Showing posts with label Alumni page. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alumni page. Show all posts

Sunday, October 09, 2011

Ryan continues to bloom at UH

Kudos to Japanese major, Ryan Buyco, GW '10, who presented a paper entitled, "Travels in the Philippines: A Postcolonial Reading" at the 2011 School of Pacific and Asian Studies Graduate Student Conference at the University of Hawai'i at Manoa. The theme of the conference was “Crossing Borders: Emerging Trends in Pacific and Asian Studies." Ryan received the Edward Seidensticker Award for best paper in Japanese studies.

According to Ryan:

"My paper focuses on a travelogue written in 1967 by Ōoka Shōhei, considered to be one of the most well respected writers in Japan's postwar history. During world war II, Ōoka was a soldier in the Philippines where he became a prisoner of war. This travel account documents his return back—more than twenty years after, where he goes around the Philippine countryside paying respects to his comrades that died in battle. My paper attempts to understand this text in relation to Japan's historical memory as a former colonizer."

Congratulations again!

Erin in her own words

Former Japanese Major, Erin Newton, GW '09, spent the last year in Korea teaching English but recently applied to graduate programs to study Asian Studies (I know because I wrote the letters of recommendation). Starting this Fall, Erin is a graduate student at the University of Texas. This is a recent correspondance I received from her.

"I thought I should keep you updated on what's going on here in Texas.

"I'm now a little over a month into my first semester as a grad student. I love the program and my professors, but I don't remember anyone telling me that there would be so much reading! I'm glad that I picked UT though; the Graduate School has a good reputation, and if I get my master's in Asian Studies then I can get a Ph.D. in something like history or religion. The big worry for all the grad students these days is getting a job, and apparently a Ph.D. in Asian Studies or Japanese can make that very difficult these days. Several professors have told me that it's better to go for a general Ph.D--like history or religion--because it's a more general field. I don't know if you have any thoughts on this; it definitely wasn't something I had really considered before coming here.

Last weekend I went to my first conference. Not to present anything but to listen to the presentations of the second-year grad students and to sort of see what they were like. It was pretty small, but all the presentations were pretty impressive. I can't imagine what it will be like presenting though. I feel so far away from picking a thesis topic, and even though I know that I only have a few years in the program, compared to undergraduate, that feels so short!"
October 6, 2011

Good luck, Erin. Initial presentations are alwyas a bit daunting, but I'm sure you'll do great when your time comes. Good research leads to great presentation and great publications. Hook 'em Horns! (I can't believe I just wrote that... after the whoopin' their football team gave my alma mater, UCLA, last month.)

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Brief Notes from Alumni

Ryan Buyco, GW ’10, was a Japanese major who was accepted into the Master Program in Asian Studies at the University of Hawaii. He was also awarded the Starr Fellowship for Academic Year 2010-2011. Here’s a brief note from the man his peers came to know as the boxing monk. (Long story...)

I’m officially here in Hawaii and this week is my first week of school.

It's actually pretty awesome so far, the Asian studies grad students have their own grad room and I find all the professors really helpful. Also, right now, I'm in the Southeast concentration but trying to switch over to the Japan studies concentration. I sat in their seminar today with Professor Huey, and it ended up being really interesting. In fact, Professor Huey was talking about new historicism today. In any case, I've talked with him a couple of times this week and he seems like a really laid back professor. (Note: Robert Huey is Hanami sensei’s senpai at Stanford)

Anyways, I talked with a few professors and they told me a big reason why I received my fellowship at all was because of my duel interest in Japan and Southeast Asia. So after talking with several professors of what kind of research I could possibly do but still retain my background in Japanese literature, I figured that a possible option was to analyze Southeast Asia in Japanese literature. For example, Takeyama Michio's Harp of Burma or Murakami's short story "Thailand" in After the Quake. Actually, the other day I talked with a professor of Japanese modern literature and she gave me these titles among several others from the top of her head.

This might end up being interesting so I'll let you know if this becomes anything!

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Alumni Weekend

This weekend was Alumni Weekend at GW. I signed up to stay in our department to welcome any alumni who might drop by, but unfortunately, no one came. However, on Sunday, Prof. Hamano and Hanami had the opportunity to see Clark and Alison Munson who came down from Pittsburgh for the weekend. We met up in Ballston and had a nice chat. Clark and Alison seem to be doing fine in married life and it was very nice to see them.
Munsons 2008

Sunday, April 06, 2008

To be or not to be... a Japanese Major

Okay, we’re back again... If you read the previous newsletter and are convinced that you want to declare a Japanese major, then that’s GREAT! But maybe some of you are still sitting on the fence. Are you worried about finishing on time? Then come by to see Profs Hamano, Hanami or Tsujioka—this is alphabetical order, if you’re wondering—to check out the classes you need. Are you afraid that Bungo (classical Japanese) might be too hard? Pfffzt! Piece of cake... Here’s a hint: Japanese verbs are pretty regular, right?—How many irregulars in Japanese? Three? THREE?!? How many in English? Hmmm, maybe 3847? (This is an Onigiriman guess-timate) Well, Bungo verbs are even more regular than modern Japanese—although we won’t mention that there are more than ichidan and godan verbs... Anyway, if you are still procrastinating—like Etchan,—then here are a couple more comments from recent graduates for context. And if you have any questions, come and see us. We’ll be waiting...


