Bachelor of Arts (BA)

BA Sociology and Japanese

Study sociology alongside Japanese language and culture.
  • Duration: 4 years
  • Year of entry: 2025
  • UCAS course code: TL33 / Institution code: M20
  • Key features:
  • Study abroad
  • Study with a language

Full entry requirementsHow to apply

Fees and funding

Fees

Tuition fees for home students commencing their studies in September 2025 will be £9,535 per annum (subject to Parliamentary approval). Tuition fees for international students will be £26,500 per annum. For general information please see the undergraduate finance pages.

Policy on additional costs

All students should normally be able to complete their programme of study without incurring additional study costs over and above the tuition fee for that programme. Any unavoidable additional compulsory costs totalling more than 1% of the annual home undergraduate fee per annum, regardless of whether the programme in question is undergraduate or postgraduate taught, will be made clear to you at the point of application. Further information can be found in the University's Policy on additional costs incurred by students on undergraduate and postgraduate taught programmes (PDF document, 91KB).

Scholarships/sponsorships

Residence abroad support

We offer dedicated financial support packages of up to £2,000 for residence abroad students, based on household income.

You will be automatically assessed for this, based on your Student Finance financial assessment - you just need to make sure you apply for a financial assessment in the academic year in which your residence abroad will take place.

RWS Brode Scholarship

You may be eligible for this scholarship if you fulfill the following conditions:

  • your qualifications were achieved at a state-funded school in the UK;
  • your total household income does not exceed £60,000 (as verified by the Student Loan Company);
  • you achieve high marks in your A-levels (or equivalent qualifications), usually AAB or above;
  • you apply to (and remain on) either a single honours Language course, or a dual-language course.

Awards will be made according to a sliding scale, benefitting those who have achieved the highest marks relative to backgrounds.

You will be automatically assessed for this after you have registered on your degree.

You simply need to make sure you allow the University access to your records when applying for your student lLoan (we cannot otherwise assess your eligibility).

Bursaries and Scholarships

Course unit details:
Culture, Gender and Resistance in Contemporary Japan and East Asia

Course unit fact file
Unit code JAPA34422
Credit rating 20
Unit level Level 3
Teaching period(s) Semester 2
Available as a free choice unit? No

Overview


This is a final year course based in Japanese Studies and East Asian Studies tracing the emergence and specific symbolism and genres of popular culture in twentieth century Japan culminating in the proliferation of various expressions of literature, fashion, and animation character culture, establishing regional Asian cultural forms in the twenty first century. The course will trace the movement of gendered and class-based cultural modes and resistant and critical fashion and art of the 2010s. The increasingly contiguous regional and hegemonic presence of the ambivalent popular aesthetics in visual culture and social media online is heavily embedded in K-pop and East Asian animation-character-based animation, digital games, and fashion. This course will also have appeal to Humanities and Social Science students and will bring final year undergraduate students to the entry point of new and exciting research around aesthetics and politics in East Asia and the online social media environment. In this course we will include exploration of how popular cultural styles are also informed and contextualised by economic and demographic shifts, social and labour precarity, and low fertility social environments. 

Aims

• Foster more advanced final-year undergraduate levels of detailed knowledge and critical understanding of the multiple elements of the culture, aesthetics and logic in Japan and East Asia. The course will discuss and sample most major cultural moments and genres in the twentieth century building up layers of understanding the evolution of aesthetics and meaning underlying contemporary popular culture and style, with a focus on the contemporary period from 1970 to the present. Students will develop an analytical approach and knowledge of the dominant popular cultural aesthetics of popular cultural forms in Japan, and more widely across East Asia and South-East Asia in the contemporary period.

• Students will learn to appreciate and apply historical political and cultural insights to deepen an understanding of contemporary cultural and political sentiments and meanings in general and in popular animated, digital and fashion culture in Japan and East Asia today.

• Students will learn to write and speak about these ideas on contemporary culture and its sociological contexts effectively. 

Learning outcomes

The course will develop a range of abilities that are essential for higher-level and professional employment skills. These include gathering, critically selecting, and organizing information and ideas; analytical, critical thinking; interpreting and assessing sources; articulating coherent, logical and convincing arguments and supporting them by relevant evidence; articulate participation in oral discussion; working independently and to deadlines. In addition, it will develop critical understanding of different societies and cultural histories and contexts, highly valuable for employment with an international dimension. It will develop an understanding of key genres and events, personae, and literary and filmic cultural refences in the recent history of postwar Chinese and Japanese societies. The above will also be invaluable for those seeking employment in these countries or seeking employment where engagement with them is important. 

