Edwin O. Reischauer

American historian and diplomat
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Also known as: Edwin Oldfather Reischauer
Quick Facts
In full:
Edwin Oldfather Reischauer
Born:
Oct. 15, 1910, Tokyo, Japan
Died:
Sept. 1, 1990, La Jolla, Calif., U.S. (aged 79)
Also Known As:
Edwin Oldfather Reischauer
Subjects Of Study:
Japan

Edwin O. Reischauer (born Oct. 15, 1910, Tokyo, Japan—died Sept. 1, 1990, La Jolla, Calif., U.S.) was an American historian, diplomat, and educator and a leading expert on Asian, particularly Japanese, affairs.

Reischauer was born in Japan to American missionary parents. Living there until the age of 17, he gained complete fluency in the Japanese language, as well as an intimate knowledge of Japanese culture and customs. Returning to the United States for further schooling, he attended Oberlin College (B.A., 1931) and Harvard (M.A., 1932). He did postgraduate work at the Sorbonne (1933–35), at the universities of Tokyo (1935–36) and Kyōto (1937–38), and in China. He received his Ph.D. in Far Eastern languages from Harvard in 1939. An instructor at Harvard from 1939 to 1942, he then worked for the War Department (1942–43) and U.S. Military Intelligence (1943–45). After the war he worked with the State Department in the Office of Far Eastern Affairs. He returned to Harvard as a professor of Far Eastern languages (1946–50) but was soon made a professor of Japanese history (1950–61, 1966–81) and achieved national acclaim as an educator.

Long an outspoken critic of U.S. cultural ignorance of Asia, especially of Japan, which he felt was of central importance to the West, Reischauer produced scholarly works and conducted educational seminars that were directed at improving U.S. cultural understanding of Japan. This failure to understand Asian affairs, he contended, led directly to U.S. political failures in the area. The academician had a chance to put his theories into practice when, in 1961, Pres. John F. Kennedy appointed him ambassador to Japan in the wake of the riots that had greeted the U.S.–Japan Mutual Security Treaty of 1960. His appointment was an enormous success, owing in no small measure to his personal popularity with the Japanese. By the time that he resigned (1966), he had done much to improve relations between the two countries.

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Reischauer wrote many books, including translations of Chinese and Japanese works. Among his works are East Asia: The Great Tradition (1960; with John King Fairbank), a work regarded as a classic; The Modern Transformation (1965); Japan, The Story of a Nation (1970; rev. ed. 1981); The Japanese (1977); and Japan Society 1907–1982 (1982).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.