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This
major course has only two faculty members dedicated to the course: Professor Shinya
FUKUNAGA and Associate Professor Teruhiko TAKAHASHI. Despite its relatively small
scale, the course has many students and its seminar room is active day and night.
Taking advantage of the university’s geographical location in the Kinki
region, locus of Japanese ancient capitals, the major focus of research and educational
activities is on Japanese archaeology. The faculty members and graduate school
students, however, are eager to engage in overseas archaeological surveys and
comparative studies, which are effective in resolving various archaeological questions
in Japan from global perspectives. In addition to seminars and lectures, excavation
surveys are organized every summer. Following excavation, which takes more than
one month, students classify and analyze unearthed materials during autumn and
winter. Through these experiences, students learn that they cannot study archaeology
by keeping their hands clean, but they should become muddy and sweat-soaked in
fieldwork. These experiences are essential for all beginners aspiring to become
archaeologists.
Benefiting from such invaluable experiences, alumni are active in various fields:
some are working at archaeological sites, as well as in museums as curators; others
have become teachers, public employees, journalists and businesspersons. |
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FUKUNAGA, Shinya (Ph.D.) Japanese
Archaeology; Mortuary Practices, Political History in Kofun Period, Ancient Bronze
Mirrors |
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TAKAHASHI, Teruhiko (M.Lit.) Japanese
Archaeology; Manual Industry, Cultural Exchanges in Nara and Heian Period, Ancient
Pottery and Ceramic |
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