Mark Peattie, PhD
Visiting ScholarShorenstein APARC
Stanford University
Encina Hall, Room E301
Stanford, CA 94305-6055
Expertise
Sino-Japanese War 1937-45
Mark R. Peattie is a visiting scholar at Shorenstein APARC and a research fellow at the Hoover Institution. He is a professor of history emeritus at the University of Massachusetts at Boston. He was the John A. Burns Distinguished Visiting Professor of History at the University of Hawaii in 1995.
Peattie is a specialist in modern Japanese military, naval, and imperial history. His current research focuses on the historical context of Japanese-Southeast Asian relations. He is also directing a pioneering and international collaborative effort of the military history of the study of the Sino-Japanese war of 1937-45 being sponsored by the Asia Center at Harvard University.
He is editor, with Peter Duus and Ramon H. Myers, of The Japanese Wartime Empire, 1937-1945 (Princeton University Press, 1996). He is the author of The Japanese Colonial Empire: The Vicissitudes of Its Fifty-Year History (in Japanese) (Tokyo: Yomiuri Press, 1996).
He coauthored, with David Evans, Kaigun: Strategy, Tactics and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1887-1941 (Naval Institute Press, 1997), winner of a 1999 Distinguished Book Award of the Society for Military History. A sequel, Sunburst: The Rise of Japanese Naval Air Power, 1909-1941, was published by the Naval Institute Press in 2001.
Peattie is also the author of the monograph A Historian Looks at the Pacific War (Hoover Essays in Public Policy, 1995).
Peattie is a reader for Columbia University, University of California, University of Hawaii, Stanford University, University of Michigan, and U.S. Naval Institute Presses.
Peattie frequently serves as lecturer in the Stanford University Continuing Studies Program and in the Stanford Alumni Travel Program.
He was named an associate in research at the Edwin O. Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies at Harvard University from 1982 to 1993.
He was a member of the U.S. Information Agency from 1955 to 1968 with service in Cambodia (1955-57), in Japan (Sendai, Tokyo, Kyoto) (1958-67), and in Washington, D.C. (1967-68).
Peattie holds a Ph.D. in Japanese history from Princeton University.
View Mark Peattie's bio, list of research, recent publications and events »



