Women in Japanese Studies
Memoirs from a Trailblazing Generation
Herausgeber: Freedman, Alisa
Women in Japanese Studies
Memoirs from a Trailblazing Generation
Herausgeber: Freedman, Alisa
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This Book brings together trailblazing women scholars from diverse disciplines in Japanese Studies to reflect on their careers and offer advice to colleagues.
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This Book brings together trailblazing women scholars from diverse disciplines in Japanese Studies to reflect on their careers and offer advice to colleagues.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Association for Asian Studies
- Seitenzahl: 618
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 163mm x 228mm x 39mm
- Gewicht: 934g
- ISBN-13: 9781952636387
- ISBN-10: 1952636388
- Artikelnr.: 69299908
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Association for Asian Studies
- Seitenzahl: 618
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 163mm x 228mm x 39mm
- Gewicht: 934g
- ISBN-13: 9781952636387
- ISBN-10: 1952636388
- Artikelnr.: 69299908
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
ALISA FREEDMAN is a professor of Japanese literature, cultural studies, and gender at the University of Oregon. Her books include Japan on American TV: Screaming Samurai Join Anime Clubs in the Land of the Lost (AAS Asia Shorts book series, 2021); Tokyo in Transit: Japanese Culture on the Rails and Road (2010); an annotated translation of Kawabata Yasunari¿s The Scarlet Gang of Asakusa (2005); a coedited volume on Modern Girls on the Go: Gender, Mobility, and Labor in Japan (2013); and an edited textbook on Introducing Japanese Popular Culture (first edition in 2017, second edition in 2023). She served as the editor in chief of the US¿Japan Women¿s Journal (2016¿2022) and has published more than thirty-five articles and chapters for peer-reviewed journals and books, around twenty-five literary translations and co-translations, several guides to academic publishing, and numerous articles for general-interest publications. She is the Faculty Fellow of a university residence hall and has received a national award for her mentorship work. Alisa enjoys presenting at public events like cultural festivals, anime cons, and reading groups.
Alisa Freedman,
Introduction, or the Professional is Personal
Ellen P. Conant,
The Implausible Origins of Becoming an Art Historian
Joyce Lebra,
An Asian Affiliation
Marlene J. Mayo,
Against the Odds, Persisting
Barbara Ruch,
In Search of Flowers Yet Unseen
Margaret Lock,
On Becoming a Medical Anthropologist
Takako Lento,
Life on Two Tracks
Phyllis I. Lyons,
A Record of Puzzlement
Susan B. Hanley,
An Accidental Pioneer
Susan Matisoff,
Another Girl Studying Japanese!
Mary Elizabeth Berry,
Becoming a Historian
Patricia G. Steinhoff,
Serendipity and Sociology
Sumie Jones,
I Came, I Saw, I Stayed
Richard Smethurst,
Mae as a Professional Scholar
Amy V. Heinrich,
Margins
Sonja Arntzen,
The Presence of the Past in Life and Scholarship
Christine M.E. Guth,
Two Children
and a PhD
Maureen Donovan,
Memories of Becoming a Japanese Studies Librarian
Janine Beichman,
The Open Gate
Phyllis Birnbaum,
Confessions of a Biographer
Merry White,
Backwards and in High Heels
Susan Pharr,
Night Train to Tokyö Margaret McKean,
From Ch
shingura to Commons
Kate Wildman Nakai,
Encounters
Anne Walthall,
I Owe My Career to Men
Anne E. Imamura,
Embracing the Unexpected and Weaving a Life
Juliet Winters Carpenter,
Translating in Japan
Eleanor Kerkham,
Still on the Way
Kristina Kade Troost,
Growing Up, or How I Learned to Be a Japanese Studies Librarian
Helen Hardacre,
With a Lot of Help from My Friends
Barbara Sato,
On Being an Outsider-Insider
Esperanza Ramirez-Christensen,
Japanese Literature as a Refuge
Introduction, or the Professional is Personal
Ellen P. Conant,
The Implausible Origins of Becoming an Art Historian
Joyce Lebra,
An Asian Affiliation
Marlene J. Mayo,
Against the Odds, Persisting
Barbara Ruch,
In Search of Flowers Yet Unseen
Margaret Lock,
On Becoming a Medical Anthropologist
Takako Lento,
Life on Two Tracks
Phyllis I. Lyons,
A Record of Puzzlement
Susan B. Hanley,
An Accidental Pioneer
Susan Matisoff,
Another Girl Studying Japanese!
