive today in Japanese films. Probably the best-known recent example of a popular Japanese horror film in America is The Ring,1 (2002) which remakes the Japanese original for American audiences. The story contains a faceless female ghost with beautiful long hair that covers her face.  She is shown on a strange video and anyone who sees the video dies in a certain number of days. There may be some echoes of …

Searching the Home of Mujina: For Glen Grant - Part 1

18 de febrero de 2011 • Kaori Akiyama

One sunny day in August, I was on the way to go back to my new place in Kaimuki near the University of Hawaii.  That day, I took a walk to the Kaimuki Shopping center to acquire some household implements for my new place.  I had four plastic shopping bags and felt thirsty under the bright sun, so I decided to take a rest at a McDonald’s.  Outside the McDonald’s on the Waealae there was a small triangle park having …

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