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New Asian Studies Faculty Appointed
The Asian Studies Center (ASN) (http://www.isp.msu.edu/AsianStudies/) at Michigan State University has played
an important facilitative role in the hiring of four new tenure-track
Asia scholars by the university. ANS's support for these positions was
made possible through the center's Title VI allotment from U.S. Department
of Education as a result of being named an All-Asia National Resource
Center for the current three-year cycle. The four new tenure-track faculty
members, who arrived for the fall 2001 semester, are housed in
the Department
of Anthropology (http://www.ssc.msu.edu/~anp/)(College of Social Science), the Department of Linguistics
and Germanic, Slavic, Asian, and African Languages (http://www.msu.edu/user/linglang/)(College of Arts and
Letters), and James Madison College (http://www2.jmc.msu.edu/).
- John H. Davis, Jr. received his Ph.D. in anthropology from Stanford
University in January 2002. A Japan specialist, his dissertation was
titled "Challenging the State, Embracing the Nation: The Cultural Politics
of Human Rights in Japanese Society." He joins the Department of Anthropology,
where he teaches Japan: Society and Culture; Human Rights: Anthropological
Perspectives; Psychological Anthropology; and Social and Cultural Analysis.
- Elizabeth F. Drexler received her Ph.D. in anthropology from the
University of Washington in 2001. An Indonesia specialist, her research
focuses on issues related to human rights and state violence. Her dissertation
was titled "Paranoid Transparencies: Aceh's Historical Grievance and
Indonesia's Failed Reform." She joins the Department of Anthropology,
were she teaches Race, Ethnicity, and the Nation-State; Globalization
and Justice; and Anthropological Methods.
- Bryan K. Ritchie received his Ph.D. in political science from Emory
University. A Southeast Asia specialist, his dissertation was titled
"The Political Economy of Technical Intellectual Capital Formation in
Southeast Asia." He joins the faculty of James Madison College, where
he teaches courses on the political economy of Southeast Asia, the political
economy of technological development, and the politics of international
economic relations.
- Catherine Ryu received her Ph.D. in Japanese language and literature
from the University of Michigan. Her dissertation, completed in 1999,
was titled "Configuring Female Authorship in Japanese Cultural History:
The Case of Ono no Komachi." Her research interests are in the field
of gender studies and women's literature, especially Japanese Heian
narratives. She teaches courses in Japanese language for her home department,
the Department of Linguistics and Germanic, Slavic, Asian, and African
Languages, and also teaches Japanese literature courses for the Asian
Studies program.
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