About
- Paul G. Schalow
- PROFESSOR OF JAPANESE LITERATURE
- schalow@rutgers.edu
- Phone: 848-932-5025
- Office: Rutgers Academic Building AB-6052 (West Wing) 15 Seminary Place, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
Education
- Ph.D. in Japanese Literature, Harvard University, Department of East Asian Languages and
Civilizations, 1985 - M.A. in Regional Studies-East Asia, Harvard University, Department of East Asian Languages
and Civilizations, 1979 - B.A. in Japanese and Linguistics, Hampshire College, Amherst, Massachusetts, 1977
Areas of Specialization
- Classical and Early-Modern Japanese Literature
- Japanese Women’s Writing
- A-Bomb Literature and Film in Japan
Selected Articles and Book Chapters
- “Auschwitz and Hiroshima: Economies of Victimization, Communities of Empathy,” in Essays in Honor of Irmela Hijiya-Kirschnereit, eds. Judit Árokay, Verena Blechinger-Talcott, and Hilaria Gössmann (Munich: Iudicium, 2008), 409-426.
- “Figures of Worship: Responses to Onnagata on the Kabuki Stage in Seventeenth-Century Japanese Vernacular Prose,” in Transvestism and the Onnagata Traditions in Shakespeare and Kabuki, eds. Minoru Fujita and Michael Shapiro (Kent: Global Oriental, 2006), 59-70.
- “Five Portraits of Male Friendship in the Ise Monogatari,” Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 60.2 (2000): 445-488.
- “Theorizing Sex/Gender in Early Modern Japan: Kitamura Kigin’s Maidenflowers and Wild Azaleas,” Japanese Studies 18.3 (1998): 247-263.
- “The Invention of a Literary Tradition of Male Love: Kitamura Kigin’s Iwatsutsuji,” Monumenta Nipponica 48.1 (1993): 1-31.
- “Spiritual Dimensions of Male Beauty in Japanese Buddhism,” in Religion, Homosexuality, and Literature, eds. Michael L. Stemmeler & José Ignacio Cabezón (Las Colinas, Texas: Monument Press, 1992), 75-94. Reprinted in Queer Dharma: Voices of Gay Buddhists, ed. Winston Leyland (San Francisco: Gay Sunshine Press, 1998), 107-124.
- “Male Love in Early Modern Japan: A Literary Depiction of the ‘Youth’,” in Hidden From History: Reclaiming the Gay and Lesbian Past, eds. Martin Duberman, Martha Vicinus, & George Chauncey (New York: New American Library, 1989), 118-128.
Courses Taught
- Global East Asia (01:098:250) Rutgers University Signature Course
- A-Bomb Literature and Film in Japan (01:565:215)
- The Samurai Tradition in Japanese Literature and Film (01:565:320)