Mary Elizabeth Berry,
Becoming a Historian
Patricia G. Steinhoff,
Serendipity and Sociology
Sumie Jones,
I Came, I Saw, I Stayed
Richard Smethurst,
Mae as a Professional Scholar
Amy V. Heinrich,
Margins
Sonja Arntzen,
The Presence of the Past in Life and Scholarship
Christine M.E. Guth,
Two Children
and a PhD
Maureen Donovan,
Memories of Becoming a Japanese Studies Librarian
Janine Beichman,
The Open Gate
Phyllis Birnbaum,
Confessions of a Biographer
Merry White,
Backwards and in High Heels
Susan Pharr,
Night Train to Tokyö Margaret McKean,
From Ch
shingura to Commons
Kate Wildman Nakai,
Encounters
Anne Walthall,
I Owe My Career to Men
Anne E. Imamura,
Embracing the Unexpected and Weaving a Life
Juliet Winters Carpenter,
Translating in Japan
Eleanor Kerkham,
Still on the Way
Kristina Kade Troost,
Growing Up, or How I Learned to Be a Japanese Studies Librarian
Helen Hardacre,
With a Lot of Help from My Friends
Barbara Sato,
On Being an Outsider-Insider
Esperanza Ramirez-Christensen,
Japanese Literature as a Refuge
Alisa Freedman,
Introduction, or the Professional is Personal
Ellen P. Conant,
The Implausible Origins of Becoming an Art Historian
Joyce Lebra,
An Asian Affiliation
Marlene J. Mayo,
Against the Odds, Persisting
Barbara Ruch,
In Search of Flowers Yet Unseen
Margaret Lock,
On Becoming a Medical Anthropologist
Takako Lento,
Life on Two Tracks
Phyllis I. Lyons,
A Record of Puzzlement
Susan B. Hanley,
An Accidental Pioneer
Susan Matisoff,
Another Girl Studying Japanese!
Mary Elizabeth Berry,
Becoming a Historian
Patricia G. Steinhoff,
Serendipity and Sociology
Sumie Jones,
I Came, I Saw, I Stayed
Richard Smethurst,
Mae as a Professional Scholar
Amy V. Heinrich,
Margins
Sonja Arntzen,
The Presence of the Past in Life and Scholarship
Christine M.E. Guth,
Two Children
and a PhD
Maureen Donovan,
Memories of Becoming a Japanese Studies Librarian
Janine Beichman,
The Open Gate
Phyllis Birnbaum,
Confessions of a Biographer
Merry White,
Backwards and in High Heels
Susan Pharr,
Night Train to Tokyö Margaret McKean,
From Ch
shingura to Commons
Kate Wildman Nakai,
Encounters
Anne Walthall,
I Owe My Career to Men
Anne E. Imamura,
Embracing the Unexpected and Weaving a Life
Juliet Winters Carpenter,
Translating in Japan
Eleanor Kerkham,
Still on the Way
Kristina Kade Troost,
Growing Up, or How I Learned to Be a Japanese Studies Librarian
Helen Hardacre,
With a Lot of Help from My Friends
Barbara Sato,
On Being an Outsider-Insider
Esperanza Ramirez-Christensen,
Japanese Literature as a Refuge
Introduction, or the Professional is Personal
Ellen P. Conant,
The Implausible Origins of Becoming an Art Historian
Joyce Lebra,
An Asian Affiliation
Marlene J. Mayo,
Against the Odds, Persisting
Barbara Ruch,
In Search of Flowers Yet Unseen
Margaret Lock,
On Becoming a Medical Anthropologist
Takako Lento,
Life on Two Tracks
Phyllis I. Lyons,
A Record of Puzzlement
Susan B. Hanley,
An Accidental Pioneer
Susan Matisoff,
Another Girl Studying Japanese!
Mary Elizabeth Berry,
Becoming a Historian
Patricia G. Steinhoff,
Serendipity and Sociology
Sumie Jones,
I Came, I Saw, I Stayed
Richard Smethurst,
Mae as a Professional Scholar
Amy V. Heinrich,
Margins
Sonja Arntzen,
The Presence of the Past in Life and Scholarship
Christine M.E. Guth,
Two Children
and a PhD
Maureen Donovan,
Memories of Becoming a Japanese Studies Librarian
Janine Beichman,
The Open Gate
Phyllis Birnbaum,
Confessions of a Biographer
Merry White,
Backwards and in High Heels
Susan Pharr,
Night Train to Tokyö Margaret McKean,
From Ch
shingura to Commons
Kate Wildman Nakai,
Encounters
Anne Walthall,
I Owe My Career to Men
Anne E. Imamura,
Embracing the Unexpected and Weaving a Life
Juliet Winters Carpenter,
Translating in Japan
Eleanor Kerkham,
Still on the Way
Kristina Kade Troost,
Growing Up, or How I Learned to Be a Japanese Studies Librarian
Helen Hardacre,
With a Lot of Help from My Friends
Barbara Sato,
On Being an Outsider-Insider
Esperanza Ramirez-Christensen,
Japanese Literature as a Refuge