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Keynote: Melissa McCormick (Harvard University): "Taming the Tomboy: Gender Conformity and Defiance in a Medieval Japanese Picture Scroll"
Representations of the Body and Gender in Illustrated Texts of Pre-Meiji Japan.
This Keynote talk examines a sixteenth-century narrative entitled “The New Chamberlain” (Shinkurodo monogatari), the story of a young woman who, desiring the freedoms afforded only to men, disguises herself as a man to enter court service at the imperial palace. On the surface, this illustrated tale resembles a typical courtly romance of cross-dressing intrigue. A closer look, however, reveals that the cross-dressing trope functions as a metaphor for one of the most central concerns of women related to Buddhist doctrine: the necessity of male transformation in order to achieve salvation. This talk will explore how the scroll offers a wry commentary on the standard discourse pertaining to gender conformity and female buddhahood, and will examine in the process the work’s unique representation of a defiant and complex heroine who ultimately aspires to gender nonduality.
Sponsored by the Asian and Middle Eastern Studies Program, co-sponsored by the Asian and Middle Eastern Languages and Literatures Department.
Events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.