John Whittier Treat
John Whittier Treat is Professor of East Asian Languages and Literature at Yale University, Connecticut, United States, where he teaches Japanese literature and culture. He was co-editor of the Journal of Japanese Studies. He has published numerous essays and several books on Japan-related topics. In 2008, he discussed his work with Peter Shea at the University of Minnesota.[1]
He received his BA, from Amherst College, Massachusetts, in 1975, and his MA and PhD from Yale University in 1979 and 1982, respectively.
Selected works
In a statistical overview derived from writings by and about John Whittier Treat, OCLC/WorldCat encompasses roughly 9 works in 20 publications in 1 language and 1,000+ library holdings.[2]
- This is an incomplete list that may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
- The literature of Ibuse Masuji (1982)
- Pools of water, pillars of fire: the literature of Ibuse Masuji (1988)
- Yoshimoto Banana Writes Home: Shojo Culture and the Nostalgic Subject (1993)
- Contemporary Japan and popular culture (1995)
- Writing ground zero: Japanese literature and the atomic bomb (1995)
- Great mirrors shattered: homosexuality, orientalism, and Japan (1999)
- Japanese writers and the Second World War (2005)
- Other published writing
- Studies in Modern Japanese Literature: Essays and Translations in Honor of Edwin McClellan with Alan Tansman and Dennis Washburn, eds. Center for Japanese Studies, University of Michigan, (1997). ISBN 0-939512-84-X
Honors
- 1998: Social Science Research Council Grant
- 1997: Association for Asian Studies, John Whitney Hall Book Prize, 1997.[3]
- 1996-97: Mary Weeks Senior Fellowship, Center for the Humanities, Stanford University
- 1994: NEH Summer Stipend
Notes
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