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Visualizing the Birth of Modern Tokyo

See Tokyo’s modernization through the “100 views” tradition, from the gas-lit 1870s to the jazz era 1930s. Developed by MIT Visualizing Cultures, with images from the Smithsonian Institution.

Course Information

Format: Self-Paced
Estimated: 6 weeks, 1-3 hours per week
Start: AnytimeEnd:
Payment deadline:

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About this Course

This online course shows the emergence of modern Tokyo through artist renderings of its neighborhoods, daily life and nightlife, nested between its recurring destruction by natural disasters and war. You will learn about the tradition of the “100 views,” and through these composite depictions of the city, witness the excitement and loss of change. Kiyochika Kobayashi’s woodblock prints of Tokyo in the late 1870s convey a moody view on the cusp of change as the new capital, formerly Edo, begins modernization with Western influences. Koizumi Kishio’s depictions of the “Imperial Capital” in the 1930s show the lively cosmopolitanism and move toward ultranationalism that placed the emperor at its center.

Navigate visual primary sources and use them to investigate:

  • Tokyo, through the many locations depicted at different points in time (this can be especially helpful for those would like to visit these sites today);
  • the Meiji restoration and how Tokyo emerged from the earlier city of Edo to become Japan’s capital;
  • cultural and political interactions between east and west;
  • how Tokyo was rebuilt from various forms of destruction;
  • methods used by scholars and curators of the Visualizing Cultures project and the Smithsonian Institution to develop online content and exhibitions;
  • the ability of visual motifs to capture tangible and intangible qualities of time and place;
  • how to read image sets, especially useful in the large digital archives of today;
  • woodblock print series, distribution, and competition from other media.

The format of roundtable discussions between art historian, historians, and media specialists sets up a discursive and exploratory style of learning. You will be exposed to multiple points of view as the teaching team brings together scholars who have studied the topics from different disciplines. You will engage with visual evidence as primary sources to assemble arguments.

For teachers, the course presents a number of units from the online resource, MIT Visualizing Cultures (VC). The course instructors are the authors of VC units, and guide students through the site's rich content. The VC website, widely taught in both secondary and college courses, is the primary resource for this course. Educators can selectively pick modules that target needs in their classrooms; the course can be used in a “flipped” classroom where students are assigned modules as homework.

Other Visualizing Cultures courses you may be interested in: Visualizing Japan (1850s-1930s): Westernization, Protest, Modernity (VJx)

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What you'll learn

This course invites learners into the process of exploring history through content that literally looks at change in Tokyo over time. Learners will acquire background and skills that will help with:

  • understanding how Japan and its capital city evolved
  • the study of history and how it uses visual sources
  • the study of visual images, large databases and visual communication
  • the culture of change in the built environment.

Prerequisites

None

Meet your instructors

Ellen Sebring

Creative Director of MIT Visualizing Cultures

Ellen Sebring, media artist and theorist, was a Research Fellow at MIT’s Center for Advanced Visual Studies, and the founding Creative Director of the MIT Visualizing Cultures project, with new units in projection in 2020, and a postdoctoral fellow at Duke University (2017-2018). Her book, Centerbook: the Center for Advanced Visual Studies and the Evolution of Art-Science-Technology at MIT , was released fall 2019. Sebring's immersive reality applications enhance visual access to history, focused on the Boxer Uprising in China, 1900.