Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney

born and raised in Japan. After a B.A.
degree from Tsuda College

in Tokyo, she came to the United States on a
Fulbright scholarship. Her anthropological work began with an anthropological history
of the Detroit Chinese community since their arrival in the city (the only study of the
"China Town," now demolished).
She then turned to the Sakhalin Ainu resettled in Hokkaido, resulting in three books.
Realizing the limitation of studying a "memory culture," she shifted her focus on the
Japanese, with Illness and Culture in Contemporary Japan as her first book on the
Japanese. This work made her realize how one fails to understand the people and their
way of life by studying only at a particular point in time. All her subsequent works have
considered long periods of Japanese history to understand "culture through time." Her
foci have been on various symbols of identities of the Japanese, such as rice and the
monkey, within broader socio-political contexts and in comparative perspective. Her
latest work began as a study of symbolism of cherry blossoms and their viewing in
relation to Japanese identities. But she soon realized how the governments, since the end
of the nineteenth century through World War II, manipulated cherished symbolism, such
as that of cherry blossoms, and especially its folk aesthetic in order to co-opt people for
their own purposes, such as waging wars and imperial expansions, without people
realizing it. The work culminated in her two most recent books, with the last one,
Kamikaze Diaries, introducing the diaries of student soldiers whom the government
drafted and sent on the death mission known outside of Japan as "kamikaze." She
continues to explore the general theories about the role of symbolism and folk aesthetic in
historical and cross-cultural perspective and to show how the "culture concept" itself
must be historicized, rather than thrown away altogether.
All her books have been re-written in Japanese for the Japanese readership. Her books
have been translated into several languages, including Italian, Korean, Polish and Russian.