Gary Okihiro
Template:Short description Template:Infobox scholar
Gary Y. Okihiro (October 14, 1945 – May 20, 2024) was an American author and scholar. Before he moved to Yale,[1] he was a professor of international and public affairs at Columbia University in New York City and the founding director of Columbia's Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race. Okihiro received his Ph.D. from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1976.[2]
Education
Okihiro earned a B.A. in history from Pacific Union College in 1967.[3] He earned his M.A. in history from UCLA in 1972.[4] Okihiro earned his Ph.D. in African History at UCLA in 1976.[4] His dissertation was titled "Hunters, Herders, Cultivators, and Traders: Interaction and Change in the Kgalagadi, Nineteenth Century."[5]
Okihiro served in the Peace Corps in Botswana for three years.[6]
Career
Prior to Yale and Columbia, Okihiro was the director of Asian American Studies at Cornell University.[7][8] He was recruited to Columbia partially as a result of a 1996 undergraduate student protest calling for an ethnic studies department to provide counterbalance to what was perceived to be a biased pro-Western core curriculum.[9] He received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Association for Asian American Studies and the American Studies Association, and was a past president of the Association for Asian American Studies. In 2010, Okihiro received an honorary doctorate from the University of the Ryukyus.[10]
Social Formation Theory
Okihiro was the originator of "social formation theory," which he defined as the forms and processes of power in society to oppress and exploit. By forms, he meant the discourses and practices of race, gender, sexuality, class, and nation, and by processes, he referred to the articulations and intersections of those social categories. Power is agency, while oppression is the restriction of agency, and exploitation, the expropriation of land and labor. Okihiro has also proposed a field of study that he called "Third World studies" from the "Third World curriculum" demanded by students of the Third World Liberation Front in 1968. Third World studies, he contended, is the correct name for the field now known as "ethnic studies." He explained that name switch and some of its consequences in his book, "Third World Studies: Theorizing Liberation" (2016).
Death
Okihiro died in New Haven, Connecticut, on May 20, 2024, at the age of 79.[11][6]
Writings
Okihiro was the author of twelve books, six of which have won national awards, and dozens of articles on historical methodology and theories of social and historical formations, and the history of racism and racial formation in the U.S., African pre-colonial economic history, and race and world history. Among his books are:
- Cane Fires: The Anti-Japanese Movement in Hawaii, 1865-1945 (Template:ISBN);
- Margins and Mainstreams: Asians in American History and Culture (Template:ISBN);
- (with Joan Myers) Whispered Silences: Japanese Americans and World War II (Template:ISBN);
- (with Linda Gordon) Impounded: Dorothea Lange And the Censored Images of Japanese American Internment (Template:ISBN);
- Common Ground: Reimagining American History (Template:ISBN);
- The Columbia Guide to Asian American History (Template:ISBN);
- Island World: A History of Hawai`i and the United States (Template:ISBN);
- Pineapple Culture: A History of the Tropical and Temperate Zones (Template:ISBN).
- The Boundless Sea: Self and History (Template:ISBN).
- American History Unbound: Asians and Pacific Islander (Template:ISBN).
- Third World Studies: Theorizing Liberation (Template:ISBN).
Okihiro also wrote on African history, including A Social History of the Bakwena and Peoples of the Kalahari of Southern Africa, 19th Century (Template:ISBN).
References
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External links
- Personal site
- Columbia University faculty page
- "On Comparative Ethnic Studies" by Gary Okihiro, Columbia Daily Spectator, Feb. 20, 2004
- "College students renew demands for ethnic studies programs" by Alethea Yip, AsianWeek, May 10, 1996
- Gary Okihiro Papers at the Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University, New York, NY
- Interview with Gary Okihiro by Stephen McKiernan, Binghamton University Libraries Center for the Study of the 1960s, November 2010
- Pages with script errors
- 1945 births
- 2024 deaths
- People from Oahu
- Pacific Union College alumni
- University of California, Los Angeles alumni
- Peace Corps people
- American academics of Japanese descent
- American writers of Japanese descent
- Columbia University faculty
- Cornell University faculty
- Yale University faculty