FYF@Innis Seminars

Human-Nonhuman Relations through Manga & Anime

Professor: Shiho Satsuka
Subject: Anthropology
Course Code: ANT194H1

Seminar description

Anthropology has examined various ways human beings imagine and engage with non-human beings in their everyday lives in particular social and cultural contexts. By using manga and anime, specific popular cultural expressive modes developed in Japan, this course examines social and cultural aspects of human relationship with other beings, including but not restricted to animals, plants, microbes, technological objects and spirits from anthropological perspectives

Get to know your professor

Shiho Satsuka

headshot of Eva-Lynn Jagoe

You can call me…

Professor Satsuka

I just can't live without…

Manga!

I just can't live without…

Manga!

My hometown is…​

Tokyo, Japan

For my undergraduate degree…

I studied History at Keiko University, Japan.

I am surprisingly good at…

Remembering a route

Fun fact:

I’m learning woodworking with hand tools only!

If I wasn't teaching, I would be a…

An organic farmer.

NAME: Bart Testa

INNIS FYF SEMINAR I WILL BE TEACHING IN 2020-2021: Story Worlds & The Cinema, Action Cinema, Chinese Cinemas

HOMETOWN: Toronto

THE LAST GREAT MOVIE I SAW WAS: Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

MY ACTUAL FAVOURITE MOVIE: Touch of Evil

THE SONG I HAVE ON REPEAT RIGHT NOW: “Opening” by Phillip Glass

FAVOURITE FOOD: Pizza

GUILTY PLEASURE: Zombie & vampire movies

I AM SURPRISINGLY VERY GOOD AT: Dish washing

A FUN FACT ABOUT MYSELF: I have a new puppy.

MY FAVOURITE THING ABOUT TEACHING: The actual teaching part.

WHY YOU SHOULD TAKE MY CLASS: Many opportunities to work on your writing.

WHAT I WANT MY STUDENTS TO KNOW: All writing is rewriting.

A COOL FACT ABOUT MY FIELD OF STUDY: I get paid to talk about films.

SOME FINAL WORDS: Roll credits.

What I'm working on now is…

Writing a book about mushroom and humans.

Lately, something that has been exciting me about my research/scholarship is…

How fungi helps us see the world from a new perspective.

A fun fact about my field of study is…

A small surprise in everyday life can lead to a big theoretical discovery.

I was inspired to get into this field because…

It challenges taken-for-granted perspectives.

A fun fact about my field of study is…

In a sentence, what you’ll learn in my course:

You will develop skills to analyze human-nonhuman relations expressed in Japanese manga and anime from socio-cultural anthropological perspectives.

One of my favourite things about teaching first-year students is…

Enthusiasm

My best advice for those starting their first year…

Follow your curiosity. Explore new perspectives.

NAME: Chelsea Rochman.

INNIS FYF SEMINAR I WILL BE TEACHING IN 2020-2021: EEB197H1S Biodiversity and the city

HOMETOWN: Tucson, Arizona.

THE LAST GREAT MOVIE I SAW WAS: Coco :)

MY ACTUAL FAVOURITE MOVIE: hmmmm… not sure.

THE SONG I HAVE ON REPEAT RIGHT NOW: CSNY, Judy Blue Eyes.

FAVOURITE FOOD: Pickles & gummy candy.

GUILTY PLEASURE: Gummy worms & other gummy candy.

I AM SURPRISINGLY VERY GOOD AT: Multi-tasking.

A FUN FACT ABOUT MYSELF: I have 2 sisters named Berrye.

MY FAVOURITE THING ABOUT TEACHING: Keeping up with the knowledge.

WHY YOU SHOULD TAKE MY CLASS: So you can see the nature behind the concrete in our city.

WHAT I WANT MY STUDENTS TO KNOW: We live in the Carolinian forest.

A COOL FACT ABOUT MY FIELD OF STUDY: There are just as many freshwater fish species as marine.

SOME FINAL WORDS: The waste hierarchy is a good rule to live by.

Good to know

Pre-requisites: none
Co-requisites: none
Exclusions: none
Recommended Preparation: none
Breadth: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)
CR/NCR: Not eligible for CR/NCR option
Restrictions: Restricted to first-year students

Register for FYF@Innis seminars

You can enrol in courses on a first-come, first-served basis during regular course registration.

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Need more info about FYF@Innis seminars? Not sure which seminar is right for you? We can help!

programs.innis@utoronto.ca
416-946-7107