- Donald Roden
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Donald Roden is an associate professor of history at Rutgers University. He is the founder of Rutgers' Mountainview Prison Project, a program that recruits and prepares students during their incarceration, and supports their pursuit of an undergraduate degree at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, after their release. For Roden, the Mountainview Project is his most important life's work. Dr. Roden has written about a variety of subjects dealing with East Asian history including Japanese baseball, Taisho culture, and foreigners in Meiji Japan.[1] He was awarded in 2006 for 30 years of service to Rutgers.[2]
His book Schooldays in Imperial Japan: A Study in the Culture of a Student Elite was reviewed in numerous journals.[3][4][5] He also authored a number of Monarch Notes for that publisher. [6]
References
- ^ Kam Louie, Morris Low (2003). Asian Masculinities: The Meaning and Practice of Manhood in China and Japan. Routledge. p. 81. ISBN 0415298385.
- ^ "Faculty, staff honored for years of service". 2006-05-30. http://ur.rutgers.edu/focus/article/Faculty,%20staff%20honored%20for%20years%20of%20service/1856/. Retrieved 2008-03-02.
- ^ Byron Marshall; Roden, Donald T. (Winter, 1982). "Schooldays in Imperial Japan: A Study in the Culture of a Student Elite by Donald T. Roden". Journal of Japanese Studies 8 (1): 205–208. doi:10.2307/132287. JSTOR 132287.
- ^ Henry D. Smith II (November 1981). "Schooldays in Imperial Japan: A Study in the Culture of a Student Elite by Donald T. Roden". The Journal of Asian Studies 41 (1): 156–157. doi:10.2307/2055643. JSTOR 2055643.
- ^ Edward R. Beauchamp (1982). "Schooldays in Imperial Japan: A Study in the Culture of a Student Elite by Donald T. Roden". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London 45 (3): 625–626. JSTOR 614972.
- ^ Amazon.com: Donald F. Roden: Books
External links
- Donald Roden at Rutgers University
Categories:- Living people
- Rutgers University faculty
- American historian stubs
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