Hajimu Masuda

For more than a decade, I have been interested in the crossroads of society and politics, and state and people. The beginning point for my interest may have been a two-month bicycle trip in the Middle East when I was nineteen years old, during which I learned through interactions with local people that diplomatic achievements, however important, are not the whole picture.

This realization made me more attentive to the life of everyday people and the popular political cultures behind politics and conflicts, leading me to pursue my first career as a newspaper journalist in Japan. While reporting on diverse topics in contemporary Japan, I developed interests in photography and history, as well as coming to feeling a need to study foreign languages, not only English but also Chinese and Korean. Thus, I moved to the United States, taught Japanese at an alternative high school in Southern California, learned these languages, and studied photography and history, leading me to eventually attaining a doctoral degree in history at Cornell University in 2012.

Although I eventually chose history as my profession with primary interests in global and international history as well as modern Japanese history, I continue to be passionate about pursuits that I have been following throughout my life: camping, cycling, traveling, and backpacking, as well as photography and journalism. When I am not doing archival research, writing a manuscript, or hitting the road, I am usually reading novels by Murakami Haruki.

TEACHING AREAS:
  • Modern Japan: Conflict in History
  • Student Movements in Asia
  • Reconsidering the Cold War
  • Decolonization in the 20th Century

CURRENT RESEARCH:
  • The Cold War
  • Decolonization
  • Postwar Japan
  • Social Movements
  • U.S. Foreign Relations
  • 20th Century Global History

SELECTED PUBLICATIONS:
  • Cold War Crucible: The Korean Conflict and the Postwar World (Harvard University Press, 2015)

Articles Essays, Book Chapters and Book Reviews:


INTERESTS: