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Herman OomsProfessor |
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Fields
of interest: Pre-modern Japanese History; Cultural Theory. Herman
Ooms teaches upper-level
undergraduate survey courses in early modern (Tokugawa) Japanese history,
the history of religions in Japan, and an introduction to new theory from
Saussure to post-modern thinkers. At the graduate level, he offers
seminars on: Tokugawa social, legal, and intellectual history, critical
social theory (such as Pierre Bourdieu's approach). He
was educated in Belgium, where he majored in Classics and earned an MA in
Philosophy; Japan, where he earned an MA at Tokyo University in
Anthroplogy of Religion; the University of Chicago, where he received a
PhD in Japanese History. In his research and teaching, he combines
anthropological approaches, intellectual history and critical theory. His
publications include: Charismatic
Bureaucrat: A Political Biography of Matsudaira Sadanobu (1758-1829)(University
of Chicago Press, 1975); Tokugawa
Ideology: Early Constructs, 1570-1680,
(Princeton University Press, 1985) the Japanese translation of which, Tokugawa
ideorogii (Tokyo: Perikansha, 1990) received the Watsuji Tetsuro
Culture Prize in 1992; a Korean translation is being prepared; Sosensuhai
no shimborizumu
(Symbolism in Ancestor Worship; Tokyo: Dobundo, 1987); Tokugawa
Village Practice: Class, Status, Power, Law,
(University of California Press, 1996); special recognition by the Herbert
Jacobs Book Prize Committee of the Law and Society Association in 1997; a
Japanese translation forthcoming from Pelikansha in 2001; Shukyo
kenkyu to ideorogii bunseki
(Essays on Ideology and Religion in Japan; Perikansha, 1996); Shinpojiumu
Tokugawa Ideorogii
(Symposium on Tokugawa Ideology:
Appraisals and Critiques), co-edited with Okuwa Hitoshi (Perikansha,
1996); "Forms and Norms in Edo Arts and Society," in Edo Art in Japan 1615-1868, (National Gallery of Art, Washington). Exhibition Catalogue, 1998. |
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