Syllabus

Week 1: Privilege, Secondary Education and emergent youth cultures and identities.

Week 2: Youth Labour, Employment Migration and Extending Youth Cultures

Week 3: Literature, Romance, and Camaraderie in the prewar period

Week 4: Youth Style and Pop Idols  

Week 5: Alienation, fashion and performance

Week 6: Fan Culture and attachment to idols and characters

Week 7: Popular culture inspired Art Movements of the 1990s and 2000s

Week 8: Style on the Streets in the 1980s and 1990s

Week 9: Online and visual cultural Play in East Asia  

Week 10: Popular Culture in Low Fertility / Low Relationship Society

Week 11: Resistant Culture and Style within East Asia

 

Teaching and learning methods

  • Three weekly hours in the class (90m mins lecture, 90 mins seminar) for 11 weeks.
  • Two consultation hours per week.
  • Further consultation on demand. 

Knowledge and understanding

  • Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of major aspects of class and gender responsive styles in social context
  • Demonstrate critical understanding of context and timing of key events of modern and contemporary popular culture in Japan.
  • Demonstrate an awareness of the gendered forms of popular cultural movements, and the regional popular cultural system in East Asia, especially as they apply to contemporary China, Korea and Japan.

 

Intellectual skills

  • Engage in critical reading and discussion of academic writing on cultural movements in modern societies, with special reference to Japan and East Asia.
  • Articulate critical analysis of cultural genres and media with special reference to Japan and East Asia.
  • Link a knowledge of social and economic and labour market structures to gendered and popular cultural genres and media.

 

Practical skills

  • Organise notes derived from lectures, seminars, and reading.
  • Use library, electronic, and online resources.
  • Prepare to discuss and debate key topics in a live context.

 

Transferable skills and personal qualities

  • Demonstrate their skills in reasoned argument.
  • Develop personal qualities of independence of mind, in order to make nuanced and informed ethical judgments.
  • Confront their own values as global citizens and as possible participants of related popular culture and entertainment.

 

Assessment methods

Method Weight
Other 50%
Written assignment (inc essay) 50%
Formative Assessment Task Length (word count/time) How and when feedback is provided 
Essay Outline 300 words In writing, within 15 working days of submission. 
Summative Assessment Task Length (word count/time) How and when feedback is provided 
Discussion Board responses to questions set on reading. (Based on the currently used DB assessment in JAPA20132, in which students post comments to specific questions with a focus on responding to peer’s comments which can be read, ie in the mode of interactive discussion.) Completed and posted online via BB, no less than 24 hours before the related seminar, for 5 seminars (400 words each), compiled into a final portfolio of 5 Discussion board texts, submitted as a single document to Turnitin Week 12.   400 words x 5 Oral feedback in class, peer feedback during seminar discussion and reflective reading of other student responses on Discussion Board. Also written feedback within 15 working days of submission of the portfolio at the end of the semester. 
Essay 2000 words Written feedback within 15 working days of completion. 

  

Feedback methods


Oral feedback in class, peer feedback during seminar discussion and reflective reading of other student responses on Discussion Board. Also written feedback within 15 working days of submission of the portfolio at the end of the semester.

Written feedback within 15 working days of completion.

 

Recommended reading

Miriam Silverberg 2007 Erotic Grotesque Nonsense: The Mass Culture of Japanese Modern Times  

 

Maud Lavin and Yang Ling (eds) Boys’ Love, Cosplay, and Androgynous Idols: Queer fan cultures in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan. University of Chicago Press  

 

Allison, Anne (2013) Precarious Japan. Duke University Press Books.

 

Hsin-Yen Yang 2023 ‘Cute politics!: articulating the kawaii aesthetic, fandom and political participation’ in Popular Communication, 21:2, 85-97

 

Sharon Kinsella 1995 ‘Cuties in Japan’, in Moeran and Skov eds. Women, Media and Consumption in Japan, T&L

 

Sianne Ngai 2005 ‘The Cuteness of the Avant‐Garde’ in Critical Enquiry 

Teaching staff

Staff member Role
Sharon Kinsella Unit coordinator

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