Brian Dowdle
Japanese Language and Culture
Contact
- Office
- LA 326
- Phone
- (406)243-5480
- brian.dowdle@mso.umt.edu
- Office Hours
Fall 2022
Monday, Wednesday, and Fridays at 9:00
Tuesdays and Thrusdays at 10:00
Also, available by appointment.
Education
Ph.D. Asian Languages and Cultures, University of Michigan (2012)
M.A. East Asian Languages and Cultures, Columbia University (2005)
Courses Taught
2019, Spring “Elementary Japanese” JPNS 102
“Modern Japanese Thinkers and Writers” JPNS 411
“Post-War Japanese Literature” JPNS 431
2018, Fall . “Elementary Japanese” JPNS 101
“Japanese Civilization” JPNS 150
"Freshman Seminar" HUSC 194
2018, Spring “Elementary Japanese” JPNS 102
"Meiji: Birth of Modern Japan" JPNS 391
2017, Fall “Elementary Japanese” JPNS 101
“Elementary Japanese” JPNS 101
"Freshman Seminar" HUSC 194
2017, Spring “Elementary Japanese” JPNS 102
"Samurai and Geisha" JPNS 391
2016, Fall “Elementary Japanese” JPNS 101
“Elementary Japanese” JPNS 101
2016, Spring “Elementary Japanese” JPNS 102
“Elementary Japanese” JPNS 102
“Post-War Japanese Literature” JPNS 431
2015, Fall On Leave
2015, Spring “Intermediate Japanese” JPNS 202
“Survey of Medieval to Early Modern Japanese Literature” JPNS 312
2014, Fall “Japanese Civilization” JPNS 150
“Intermediate Japanese” JPNS 201
“Modern Japanese Thinkers and Writers” JPNS 411
2014, Spring “Intermediate Japanese” JPNS 202
“Post-War Japanese Literature” JPNS 431
2013, Fall “Japanese Civilization” JPNS 150
“Elementary Japanese” JPNS 101
“Intermediate Japanese” JPNS 201
2013, Spring “Survey of Medieval to Early Modern Japanese Literature” JPNS 312
“Intermediate Japanese “ JPNS 202
“Advanced Japanese” JPNS 302
2012, Fall “Intermediate Japanese” JPNS 201
“Advanced Japanese” JPNS 301
Research Interests
TEACHING AND RESEARCH INTERESTS
Modern and Pre-modern Japanese literature, Modern and Pre-modern Japanese language, Japanese language pedagogy, the long-nineteenth century, book history, print culture and technology, Edo and Meiji-period Japanese orthographies, historical fiction, Kyokutei Bakin, Mori Ogai, and Natsume Soseki.
Selected Publications
Dowdle, B. (2020). The Generalist’s Dilemma: How Accidental Language Teachers Are at the Center of Japanese Pedagogy. Japanese Language and Literature, 54(2), 383-389. doi:https://doi.org/10.5195/jll.2020.136
Dowdle, B. (2020). [Review of the book Licentious Fictions: Ninj艒 and the Nineteenth-Century Japanese Novel, by Daniel Poch]. Studies in the Novel 52(3), 362-364. doi:10.1353/sdn.2020.0039.
Brian Dowdle (2020) Kendall Heitzman. Enduring Postwar: Yasuoka Sh艒tar艒 and Literary Memory in Japan. Nashville: Vanderbilt up, 2019. 225 pp, Symposium: A Quarterly Journal in Modern Literatures, 74:4, 252-254, DOI:
Dowdle, B. C. "Why Saikaku Was Memorable but Bakin Was Unforgettable." The Journal of Japanese Studies 42.1 (2016): 91-121.
Dowdle, Brian. "'Ega no kakutoku: Edo ni okeru gi, seisan, tenshi'" Rev. of Obtaining Images: Art, Production and Display in Edo Japan, by Timon Screech. Nihon Kenkyū 51 (2016): 186-188.
Dowdle Brian. “Obtaining Images: Art, Production and Display in Edo Japan, by Timon Screech.” Japan Review: Journal of the International Research Center for Japanese Studies 28 (2015): 244-245
Affiliations
National Consortium for Teaching about Asia
East Asia Resource Center
Past President of the Western Association for Asian Studies (WCAAS) Fall 2016-Fall 2018
WCAAS Representative to the Counicl of Confrences for the Assocation for Asian Studies 2017, 2018, 2019
Assocation for Asian Studies Board Member 2018-2019