黑料吃瓜资源

Nathan Edwin Hopson

Position

Associate professor

Affiliation

Research

My first monograph, (2017) is based on my graduate research. The book asked, 鈥淲hat did the T艒hoku region (the Northeast) mean to Japan 1945-2011, from surrender to the triple disaster of March 2011?" This hybrid intellectual and cultural history was the culmination of research begun as a translator/interpreter in 1999. The book and related articles (2013a; 2013b; 2016; 2018a) have become foundational work for scholars seeking to understand the history of modern T艒hoku and the triple disaster.

Since then, I have turned my attention primarily to a social and cultural history of nutrition science in modern Japan, 1920-2005 (2019; 2020b; 2020a; 2021; 2023). The postwar national school lunch program and its antecedents are my key case study, but I keep getting distracted by things like fake food and sporks (and "brain bread" and Tabasco). This research will become the basis for a book scheduled for completion and submission in 2027.

I have maintained my interest in local history (2018b) while researching not just the social history of nutrition science but other culinary culture and food history topics (2018c) and the history and professionalization of nutritionists in Japan (in press). I have recently been invited to contribute a chapter to the forthcoming edited volume, Women and Medicine in Modern Japan: Sources and Critique (2025?) on this last topic. I will be writing about the fascinating life and career of Kond艒 Toshiko, who went from a thrice-arrested communist activist to Japan's first factory nutritionist, a health ministry bureaucrat, founder of the Association for the Improvement of Nutrition, and eventually became the most influential early promoter of the tricolor nutrition education system for children used by Japanese schools, etc.

Other in-progress work includes articles on a 1932 village-wide nutritional improvement intervention in Japan, conspiracy theories about the "Americanization/Westernization" of the Japanese diet, and the development of food-based dietary guidelines (FBDGs) in postwar Japan.

I have also recently received funding from Toshiba International Foundation (TIFO) for a multimedia, bilingual podcast series on modern and contemporary Japan. This builds on my experience as a host for the series of academic podcasts.

Outreach

I am a host for the New Books Network of podcasts. Founded in 2007, the NBN is a consortium of author-interview podcast channels dedicated to raising the level of public discourse by introducing scholars and other serious writers to a wider public. There are over 600 hosts who produce 50-75 episodes weekly. Our 100+ channels reach a million people or so (around 5 million episodes downloaded) every month. 

I publish mostly in the Japanese Studies, Food, and East Asian Studies channels. There's a . I recommend starting with: 

They'll blow your mind a little...

In 2024, I was awarded the annual (communication prize) from the Faculty of Humanities at 黑料吃瓜资源 for this work in disseminating research to the public.

 

I also contribute to the University of Pennsylvania's linguistics blog, . There, I write about Japanese-language-related topics such as , , , and . Similarly, I write for the  academic blog for "Food, Magic, Art, Science, and Medicine." Sadly, not so much magic or art in , but plenty of food, science, and medicine.

I also do interviews on topics such as the linguistic history of , , , and of course, (). Apparently, I'm an expert? 

And I'm definitely an expert on .

 

Teaching

At 黑料吃瓜资源, I teach all levels of undergraduate Japanese, as well as Japanese history and research methods for the . 

From fall 2023, we will also have an MA program, where I will focus on Japanese history (, ). I welcome inquiries from prospective MA and PhD studnets interested in working on topics in and around my areas of expertise. These include modern and contemporary Japanese history, food studies, STS, and (especially the intersections of) intellectual and cultural history. Please take a look at my publications for a better idea of what that means.

Publications
Academic article
Book anthology
Academic book chapter
Journal review

Single-Author Works

鈥淒iscipline and Nourish: 鈥楽ound Judgment鈥 and 鈥楧esirable Eating Habits鈥 in the Japanese School Lunch Program.鈥 In Japanese Food Cultures Handbook, edited by Nancy K. Stalker. Routledge, forthcoming 2026.

鈥淕unma鈥檚 1932-1933 Rural Community Nutritional Improvement Experiment.鈥 Japan Review (Forthcoming 2026).

