Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Liberty Memorial
About a month ago my seminar went to the Liberty Memorial and WWI Museum in Kansas City. This was my third trip to the museum and memorial, but I'm always struck by the lovely view of Union Station from the memorial, as seen above. I apologize for the tiny photos, they are from my cell phone, but you get the idea.
We toured the exhibits of the Museum, housed underground beneath the Memorial, which is seen above. The interior of the original Memorial exhibit hall is below. The Liberty Memorial was built in the 1920s and the WWI Museum was opened within the past decade.
After Happy Hour at Pierpont's at Union Station we were able to catch the sunset from the top of the hill.
Saturday, September 25, 2010
Green Juice
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Generally we have a side salad with our dinner each night, but this week we had extra cucumbers from the CSA and needed to figure out what to do with our bounty of produce. Enter the juicer. We juiced half a cucumber, half a head of romaine lettuce, a handful of spinach, and two pears, and in about five minutes we had a beautiful, inexpensive, and tasty way to get a few servings of veggies in on a Saturday afternoon. The salad juice was smooth and had a nice balance of sweet from the pear and zip from the cucumber. Apparently our countrymen could use to learn a few lessons in eating veggies, as yesterday's paper reported that only one in four Americans eats three or more servings of vegetables a day. Eesh. My advice- buy a juicer, it's fast and so yummmmmmyyyyyy!
Friday, September 24, 2010
September Prairie
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For the first time in my life I have a U.S. style commute. By this I mean by car and about 45 minutes each way. While I decidedly prefer public transportation (and really, given the option who wouldn't?) or my former ten minute commute by moped, I have been making due and trying to find the upsides of my situation. Perhaps the best part is that I don't have to drive through a crowded metro area, but rather I drive between a metro area and a small town, crossing an idyllic Midwestern landscape. At this time of year that means hundreds of thousands of sunflowers, farm fields turning from green to gold, and rolls of hay dotting fields of cattle. The above photo is from the Ernie Miller Nature Center, which I pass each day and which is fairly representative of the scenery through which I drive. Below is one of my favorite paintings from the Spencer Museum of Art, Near Sundown by Grant Wood, which I am reminded of each day that I cruise along K-10, listening to the news on NPR in the morning and music on my iPod in the afternoon, soaking up the prairie scenery.
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Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Late summer veggies
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We got a wealth of pumpkins and squashes from our CSA a few weeks back. I didn't get a photo of the pile of beautiful veggies, but I did remember to get a photo as we were working to freeze them. We cut up the squash, blanched it in a few batches, and put it into huge freezer bags, so now we have a few pounds of squash ready to go for the fall season, some like the acorn pictured here, but most of it being Delicata. I'm thinking about Ricotta, Red Onion and Squash Pizza, Squash Ravioli, and Squash Rissotto....
Thursday, September 09, 2010
Transitioning
After a near three month silence, I think I am ready to get back to the blogging.
The last time I posted we were in the midst of packing up our Yokohama apartment at the end of two wonderful years in Japan, and now I sit in Kansas, close to the point from which we departed for our journey. The readjustment period took longer than I expected and was surprisingly disorienting and emotional at times. In the two years that we were gone we had many adventures, traveled all over Asia, learned Japanese, made wonderful friends, had a baby, and generally enjoyed a fantastic time of life when we felt very free. After returning to Chicago and visiting with family for about a week we came down to the Kansas City-Lawrence area and in many ways it felt like nothing changed at all, our two year life-changing adventure was a dream.
In some ways it has been very comfortable and easy to be back. Daily interactions are in English. I understand how things work (like how to rent an apartment or purchase a car). It’s been wonderful to see family and friends and to be reunited with our dog and cats.
In other ways it has been an uncomfortable and difficult experience. We have to drive everywhere. The carts at the grocery store are disgustingly large, as are the products and the cars into which people load their commercial bounty. American politics makes my blood pressure rise. People are rude.
The past few months have had their ups and downs, and we have done a few really fun things. We saw fireworks on the Fourth of July. We went to a baseball game and watched the Kansas City Royals play the Oakland A’s. We went camping in the Flint Hills with the dog and the baby. We joined a CSA. The list goes on. After this long period of adjustment, I finally feel like I am wholly back. I miss Japan dearly, and I look forward to going back, but for now it feels good to be fully in one place.
I hope that in the next few months I can find some time to post now and again, either about daily life, the experience of working on a PhD in Art History, cooking, travels in the U.S., or just general thoughts.
May the next chapter of the adventure begin.
Sunday, June 13, 2010
Rice Cooker 炊飯器
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Tuesday, June 08, 2010
Tomioka Silk Mill 富岡製糸場
富岡製糸場のイメージとして富岡の技術を称えた錦絵や富岡に昭憲皇太后の富岡行啓を描いた日本画があります。明治時代の文化コンテクストの中で富岡製糸場を題材とした視覚資料を調査することによってこの発表には明治政府が女性の役割をどう考えていたかを示します。
During the early Meiji period Japanese women assumed new societal roles and acted as active producers in Japan’s rapidly developing industrial economy, yet they were simultaneously denied basic political freedoms and rights. Using the Tomioka Silk Mill as a point of departure, this paper examines how images of Meiji women reflected Japanese societal values and concerns of the 1870s and 1880s.
Images of the Tomioka Silk Mill range from multi-color woodblock prints that celebrate the technological achievements of the mill to softly painted Nihonga representing the Meiji Empress’ visit to the site. By investigating the breadth of visual material referencing the Tomioka Silk Mill in the cultural context of the late nineteenth century this paper will shed light on Meiji period women’s roles as they were condoned and promoted by the government.
As part of my research, a few weeks ago I took a day trip out to the Tomioka Silk Mill in Gunma prefecture, about three hours away by local train.
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The train from Takasaki to Tomioka was a true inaka (rural) train, departing once an hour. Tickets were stamped by hand, not machine. I purchased the combination train and site visit ticket.
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Sunday, June 06, 2010
Hydrangeas アジサイ
The hillside was covered with blossoms, and the breeze from the nearby seaside was lovely.
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To get to Hasedera we transfer to the Enoshima Dentetsu at Kamakura Station. The Enoden is a funky little toy train that runs along the coast near Kamakura, and has its own special Hello Kitty, complete with a surfboard.
Friday, June 04, 2010
Inageya いなげや
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