Grantees

Rachael Hutchinson

Associate Professor of Japanese Studies

Newark, DE 19716
302-831-2597
[email protected]

Biography

Rachael Hutchinson is Associate Professor in Japanese Studies at the University of Delaware. She received her D.Phil. from the University of Oxford in 2000, and her research addresses representations of Japanese identity in a range of narrative texts literature, film, manga and videogames. Her major publications are Nagai Kaf?s Occidentalism: Defining the Japanese Self (author, SUNY Press 2011), Representing the Other in Modern Japanese Literature: A Critical Approach (co-editor, Routledge 2007) and Negotiating Censorship in Modern Japan (editor, Routledge 2013). She has published essays in Japan ForumMonumenta Nipponica and Games and Culture. Currently she is working on a book manuscript about videogames and Japanese culture.Hutchinson believes passionately in undergraduate research and writing, incorporating writing and presentation skills in all her courses. She teaches advanced Japanese language, reading and translation, as well as culture courses such as Issues in Japanese Film, Representing the Other in Modern Japanese Literature, and Critical Approaches to the Japanese Videogame. Her students have presented academic papers at such prestigious conferences as the GEIS Student Research on Women conference (2010), the Mid-Atlantic Region Association for Asian Studies conference (2013) and the Greater Philadelphia Asian Studies Consortium (2014). Hutchinson is faculty liaison to the Japanese National Honor Society on campus as well as advisor to the UD Anime and Manga Club, the Kendo Club, Aikido Club, Genshiken and the UD Videogame Tournament Club.As co-founder of the UD Game Studies Research Group, Hutchinson recently received a grant from the IHRC to further Game Studies on campus, through interfaculty collaboration as well as course development and expansion of library holdings. Hutchinson established the Games Lab on campus in 2009 and has delivered papers at national conferences on using videogames in a university syllabus.