Tsuyoshi Hasegawa
Tsuyoshi Hasegawa (Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, 1941 -) is an American resident historian. American nationality. The specialty is the Russian history, Japan and Russia relation.
Table of contents
Brief career history
Tokyo birth. After Tokyo Metropolitan Musashi hill Senior High School, Tokyo University college of liberal arts graduation, I acquire a doctorate in University of Washington. In 1976, I acquire American citizenship. Through Hokkaido University slab research center (existing Hokkaido University slab Eurasia research center) professor, I teach University of California Santa Barbara school history department now.
Receiving a prize
- Masayoshi Ohira memorial award - book The Northern Territories Dispute and Russo-Japanese Relations
- Robert Ferrell Award (the Society for Historians of American Foreisn Relations) - Book Racing the Enemy
- Yomiuri, Sakuzo Yoshino Prize、Ryotaro Shiba Prize - book "secret strife"
Evaluation
I study Japan and Soviet relations in the United States. The points where delicately vary in contents appear in a Japanese sentence about the published thing for a Japanese reader that it was written in an English sentence. In book Racing the Enemy (as for the Japanese edition "secret strife") which handled U.S. and Russia relations on a day of the last years of Pacific War, participation in a war of the Soviet Union to Japan performs the claim that more strongly acted than American atom bomb throwing down for surrender decision of Japan and calls the yes and no in a learned society [1].
Book
Single work
- The February Revolution, Petrograd, 1917 (University of Washington Press, 1981).
- Japanese Perceptions of the Soviet Union, 1960-1985 (Slavic Research Center, Hokkaido University, 1986).
- "A civic life of Russian Revolution lower Petrograd" (Nakakou new book, 1989)
- The Northern Territories Dispute and Russo-Japanese Relations, vol. 1 Between War and Peace, 1697-1985 (University of California, International and Area Studies, 1998).
- The Northern Territories Dispute and Russo-Japanese Relations, vol. 2 Neither War nor Peace, 1985-1998 (University of California, International and Area Studies, 1998).
- "The issue of northern territories and Japan and Russia relations" (Tsukama bookshop, 2000)
- Racing the Enemy: Stalin, Truman, and the Surrender of Japan (Harvard University Press, 2005).
"Secret strife - - Stalin, Truman and surrender in Japan" (Chuo Koron new company, 2006 / Nakakou library top and bottom, 2011)
Compilation
- The End of the Pacific War: Reappraisals, (Stanford University Press, 2007).
- The Cold War in East Asia: 1945-1991, Stanford University Press, 2011.
Cocompilation
- Perestroika, Soviet Domestic and Foreign Policies, co-edited with Alex Pravda, (Royal Institute of International Affairs, 1990).
- Russia and Japan: An Unresolved Dilemma between Distant Neighbors, co-edited with Jonathan Haslam and Andrew Kuchins, (International and Area Studies, University of California at Berkeley, 1993).
Footnote
- As ^ main book review, I refer to the following.
- Michael Kort (January/February 2006). "Racing the Enemy: A Critical Look".(Historically Speaking: The Bulletin of the Historical Society.Boston University)
- "Book Review: Racing the Enemy" (The Journal of American History. June 2007).
- "Roundtable Reviews: Racing the Enemy" (links to PDFs). h-net.org. January–February 2006.
- It is in Sadao Asada "to consider "three Soviet Union" to be the main reason of the surrender in Japan than - - "atom bomb throwing down" that there is an objection" in for "secret strife" "you!" September, 2006
- Sadao Asada "atom bomb diplomacy opinion" "criticism - - "myth" and a taboo" (1949-2009 years) "Doshisha law" Vol. 60 sixth (2009)
Outside link
This article is taken from the Japanese Wikipedia Tsuyoshi Hasegawa
This article is distributed by cc-by-sa or GFDL license in accordance with the provisions of Wikipedia.
In addition, Tranpedia is simply not responsible for any show is only by translating the writings of foreign licenses that are compatible with CC-BY-SA license information.
0 개의 댓글:
댓글 쓰기