Institute Participants
Please click on names for additional information and images
Visiting Scholars
Dr. Mary Elizabeth Berry (University of California, Berkeley)
Raising the Material Girl
Dr. Chad Diehl (Emmanuel College)
Paper and Bombs: Nagasaki no kane, Publishing, and Power during the Allied Occupation
Dr. Brian Dowdle (University of Montana)
Why Saikaku was Memorable While Bakin was Unforgettable
Dr. Hoyt Long (University of Chicago)
(Il)legibility in Meiji Letters: A Media History of Handwriting
Global Literary Networks and the Problem of Scale in Digital Humanities
Dr. Edward Mack (University of Washington)
Periodicals, Codices, and Digital Media: The Materiality of Japanese-Language Literature in
Brazil
Dr. Ann Sherif (Oberlin College)
Publishing in Twentieth-Century Coterie and Culture Circles
Dr. Nathan Shockey (Bard College)
Popular Philosophy, Enlightened Consumers, and a New Universal Library: Iwanami
Shoten's Mass-Market Mission
Dr. Ellis Tinios (Honorary Lecturer in History, University of Leeds)
Adapting Chinese Illustrated Books for the Japanese Market
Dr. Robert Tuck (University of Montana)
Climbing the Ladder of Poetry: Kanshi Pedagogy and Publishing in 19th Century Japan
Dr. Umetada Misa (Waseda University)
歌舞伎の小説〈正本写〉について~河竹黙阿弥作『小袖曽我薊色縫』を例に~
Dr. Wada Atsuhiko, UCSB 2013 Japan Foundation Visiting Professor (Waseda University)
Encouraging Immigration: Immigration Journals in Japan Before WWII
Dr. Marcia Yonemoto (University of Colorado, Boulder)
Didactic Texts for Women in the Tokugawa Period: Questions of Authorship, Publication, and Readership
Dr. Jonathan Zwicker (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor)
Benten Kozō on Trial: Piracy, Copyright, and Authorship in Nineteenth-Century Japan
Raising the Material Girl
Dr. Chad Diehl (Emmanuel College)
Paper and Bombs: Nagasaki no kane, Publishing, and Power during the Allied Occupation
Dr. Brian Dowdle (University of Montana)
Why Saikaku was Memorable While Bakin was Unforgettable
Dr. Hoyt Long (University of Chicago)
(Il)legibility in Meiji Letters: A Media History of Handwriting
Global Literary Networks and the Problem of Scale in Digital Humanities
Dr. Edward Mack (University of Washington)
Periodicals, Codices, and Digital Media: The Materiality of Japanese-Language Literature in
Brazil
Dr. Ann Sherif (Oberlin College)
Publishing in Twentieth-Century Coterie and Culture Circles
Dr. Nathan Shockey (Bard College)
Popular Philosophy, Enlightened Consumers, and a New Universal Library: Iwanami
Shoten's Mass-Market Mission
Dr. Ellis Tinios (Honorary Lecturer in History, University of Leeds)
Adapting Chinese Illustrated Books for the Japanese Market
Dr. Robert Tuck (University of Montana)
Climbing the Ladder of Poetry: Kanshi Pedagogy and Publishing in 19th Century Japan
Dr. Umetada Misa (Waseda University)
歌舞伎の小説〈正本写〉について~河竹黙阿弥作『小袖曽我薊色縫』を例に~
Dr. Wada Atsuhiko, UCSB 2013 Japan Foundation Visiting Professor (Waseda University)
Encouraging Immigration: Immigration Journals in Japan Before WWII
Dr. Marcia Yonemoto (University of Colorado, Boulder)
Didactic Texts for Women in the Tokugawa Period: Questions of Authorship, Publication, and Readership
Dr. Jonathan Zwicker (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor)
Benten Kozō on Trial: Piracy, Copyright, and Authorship in Nineteenth-Century Japan
UCSB Faculty
Dr. Michael Emmerich (Department of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies)
Summer Institute co-organizer
Bibliographic Translations of Inaka Genji
Dr. Sabine Frühstück (Department of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies)
Dr. ann-elise lewallen (Department of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies)
Dr. Kate McDonald (History Department)
Dr. John Nathan (Department of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies)
Dr. Fabio Rambelli (Department of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies)
Dr. Luke Roberts (History Department)
A Samurai's Reading in the Late Eighteenth Century
Dr. Katherine Saltzman-Li (Department of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies)
Summer Institute co-organizer
In Hand: Printed Materials in the Experience of Early Modern Kabuki Performance
Dr. Nathaniel Smith (Department of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies)
Dr. Miriam Wattles (Department of the History of Art and Architecture)
Summer Institute co-organizer
Bibliographic Translations of Inaka Genji
Dr. Sabine Frühstück (Department of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies)
Dr. ann-elise lewallen (Department of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies)
Dr. Kate McDonald (History Department)
Dr. John Nathan (Department of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies)
Dr. Fabio Rambelli (Department of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies)
Dr. Luke Roberts (History Department)
A Samurai's Reading in the Late Eighteenth Century
Dr. Katherine Saltzman-Li (Department of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies)
Summer Institute co-organizer
In Hand: Printed Materials in the Experience of Early Modern Kabuki Performance
Dr. Nathaniel Smith (Department of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies)
Dr. Miriam Wattles (Department of the History of Art and Architecture)
Graduate Students and Postdocs
Dr. Molly Des Jardin (Harvard University Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies)
The Corporate Anonymous: Media-Based Authorship, Social Networks, and Reader Reception in the Meiji Period
Digitized Texts and the Problems of Textual Analysis for Historical Japanese Books
Kazuko Hioki (University of Kentucky)
History and Physical Characteristics of Printed Books in Early Modern Japan
Judit Erika Magyar (Waseda University)
Shashin Shūhō (1938-1945), the Domestic Mouthpiece of WWII Japan
Nakano Ayako (Waseda University)
学徒兵の読書—堀辰雄人気の秘密
Steffen Remvik (University of Oslo)
Setsuyōshū and the Structure of Knowledge in Early Modern Japan
Travis Seifman (University of California Santa Barbara)
Pictures of an Island Kingdom: Ryūkyū in Edo Period Popular Publications
Momoko Welch (Arizona State University)
The Meaning of “Hand-Copying” in Edo Book Culture
The Corporate Anonymous: Media-Based Authorship, Social Networks, and Reader Reception in the Meiji Period
Digitized Texts and the Problems of Textual Analysis for Historical Japanese Books
Kazuko Hioki (University of Kentucky)
History and Physical Characteristics of Printed Books in Early Modern Japan
Judit Erika Magyar (Waseda University)
Shashin Shūhō (1938-1945), the Domestic Mouthpiece of WWII Japan
Nakano Ayako (Waseda University)
学徒兵の読書—堀辰雄人気の秘密
Steffen Remvik (University of Oslo)
Setsuyōshū and the Structure of Knowledge in Early Modern Japan
Travis Seifman (University of California Santa Barbara)
Pictures of an Island Kingdom: Ryūkyū in Edo Period Popular Publications
Momoko Welch (Arizona State University)
The Meaning of “Hand-Copying” in Edo Book Culture