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Mark Driscoll

Title: Associate Professor, Asian Studies
Department/School: Asian Studies , CB#3267
Telephone: (919) 843-9748
Email:mdriscol@email.unc.edu
Appointed Year: 2004
Education:• PHD East Asian Studies, Cornell University 2000
World Area Of Focus:• East Asia 75%-99%
Languages:• Chinese, Mandarin (professional proficiency)
• French (limited working proficiency)
• Japanese (native/bilingual proficiency)
• Spanish (limited working proficiency)
Specialization:I am a specialist in Japanese and Chinese intellectual and political history. More broadly, my work is informed by postcolonial theory and critical race studies.
Dissertations and Theses Supervised in Past 5 Years: 3
Recent Publications:• 2016 “Hyperneoliberalism: Youth, Labor, and Militant Mice in Japan.” Positions: Asia Critique, Volume 25, #1, Fall 2015. [29 pages].
• 2015 "Grass Stage's Theater of Precarity in Shanghai", in The Routledge Companion to Art and Politics, edited by Randy Martin (New York: Routledge, 2015). pages 139-147
• 2014 “The Amakasu Incident and Japan’s Age of Terror.” Terrorism and Modernity: Global Perspectives on Nineteenth Century Political Violence. Edited by Carola Dietze and Claudia Verhoven. Oxford University Press: 2014 [27 pages].
• 2010 Absolute Erotic, Absolute Grotesque: The Living, Dead and Undead in Japan's Imperialism. Book manuscript. Duke Press. [319 pages]
• 2005 “The 2 Freeters of Neoliberal Japan” in Cultural Critique, Winter, 2005. (Peer Reviewed)
• 2005 Kannani and Document. Book manuscript. Duke Press. [193 pages]
• 2004 “Reverse Postcoloniality” in Social Text 78, Vol. No. 1, Spring 2004 pp. 59-84. (Peer Reviewed)

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