Mayer Juni

Bruce Slovin Assistant Professor

Stephen Vider

Associate Professor

Publications

Book

The Queerness of Home: Gender, Sexuality, and the Politics of Domesticity After World War II (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2021)

Articles

"Public Disclosures of Private Realities: HIV/AIDS and the Domestic Archive,” Public Historian 41 no. 2 (2019), 163-189

“Clinical Activism in Community-based Practice: The Case of LGBT Affirmative Care at the Eromin Center, Philadelphia, 1973–1984," with David S. Byers and Emil Smith, American Psychologist 74, no. 8 (2019), 868-881.

“Lesbian and Gay Marriage and Romantic Adjustment in the 1950s and 1960s United States,” Gender & History 29, no. 3 (2017), 693-715

“The Ultimate Extension of Gay Community’: Communal Living and Gay Liberation in the 1970s,” Gender & History 27, no. 3 (2015), 865-881

“‘Oh Hell, May, Why Don't You People Have a Cookbook?’: Camp Humor and Gay Domesticity,” American Quarterly 65, no. 4 (2013): 877-904 (Winner of the Crompton-Noll Award, GL/Q Caucus of the Modern Language Association, January 2015)

“Sanford Versus Steinberg: Black Sitcoms, Jewish Writers, and the 1970s Ethnic Revival,” Transition 105 (2011): 21-29

Book Chapters

“What Happened to the Functional Family?: Defining and Defending Alternative Households Before and Beyond Same-Sex Marriage,” Intimate States: Gender, Sexuality, and Governance in Modern U.S. History, edited by Margot Canaday, Nancy F. Cott, and Robert O. Self (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2021)

“Domesticity,” Routledge History of American Sexuality, edited by Kevin P. Murphy, Jason Ruiz, and David Serlin (New York: Routledge, 2019)

“Consumerism,” Routledge History of Queer America, edited by Don Romesburg (New York: Routledge, 2018), 344-358

“’Nobody’s Goddamn Business But My Own’: Leonard Frey and the Politics of Jewish and Gay Visibility in the 1970s,” in The Boys in the Band: Flashpoints of Cinema, History, and Queer Politics, edited by Matt Bell (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2016), 190-215

Exhibition Catalogues

Co-author, Gay Gotham: Art and Underground Culture in New York, with Donald Albrecht, Skira Rizzoli and the Museum of the City of New York, 2016 (Finalist, 2017 Lambda Literary Award, LGBTQ Nonfiction)

“The Makings of Home,” essay in exhibition catalogue for On the Domestic Front: Scenes of Everyday Queer Life, Leslie-Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art, New York, NY, curated by James Saslow, August to October 2015

Kristin Roebuck

Assistant Professor & Howard Milstein Faculty Fellow

Publications

Scholarship

Japan Reborn: Race, Sex and Eugenics from World War to Cold War.  Under contract, Columbia University Press.

"Science without Borders?  War, Empire, and the Contested Science of 'Race Mixing' in Japan, East Asia, and the West."  In Who Is the Asianist?  The Politics of Representation in Asian Studies, eds. Will Bridges, Nitasha Tamar Sharma, and Marvin D. Sterling (New York: Columbia University Press, 2022).

"Remember Girl Zero: Asia-Pacific Patriliny and Female Slavery." Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies Vol. 81.1&2 (June–Dec. 2021).

Orphans by Design: ‘Mixed-Blood’ Children, Child Welfare, and Racial Nationalism in Postwar Japan.” Japanese Studies Vol. 36.2 (Sep. 2016)

“De-Provincializing Eugenics: The Persistence of ‘Race Hygiene’ in Japan after Its Decline in the West.”  In Asia and Africa across Disciplinary and National Lines (Tokyo: Tokyo University of Foreign Studies Press, 2015).

Mass Media

"Princess Mako of Japan's Commoner Wedding Suggests Sexism Will Doom the Royal Family."  NBC News (31 Oct. 2021).

"Akihito Bows Out, Ushering in New Era for Japan's Post-War Generation." The Hill (30 April 2019). 

"Japan, U.S. Face Legacies of Forced Sterilization." Global Journalist, National Public Radio (25 Oct. 2018). 

TJ Hinrichs

Associate Professor

Publications

  • academic journal articles:
    • Co-authored with Jeehee Hong, “Unwritten Life (and Death) of a ‘Pharmacist’ in Song China:  Decoding Hancheng Tomb Murals.” Cahier d’extrême Asie 24 (2015):231-278. 
    • “The Catchy Epidemic: Theorization and its Limits in Han to Song Period Medicine.” East Asian Science, Technology, and Medicine 41 (2015):19-62.
    • Yiru yiyi de Zhang Gao (Zhang Gao [1189 C.E.] as Scholar and as Physician).  Zhongguo shehui lishi pinglun (Chinese Social History Review). 14 (2013):65-76.
    • State of the Field: “New Geographies of Chinese Medicine.” Osiris, Beyond Joseph Needham:  Science, Technology, and Medicine in East and Southeast Asia.  Ed. Morris F. Low. 2nd Series, 13 (1998):287-325. 
  • book chapters:
    • “Picturing Medicine in Daily Life: Court and Commoner Perspectives in Song Era Paintings.” In Imagining Chinese Medicine. Pp. 233-248. Ed., Vivienne Lo. Leiden: Brill Press, 2018.
    • "Ishi ni kimareta shohosen“ (Formularies Inscribed on Stone). Bunka to toshi: Ningbo (Cultural Cities: Ningbo).  To Ajia kaiiki ni kogidasu (Rowing out into the East Asian Seas). Ed. Toshihiro, Hayasaka.  Tokyo: Tokyo University Press, 2013.
    • "Sekkoku to mokuhan: Chihou fuzoku ni tai suru huhen teki iryo to gishiki” (Stone Inscriptions and Wood Blocks: Posing Ecumenical Medicine and Ritual Against Local Customs). In Ishibumi to chihoshi no aakaibuzu wo saguru (Explorations of Stelae and Gazetteer Archives). Pp. 53-79. Ed. Takashi, Sue. Tokyo: Kyuko Shoten, 2012.
    • "Governance Through Medical Texts and the Role of Print."  In Knowledge and Text Production in an Age of Print: China, 900-1400. Pp. 217-238. Ed. Chia, Lucille. Leiden: Brill, 2011. 
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