The Story/History of Japan: Producing Knowledge by Integrating the Study of Japanese Literature and Japanese History

This essay discusses the benefits to student learning when we integrate the study of Japanese literature and Japanese history through the curricular model of "linked courses."  The essay begins by examining the process of linking an introductory Japanese literature course and introductory...

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Main Author: Peter James Kvidera
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University Library System, University of Pittsburgh 2021-04-01
Series:Japanese Language and Literature
Online Access:http://jll.pitt.edu/ojs/JLL/article/view/68
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spelling doaj-f8678383d36349f9b00670f56566544a2021-09-27T14:33:38ZengUniversity Library System, University of PittsburghJapanese Language and Literature1536-78272326-45862021-04-0155113115910.5195/jll.2021.68128The Story/History of Japan: Producing Knowledge by Integrating the Study of Japanese Literature and Japanese HistoryPeter James Kvidera0John Carroll UniversityThis essay discusses the benefits to student learning when we integrate the study of Japanese literature and Japanese history through the curricular model of "linked courses."  The essay begins by examining the process of linking an introductory Japanese literature course and introductory Japanese history course, and continues by explaining its pedagogical advantages.  Specifically, the collaboration of literary and historical study provides students greater access to the material and, subsequently, the opportunity for deeper analysis.  Students can better understand how historical context informs the literature and how literary representation enhances historical knowledge.  But in addition, this teaching model provokes broader questions about the production of knowledge itself: the disciplinary integration creates a learning environment in which we can ask how we know what we know, or in this case, how we come to understand both the "story" and the "history" of Japan.http://jll.pitt.edu/ojs/JLL/article/view/68
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Peter James Kvidera
spellingShingle Peter James Kvidera
The Story/History of Japan: Producing Knowledge by Integrating the Study of Japanese Literature and Japanese History
Japanese Language and Literature
author_facet Peter James Kvidera
author_sort Peter James Kvidera
title The Story/History of Japan: Producing Knowledge by Integrating the Study of Japanese Literature and Japanese History
title_short The Story/History of Japan: Producing Knowledge by Integrating the Study of Japanese Literature and Japanese History
title_full The Story/History of Japan: Producing Knowledge by Integrating the Study of Japanese Literature and Japanese History
title_fullStr The Story/History of Japan: Producing Knowledge by Integrating the Study of Japanese Literature and Japanese History
title_full_unstemmed The Story/History of Japan: Producing Knowledge by Integrating the Study of Japanese Literature and Japanese History
title_sort story/history of japan: producing knowledge by integrating the study of japanese literature and japanese history
publisher University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
series Japanese Language and Literature
issn 1536-7827
2326-4586
publishDate 2021-04-01
description This essay discusses the benefits to student learning when we integrate the study of Japanese literature and Japanese history through the curricular model of "linked courses."  The essay begins by examining the process of linking an introductory Japanese literature course and introductory Japanese history course, and continues by explaining its pedagogical advantages.  Specifically, the collaboration of literary and historical study provides students greater access to the material and, subsequently, the opportunity for deeper analysis.  Students can better understand how historical context informs the literature and how literary representation enhances historical knowledge.  But in addition, this teaching model provokes broader questions about the production of knowledge itself: the disciplinary integration creates a learning environment in which we can ask how we know what we know, or in this case, how we come to understand both the "story" and the "history" of Japan.
url http://jll.pitt.edu/ojs/JLL/article/view/68
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