A third Fulbright Scholar opportunity for 麻豆传媒 Professor Jonathan Pitts, Ph.D., will soon send him to Japan, where he intends to explore the intersection of personal narrative, ordinary life as art, human longevity and pilgrimage. Cultural immersion, classroom instruction, writing and walking 鈥 lots and lots of walking 鈥 are in store for Pitts, an associate professor of English.
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鈥淢y life鈥檚 work has been living, writing, teaching and researching personal stories around the world,鈥 said Pitts. An award-winning teacher, writer, outdoor educator, and international scholar, he has lived and worked on five continents including Africa, Asia, South America, and Europe,听pursuing his听interests听in the personal, cultural, and spiritual听uses of narrative and the concept of the听journey. Since 2000, he has developed the professional writing and creative writing听programs at 麻豆传媒 and taught literature, writing, multimedia studies, and intercultural communication.
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The prestigious Fulbright U.S. Scholar Program, which is the federal government鈥檚 flagship program of international education and cultural exchange, awards more than 1,700 annual fellowships for U.S. Scholars to go abroad and Visiting Scholars to come to the United States. Scholars include college and university faculty, administrators and researchers, as well as artists and professionals. The program enables Scholars to build their skills and connections, gain valuable international insights, and return home to share their experiences with their students and colleagues.
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鈥淲e are the stories we tell; we are all connected,鈥 Pitts said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a privilege to bring all of this to my students at 麻豆传媒.鈥
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Pitts鈥 adventurous physical journey in Japan will involve walking the 88-Temple Shikoku pilgrimage on the island of the same namesake. This world pilgrimage 鈥渃ircles the island following the footsteps of Kukai, the legendary founder of Shingon Buddhism,鈥 Pitts explained. 鈥淥ne of my main areas of writing, research and teaching, especially in my general education course at 麻豆传媒, 鈥楾he Hero鈥檚 Journey,鈥 is pilgrimage studies, long, sacred journeys in different cultures.
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At the University of Ryukyus on the island of Okinawa, Pitts will teach American literature to Japanese and international students using elements of personal writing for cross-cultural comparison.
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Also on Okinawa, he鈥檒l be researching the role of personal narrative in Okinawan culture, which he said 鈥渋s very different from Japanese culture, although both cultures have been Westernized.鈥 He鈥檒l be scrutinizing the community of Ogimi, one of the world鈥檚 so-called 鈥渂lue zones鈥 of longevity. 鈥淪ome of my research questions are: Is personal storytelling an element of community and, consequently, a long life? In a country like Japan, which is rapidly aging, how will the lives of the elderly be preserved, if at all?鈥 Pitts said.
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Finally, Pitts will explore the connections he sees 鈥渂etween the experiential aesthetic theory of the great American philosopher, John Dewey, who contends that ordinary life is art, and the very Japanese veneration of ordinary life as art (especially as a major element of longevity).鈥
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In September, Pitts will attend an orientation organized by JUSEC (Japan United States Education Commission), which runs the Fulbright program in Japan. At the orientation, he鈥檒l meet with fellow Fulbright scholars, 鈥渨hich will be really interesting to find out who they are and what they'll be doing,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 hope also to revisit some of my favorite haunts from my previous Fulbright: my old neighborhood, the Tokyo parks, and my favorite sushi and ramen听joints.鈥
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Pitts鈥 three Fulbright fellowships鈥攖wo in Japan and one in Turkey鈥攁re designed to fit together as aspects of a larger theme on the role of narrative (personal and otherwise) in the lives of communities, especially communities facing disruption in a variety of forms: social, cultural, and particularly environmental.听听His first Fulbright to Japan focused on the narratives of young people in response to the social, cultural, and environmental upheavals that define so much of their lives; the focus of his second, upcoming Japan Fulbright will be on the narratives of the elderly, in Okinawa.
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His 2010 Fulbright in Turkey was meant to explore how Turkey saw itself as a promising Islamic democracy; at that time, it wanted to join the European Union. 鈥淏ut things soon changed, especially with the Arab Spring that March,鈥 Pitts said. During his stay, a catastrophic tsunami also struck Japan, 鈥渨hich I watched on TV in my apartment in Turkey, when I began to imagine my听current听project in Japan,鈥 he noted.