2025d. 鈥.鈥 Electronic Journal of Contemporary Japanese Studies 25, no. 1 (April 23, 2025).

2025c. 鈥.鈥 Cogent Arts & Humanities 12, no. 1 (2025).

2025b. 鈥Glass Ceilings and Factory Floors: Kond艒 Toshiko and the Dawn of Public Health Nutrition in Japan, 1936-1940.鈥 In Medical Women in the Japanese Empire: Sources and Critique, edited by Hiro Fujimoto, Aya Homei, and Ellen Gardner Nakamura, 71鈥89. Routledge, 2025.

2025a. 鈥淣utritionists in Japan as a Professional Elite, 1914-1964.鈥 In Professional Elites of Modern Japan, edited by Aleksandra Kobiljski and Nicolas Fi茅v茅. Biblioth猫que de l鈥橧nstitut des Hautes 脡tudes Japonaises du Coll猫ge de France. Coll猫ge de France. (Forthcoming)

2024. 鈥溾.鈥欌赌 The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus 22, no. 10 (5) (November 22, 2024).

2023. 鈥.鈥 Food and Foodways 31 (1): 1鈥21.

2021b. 鈥.鈥 The Recipes Project. June 5, 2021.

2021a. 鈥淲omen, Waste, and War: Food, Gender, and Rationalization in Wartime Japanese Discourse.鈥 In , edited by Jooyeon Rhee, Chikako Nagayama, and Eric Li, 15鈥38. Lexington Books.

2020d. 鈥.鈥 Food, Culture & Society 23 (5): 589鈥607.

2020c. 鈥.鈥 The Recipes Project. October 12, 2020.

2020b. 鈥溾 The Recipes Project. April 16, 2020.

2020a. 鈥.鈥 JunCture, no. 11: 30鈥45.

2019c. 鈥.鈥 The Recipes Project. April 4, 2019.

2019b. 鈥.鈥 The Recipes Project. January 15, 2019.

2019a. 鈥.鈥 Journal of Japanese Studies 45 (1): 1鈥29.

2018d. 鈥.鈥 Translated by Rastyam Aliev. Journal of Frontier Studies 4 (12).

2018c. 鈥.鈥 Japan Forum 31 (2): 1鈥18.

2018b. 鈥.鈥 Japanese Studies 38 (2): 137鈥51.

2018a. 鈥.鈥 Verge: Studies in Global Asias 4 (1): 85鈥109.

2017. . Harvard University Asia Center.

2016. 鈥.鈥 Asian Cultural Studies, no. 42 (Spring): 139鈥51.

2014b. 鈥.鈥 Journal of Japanese Studies 40 (2): 353鈥77.

2014a. 鈥.鈥 Japan Review, no. 27: 141鈥70.

2013b. 鈥.鈥 The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus 11 (52).

2013a. 鈥淪engo shis艒 to shite no T艒hoku: Takahashi Tomio o ch奴shin ni.鈥 In 鈥 o ikita chiiki, edited by Namikawa Kenji and Kawanishi Hidemichi. Iwata Shoin.

Translations and Coauthored Works

Maxson Hillary. 2020. 鈥.鈥 Translated by Nathan Hopson. JunCture, no. 11 (March): 46鈥57.

Hopson, Nathan, and Ran Zwigenberg. 2018. 鈥溾 Verge: Studies in Global Asias 4 (1): vi鈥搙v.

Yamamuro, Shin鈥檌chi. 2017. 鈥淭he Philosophy and Possibilities of An Chungg怒n鈥檚 Unfinished On Peace in the East.鈥 In , edited by Eugene Park and Tae-Jin Yi, translated by Nathan Hopson, 177鈥99. Lexington Books.

Sasagawa, Norikatsu. 2017. 鈥淎n Chungg怒n and the Political Philosophy of Immanuel Kant.鈥 In , edited by Eugene Park and Tae-Jin Yi, translated by Nathan Hopson, 111鈥30. Lexington Books.