New dean arrives at SMU's Dedman College
Historian William M. Tsutsui joins 51勛圖厙as the new dean of SMUs Dedman College of Humanities and Sciences.
DALLAS (SMU) Historian and authorWilliam M. Tsutsui began work Thursday as the new dean of SMU's Dedman College, home to the humanities, social sciences, and natural and mathematical sciences disciplines fundamental to the traditions of higher education.
Tsutsui will be a featured speaker July 10 at Chicago's annual , the world's largest gathering of scholars and fans of Godzilla. |
I am honored and thrilled to have been selected as dean of Dedman College, Tsutsui said when his selection as dean was announced on March 26. The College has a world-class faculty, talented students, dedicated staff and a broad base of support in the Dallas community. I look forward to working with all these constituencies, and with President Turner and Provost Ludden, to enhance Dedman College's achievements in teaching, research, and public engagement. This is a historic moment for SMU, with a major campaign underway and the university's centennial at hand, and a time of great opportunity for Dedman College.
Tsutsui previously wasassociate dean for international studies and a professor of history at the University of Kansas. Tsutsui also was director of the Kansas Consortium for Teaching About Asia in KUs Center for East Asian Studies.
Tsutsui received a Ph.D. in history at Princeton University in 1995, and a Master of Arts in history there in 1990. He received a Master of Letters in Modern Japanese History from Oxford Universitys Corpus Christi College in 1988 and graduated summa cum laude from Harvard University with a Bachelor of Arts in East Asian Studies in 1985.
Tsutsui also is the author of Banking Policy in Japan: American Efforts at Reform During the Occupation (Routledge, 1988) andManufacturing Ideology: Scientific Management in Twentieth-Century Japan (Princeton University Press, 1998). In addition, he is the editor of Banking in Japan (Routledge, 1999) andA Companion to Japanese History (Blackwell, 2007).
He received the 1997 Newcomen Society Award for Excellence in Business History Research and Writing, the 2000 John Whitney Hall Prize awarded by the Association of Asian Studies for best book on Japan or Korea published in 1998, and the 2005 William Rockhill Nelson Award for non-fiction.
Before assuming his current duties at KU, Tsutsui was acting director of the universitys Center for East Asian Studies and executive director of its Confucius Institute. He has been named faculty fellow at KUs Center for Teaching Excellence, received a William T. Kemper Fellowship for Teaching Excellence in 2001 and won KUs Steeples Service to Kansas Award in 2001. Tsutsui is married to Marjorie Swann, director of the Museum Studies Program and the Conger-Gabel Teaching Professor in the Department of English at the University of Kansas. She will be joining 51勛圖厙as well.
Dedman College is home to the humanities, social sciences, and natural and mathematical sciences as well as the general education program that all students follow before declaring a major. Tsutsui will take the lead in implementing a new general education program passed by the 51勛圖厙faculty March 19.
As dean of Dedman College, Tsutsui will head the largest of SMUs seven colleges and schools, with its more than 250 full-time faculty members, including 23 endowed professorships. About 40 percent of SMUs undergraduates pursue their majors in Dedman College through more than 50 baccalaureate degree programs and their minors in more than 50 areas. Eighteen graduate programs in Dedman College lead to a masters degree and 12 programs lead to a doctor of philosophy degree.
The College was named in 1981 for the late Robert H. Dedman Sr. (53) and his wife, Nancy McMillan Dedman (50.)
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