In college, your major is more than what you study or what you're going to do when you graduate—it's really about how you feel and what makes you happy. Majoring in Japanese was much more than studying the lan-guage, it is about the appreciation of the culture and way of life that often you only truly grasp after having first hand experiences abroad. My profes-sional and personal lives are impacted daily by elements of the Japanese life-style that I have incorporated into my every day life. This, of course, I have as a result of dedicated professors passionate about sharing their experi-ences and knowledge paving the way for students to succeed.

Jordyn Cosme—2006


The Japanese major to me means ex-actly this! What I am doing right now. Sitting in a Japanese government office doing the most random transla-tion/interpretation/ event organiza-tion work that they can throw at me. Never in my life did I imagine I would end up where I am today. It’s chal-lenging and makes me feel like a Swiss army knife or cultural/linguistic su-perhero.
I knew when I entered GWU that I wanted to study abroad and maybe live abroad for a while after college. I had a lot of experience with The West and wanted to learn about cultures beyond that. The Japanese major took me, one with a very South American / New Yorker upbringing, and put me across the planet in a culture that I had no previous experience with. I was well prepared in terms of lan-guage and basic cultural understand-ing through the various Japanese ma-jor electives we have to take. I knew about concepts like Honne/Tatemae and so forth and a great deal more about J-lit than most Japanese know themselves. With those tools in hands I will able to carve out a life for myself here in Japan and really learn to un-derstand, critically evaluate, and ap-preciate a culture and a people really different from my own.
Studying/living in Japan I have had opportunities to travel to Australia, Korea, China, and Cambodia. I have a much stronger understanding about The East and I think I am more of a well rounded person for it. Even if I do not end up having a career that uses my Japanese skills, I will have gained far more insight about the world and the people in it.

I would tell prospective Japanese majors that a major in Japanese gives them the opportunity to study abroad. Not the silly kind of study abroad where you sit around in some Euro-pean city shopping and drinking and pretending you are doing anything that you wouldn't be doing back in DC. It’s the kind of study abroad where you feel angry and confused and then completely at home in a cul-ture that is so beyond what we experi-ence in the US. The Japanese major is the best way to equip yourself for study abroad and for learning about the world beyond the West. If you challenge yourself with this you will become a more understanding person and better for it. Japanese Majors in many ways are like anthropologists because we spend so much time on Culture and not just linguistics. I think it’s a great major to double ma-jor in because of the value it adds to you as a human being. However, study abroad is a total must for any real Japanese major or you are simply wasting your time. Majoring in Japanese will give you an opportunity to follow a linguistics related career, but it will also give you many opportuni-ties as a scholar and what simply is at the core of going to a liberal arts col-lege—learning about things beyond yourself and becoming a more edu-cated and well rounded person.

In a more pragmatic thought... I find—working in government now and looking at the current state of world affairs—that The West is constantly paying more and more attention to The East, but they do it without an eye of understanding. Foreigners in Gifu constantly ask me questions that start with the word "why" and I am pleased to find that I usually have an answer for them. People who have back-grounds in Asian Studies will be more likely to find jobs in international business and communications related fields. My coworkers are constantly amazed by what I know and the in-sight that I can give them into "why do X people do things the way they do it." The leverage has given me opportuni-ties to push forward my own projects and ideas because I am a better com-municator on the whole.

Lina Harper, 2006

Monday, November 19, 2007

Elizabeth Butler

From Lizzy

Three years on from graduating, Hanami sensei wrote me a short note in Japanese on Facebook. My initial thought was ‘oh no, I won’t be able to read this,’ but I still could, hurrah! And a good thing too! I wrote back a message about what I’d been up to, which seems a bit random, but thus is the life of a Japanese major … After a year getting a master’s in Japanese, a year full of translating passages out of obscure Buddhist texts out of old books in dark, quiet libraries, I am now teaching high school in Manchester, England on a program a little like Teach for America. Not quite as quiet! I’m teaching Science (I majored in Biology too), but last year I ran an after-school Japanese club and the kids really wanted to learn Japanese! This year I’m tutoring one of the girls who was most interested in learning Japanese, and I might see if I can get her sponsored to a local Japanese class. But mostly, my days are full of kids, trying to cram some information in them and trying to keep them from killing each other. I’m back to the U.S. in the Fall, and probably going back to what I had originally intended to do – go to medical school. Fwew! Perhaps I’ve got the wanderlust if not the Zen of Basho.

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

Wendy Fnishes Her First Marathon


Wendy Schultz (2000), who went to Stanford after graduating from GW, has been working in database sales/marketing for the last five years. She recently started (and finished) her first full marathon in Miami.

