2024 Faculty Courses Liberal arts and basic science courses Humanities and social science courses
Special Lecture: Science, Literature, and Humanism
- Academic unit or major
- Humanities and social science courses
- Instructor(s)
- Yakup Bektas
- Class Format
- Lecture (Face-to-face)
- Media-enhanced courses
- -
- Day of week/Period
(Classrooms) - 1-2 Mon / 1-2 Thu
- Class
- -
- Course Code
- LAH.T212
- Number of credits
- 200
- Course offered
- 2024
- Offered quarter
- 3Q
- Syllabus updated
- Mar 17, 2025
- Language
- English
Syllabus
Course overview and goals
Science, Literature, and Humanism
DESCRIPTION: This class explores ties among engineering, literature, and humanism, focusing on Japan’s popular writer and poet Miyazawa Kenji (1896-1933). During his short life, Kenji wrote several hundred short stories and many more philosophically inclined poems. From his best-known Night on the Milky Way Train (1933) to his little-known stories, he emphasized selflessness and the human obligation to alleviate suffering and poverty. This way towards “the real happiness”—helping others to achieve happiness—is the fundamental idea that permeates all of Kenji’s writing and his own way of life. For Kenji, helping others selflessly is the measure, the very essence, of being human. It is what makes us human and separates us from other animals. His “Strong in the Rain,” the most popular poem in Japan, captures this humanism beautifully.
Kenji’s idealistic science and technology are parts of this outlook. His engineers and scientists are self-taught humanitarians, feeling a deep moral duty to help others. In The Life of Gusuko Budori (1932), Kenji imagines a futuristic country, Ihatobu, where science and engineering are being applied to eradicate threats posed by natural disasters such as volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, famines, droughts, and crop diseases. Through his main character Budori, a self-taught and hard-working engineer, Kenji advocates his humanistic ideal of the engineer as a pure humanitarian, working selflessly for the happiness of others. Budori willingly sacrifices his life to save Ihatobu from cold and famine.
We will study several aspects of Kenji’s ideas and work from “peasant art” to vegetarianism, while also looking at writers who influenced Kenji’s thinking and literary growth. But this course is not limited to the work of Kenji. We will also study the relevant work of an array of prominent writers and thinkers. These include Plutarch, Jeremy Bentham, Percy Bysshe Shelley, John Ruskin, William Morris, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Matthew Arnold, Lewis Carroll, and Leo Tolstoy.
AIMS:
To show how literature can nurture humanistic ideas, and give science, technology, and engineering a social and moral mission.
Through Kenji’s stories and ideas, to motivate young scientists and engineers and help them find a sense of purpose and meaning in their work.
To learn to appreciate fine prose style and sensitive expression of emotion.
Course description and aims
To appreciate the value of literature in nurturing humanistic ideas and social and moral mission in science and engineering.
To become motivated and able to attach a stronger sense of meaning to their work.
To aspire to fine prose and style in writing.
To improve skills in critical reading, conversation, and writing.
Keywords
humanism and science, literature and science, the scientist as humanist; Miyazawa Kenji, John Ruskin, William Morris, Percy B. Shelley
Competencies
- Specialist skills
- Intercultural skills
- Communication skills
- Critical thinking skills
- Practical and/or problem-solving skills
Class flow
Class attendance is mandatory. Students are expected to:
1) read the assigned readings prior to the class
2) participate in classroom discussions
3) write short papers.
