Joseph K. Yamagiwa

Joseph Koshimi Yamagiwa (September 9, 1906 in Seattle, Washington December 10, 1968) was the Professor of Japanese at the University of Michigan and the chairman of its Department of Languages and Literature. He died of a seizure.[1]

Early life

Yamagiwa attended the University of Washington, then later transferred to Bates College, located in Maine. After his college education, he proceeded to enroll in the University of Michigan's English graduate studies. He graduated with a master's degree in 1930. Yamagiwa was an editor of the early Modern Dictionary. He completed his studies in 1942, with a treatise entitled The Older Inflected Forms of Surviving in the Modern Japanese Written Language.[1]

World War II

From 1942–1946 Yamagiwa held the position of Director of Army Military Intelligence Japanese school located at Ann Arbor and the position Supervisor of the Language Program for the Army Specialized Training Program and the Civil Affairs Training School from 1943 until 1945. Later in 1945, he took his first post at the University of Michigan as the Supervisor of the Japanese Translation Program and was also a Research Bombing Analyst for the U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey, which took place in Washington D.C. and Tokyo.[1] He was later appointed as a colonel in the United States Army Reserves.[1]

Late career

Yamagiwa was appointed as the Associate Director of Japanese in 1947, and finally to the position of Director of Japanese in 1953. He accepted the role of Chairman of the Department of Far Eastern Languages and Literature and was employed in that position until 1964. He was appointed the Fulbright Lecturer in the areas of Japanese literature, language and thought at Oxford University. Yamagiwa was an active member of the Modern Language Association, the American Oriental Society, the Association for Asian Studies, the Linguistic Society of America, and the Association of Teachers of Japanese.[1]

gollark: Also they're entirely reliant on the city for electricity and water and stuff.
gollark: Context: you can't really grow food on tiny bits of soil on cardboard. You can't really grow much food on the tiny plots. You can't grow food fast enough for it to be useful in your "commune" in the middle of a city. You probably can't grow enough food *at all* in that area to feed the sort of population density cities typically have. You definitely can't really do it without much farming equipment and by just making a few tiny soil bits with plants in them.
gollark: Yes, exactly.
gollark: https://twitter.com/tweetbrettmac/status/1270983562226012161?s=12
gollark: * stupider

See also

References

  1. Brower, Robert H. (Association of Teachers of Japanese). "The Journal-Newsletter of The Association of Teachers of Japanese". 6: 2–3. JSTOR 488712. Cite journal requires |journal= (help); Check date values in: |date= (help)
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