E. Taylor Atkins

 
 

Research

I specialize in the cultural history of modern Japan and Korea, but both my research and teaching interests extend well beyond those countries. Much of my previous work could be characterized as historical ethnomusicology, in that it uses music to understand cultures of the past.  I am also interested in colonialism, public memorialization, nationalism, aesthetics, and transnational popular culture.

Principal Publications:

Primitive Selves: Koreana in the Japanese Colonial Gaze, 1910-45Colonialisms (series ed. Jennifer Robertson).  Berkeley: University of California Press (in press).


(Editor) Jazz Planet (University Press of Mississippi, 2003). 


Blue Nippon: Authenticating Jazz in Japan (Duke University Press, 2001); winner of the 2003 John Whitney Hall Prize from the Northeast Asia Council of the Association for Asian Studies.


Other Projects:

Podcast of my Korea Society lecture on “Arirang”

 

Bahá'í Responses to Colonialism -- A global study of responses by adherents of the Bahá'í Faith to colonialism and decolonization.

 

Associate Professor & director of undergraduate studies, department of history, northern illinois university

Affiliated Global Faculty, Bahá’í Institute for Higher Education

Truth is One, sages call it by various names.
--Rig Veda I:164.46

Learning without thought is labor lost;

thought without learning is perilous.

--Confucius, Analects 2:15


Better than if there were thousands of meaningless words is one meaningful word that on hearing brings peace.

--The Buddha, Dhammapada 100


Knowledge is as wings to man's life, and a ladder for his ascent. Its

acquisition is incumbent upon everyone. The knowledge of such sciences, however,

should be acquired as can profit the peoples of the earth, and not those which begin

with words and end with words.

--Bahá'u'lláh, Epistle to the Son of the Wolf