Course schedule/Objectives
Course schedule | Objectives | |
---|---|---|
Class 1 | Science, literature, and humanism | None |
Class 2 | “Ameni mo makezu”: Miyazawa Kenji, short life and enduring work | Kenji, "Strong in the Rain" Bektas, "In search of Miyazawa Kenji's Ihatobu" |
Class 3 | The measure of being human | "Gakusha Aramu Harado no mitakimono," n.d.; (others will be posted ahead of time) |
Class 4 | Gauche, the cellist: hard-work, success, and nature (and music) | Miyazawa Kenji, Gauche the Cellist; watch "sero hiki no goshu" anime |
Class 5 | What is art? (John Ruskin & William Morris; Kenji’s “Peasant art” and drawings) | Kenji "An Introductory Outline to Peasant Art"; William Morris, "Art under plutocracy" (1883); others. |
Class 6 | Science and religion | Bektas, “Miyazawa Kenji’s Rasu Earth People’s Association” (2015) and more. |
Class 7 | Kenji’s revolutionary farmers’ school | Bektas, “Miyazawa Kenji’s Rasu Earth People’s Association” (2015) |
Class 8 | Let’s question flesh eating (Plutarch, Jeremy Bentham, Bysshe Shelley, Thoreau) | Plutarch, Morelia; Writings from Shelley, Bentham, Thoreau and others |
Class 9 | Moral and humanistic foundations of vegetarianism: from Plutarch to Percy B. Shelley, Jeremy Bentham and Thoreau. | Plutarch, Morelia; Writings from Shelley, Bentham, Thoreau and others |
Class 10 | "The Great Vegetarian Congress" | Kenji, "The Great Vegetarian Congress"; Thoreau, "Walden" (1854), and others. |
Class 11 | Ihatobu facing major catastrophes and existential threat | Kenji, The life of Gusuko Budori; Master Works of Miyazawa Kenji (more will be posted) |
Class 12 | Budori, the self-taught heroic engineer | "Master Works of Miyazawa Kenji"; (more will be posted) |
Class 13 | Scientist as the wizard | Master Works of Miyazawa Kenji"; watch "Guskō Budori-no-denki" anime;(more will be posted) |
Class 14 | What is “the real happiness”? | Overview and Discussion |
Study advice (preparation and review)
To enhance effective learning, students are encouraged to spend approximately 100 minutes preparing for class and another 100 minutes reviewing class content afterwards (including assignments) for each class.
They should do so by referring to textbooks and other course material.
Textbook(s)
None
Reference books, course materials, etc.
(A list of readings and audio-visual materials for each class will be circulated at least a week in advance). Selected: Gary Snyder, The Back Country (New York: New Directions, 1967); Makoto Ueda, Modern Japanese Poets and the Nature of Literature (Stanford University Press, 1983), pp.184–320; Sarah M. Strong, “Miyazawa Kenji and the Lost Gandharan Painting,” Monumenta Nipponica, 41 (2) (Summer, 1986), pp. 175-197; Miyazawa Kenji, The Night of the Milky Way Railway, translated by Sarah Strong (New York: 1991).
Miyazawa Kenji, Once and Forever: The Tales of Kenji Miyazawa (Translated by John Bester. Kodansha, 1994).
Miyazawa Kenji, Milky Way Railroad, (Translated by Joseph Sigrist and D. M. Stroud, 1996),
Master Works of Miyazawa Kenji (Translated by Sarah M. Strong and Karen Colligan-Taylor, (Tokyo, 2002)
Kikuchi Yūko, Japanese Modernisation and Mingei Theory: Cultural Nationalism and Oriental Orientalism (Routledge Curzon, 2004); Roger Pulvers, Miyazawa Kenji, Strong in the Rain and Selected Poems (Bloodaxe Books, 2007).
Hiroaki Sato (ed.) Selections, Miyazawa Kenji (University of California, 2007);
Helen Kilpatrick, Miyazawa Kenji and His Illustrators: Images of Nature and Buddhism in Japanese Children's Literature, (Brill, 2014).
Bektas Y, “Miyazawa Kenji’s “English Coast” (2016)
“Miyazawa Kenji’s Rasu Earth People’s Association” (2015)
“In Search of Miyazawa Kenji’s Ihatobu” (2014)
“Kenji’s Vegetarianism” (in progress)
Evaluation methods and criteria
Based on attendance, class performance, and writing assignments (short papers): roughly %80 for attendance and performance, and %20 for writing assignments
Related courses
- LAH.T111
Prerequisites
None
Office hours
One hour after every class. Other times by appointment by email or call.