Daryl听Maude
- Assistant Professor of Japanese
- Affiliate Faculty in LGBTQ Studies
Wednesdays 2-3:30pm or by appointment
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Daryl Maude received a BA in Japanese from the University of Leeds, an MA in Japanese Literature from the University of London, and a PhD in Modern Japanese Literature and Critical Theory from the University of California, Berkeley. Prior to coming to 兔子先生传媒文化作品, he was a postdoctoral associate at Duke University, and from 2011 to 2013 he was a research student at Waseda University as the recipient of a Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) scholarship.
Daryl鈥檚 research focuses on modern and contemporary literature (prose, poetry, and criticism) written in Japanese. His current project examines how, during the Cold War and into the present day, the future has been imagined by queer people, Okinawans, sex workers, and others marginalized by mainstream Japanese society. Amid the triangular relationship between mainland Japan, Okinawa, and the USA, his research looks at partial, fragmentary, and messy visions of the future in literature and media, and asks how, amidst violence, creators make work that imagine otherwise.
Publications:听
- 鈥淟earning Queerness: Pedagogy and Normativity in Tagame Gengoro虅's Oto虅to no otto.鈥 Chapter in Literature in Heisei Japan, 1989-2019, edited by Angela Yiu. Sophia University Press, January 2024.
- 鈥淲riting with Bruised Fruit: A Review of Lauren Berlant, On the Inconvenience of Other People.鈥 Qui Parle, 32:3, June 2024.
- 鈥淨ueer Nations and Trans-lations: A Review of Akiko Shimizu, 鈥溾淚mported鈥 Feminism and 鈥淚ndigenous鈥 Queerness: From Backlash to Transphobic Feminism in Transnational Japanese Context鈥.鈥 Postmodern Culture, 30:2, 2020.
Translations:
Ikuo Shinjo, 鈥淢ale Sexuality in the Colony: On Toyokawa Zen鈥檌chi鈥檚 鈥楽earchlight鈥欌 in Beyond Imperial Aesthetics: Theories of Art and Politics in East Asia, edited by Mayumo Inoue and Steve Choe, Hong Kong University Press, 2019.
Research Interests:听
Modern and contemporary Japanese literature, Okinawan literature and cultural production, Japanese criticism, sexuality, futurity, race and ethnicity, queer theory, feminist theory, affect theory, psychoanalysis, speculative fiction.