Sunday, November 04, 2007

Sarah in Japan


ジョージ・ワシントンだいがくのサラ・クーケックさんは、いま にほんにいます。これは、ゆうめいな みやじまの しゃしんです。まえのほうが クーケックさんです。

Saturday, September 08, 2007

Alison and Clark Get Married!



Allison Alvarez and Clark Munson (Class of 2004) got married in September. They had their reception in the Pittsburgh Aquarium.

Thursday, February 01, 2007

Japanese Language and Literature Alumni

We love hearing from our graduates, so please drop us a line. We'd like to post your message here to share with all our current and former students, so don't be bashful.




Click on an alumni face below to read what they're up to.




Strader Payton

Ben Robbins

Kohsuke Yamashiro

Kohsuke Yamashiro

From Kohsuke

ジョージ・ワシントン大学日本語学科の生徒の皆さん、お元気ですか?

私は2002年に国際関係と日本語の学位を獲得後、一年働き、その後に東アジアの政治と経済の修士課程の為にGWに戻って勉強していました。私は修士課程を取る間の二年間、JPN007とJPN008を教えていた先生ですが、実は日本語学科の卒業生でもあったのです。

現在はニューヨークにある日系の会社のマーケティング部門でマネージャーの仕事をしています。毎日の主な仕事は、営業部との話し合い、損益の計算、新商品開発、そして、商品売上計画の作成など、幅広い仕事を任されています。もちろん、日本の会社なので、上司には日本語での報告書提出が必要ですし、日本に書類を送るときは日本語で書く必要があります。皆さんもGW大学の日本語学科で頑張って日本語の勉強をしている事だと思います。今頑張って日本語を勉強すれば、日本の会社に就職する事も可能です。自分の可能性を広げるためにも勉強頑張ってくださいね。

Ben Robbins

From Ben

I'm doing well at Oxford, about one third of the way through the Master's program. The atmosphere here is quite rigorous but very exciting; there are speakers and other events every night, and it is just a matter of finding enough time to go and see them. I've started studying Chinese, too, and I am about to begin a dissertation on Japan-China relations.

Saturday, January 20, 2007

Strader Payton

From Strader

あけましておめでとうございます!今年も宜しくお願いします!

Sorry for the delay! We have been pretty busy recently and, to be honest, I just plain forgot to send along my contact information for your alumni site. Here's some info on my post-GW life...

After I graduated from GW, I moved to Isesaki, Gunma, Japan to teach English as an Assistant Language Teacher through my hometown's (Springfield, MO) Sister City Association. I was there from January 2002 to August 2003. It might be a small town, but owing to the large number of South American laborers in the city, it has the best Peruvian food on that side of the Andes. I performed the same job as the JETs in my city.

I graduated last year from Missouri State University with a MIAA (Master of International Affairs and Administration) degree. Although some might see this as a step down from GW, I had lots of great opportunities there, including teaching one semester of Political Science 101 (a required course for all Mo State undergrads) - American Politics and Government. I worked as a graduate assistant for two years; spent three months in the summer of 2005 interning at Yokosuka City Hall, where I studied Japanese emergency management (internship arranged by CLAIR's New York office: http://www.jlgc.org/en/index.html); and spent the fall semester of '05 at National Sun Yat-sen University (http://www.oia.nsysu.edu.tw/english/ ), studying political science and Mandarin, where I helped Dr. Dennis Hickey research a book he was writing on Taiwan's foreign policy

In June, I started work as a producer at TV Tokyo's Washington, DC Bureau. We cover American politics and international issues for TV Tokyo's news programming. We have a small office (me and 3 others), so my responsibilities run the gamut from basic office work, to reporting (I have not been on air yet, but I should be able to tick that box soon), covering developments on Capitol Hill, at the White House, at the Pentagon, at the State Department, etc, research, translation and interpretation, and developing and planning feature stories. I have only been here six months, but feature stories are by far and away the best part of my job. Being the only native English speaker in the office, I have substantial responsibilities for these stories, including: research, initializing and managing relationships with interviewees and other sources on location, conducting interviews, logistics, assisting with post-production, and developing story ideas.

We also travel annually to both the G8 and APEC summits. Since I was still too "green", I didn't go on these trips this year, but I have been told I will be going to Germany this June for the G8 and Australia in September. We also go to the annual UN start of the General Assembly in New York in the fall. I did make it to this in September.

Feel free to use all or part or none of this message in your site. Please send me a link when you have it finished. As far as contact information goes, this is my permanent e-mail address. My work e-mail is strader@tv-tokyo-america.com but gmail is probably the best way to contact me. I have a blog that I haven't updated much recently at http://straderpayton.blogspot.com/ and an online photo gallery with over 2,000 pictures from over the U.S., Japan, Taiwan, and Italy at http://flickr.com/photos/straderpayton/ that you can share to your heart's content.