Kyoto Consortium for Japanese Studies (KCJS)
The City
Kyoto, Japan’s imperial capital from 794 to 1868, is a city rich in traditional culture and history. Surrounded on three sides by densely forested mountains and intersected by a number of rivers, Kyoto is one of Japan's most beautiful cities and is home to Buddhist temples, Shinto shrines, ancient palaces, and arts and crafts centers. Traditionally a city of textiles, light industry, and refined craftsmanship, Kyoto today boasts some of Japan’s most advanced high-tech firms and many Japanese universities, and it has the nation’s highest number of students per capita.
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| View of Kyoto at night -- Billy Martyn, Academic Year 2006-2007 |
The Consortium
Established in September 1989, the Kyoto Consortium for Japanese Studies (KCJS) is a consortium of 14 American universities that sponsors a rigorous, two-semester academic program for undergraduates who wish to do advanced work in Japanese language and cultural studies.
Consortium Members
The KCJS is dedicated to:
- Providing access to premier instructors and professors
- Ensuring small class sizes to cultivate intellectual exchange
- Integrating the historical and cultural resources of Kyoto into the curriculum through excursions, field trips, and guest lectures
- Enabling academic and cultural exchange between KCJS and Japanese students through shared classes and student activities
The KCJS welcomes applications from students outside the consortium.




