New Kenneth B. Pyle Prize for Best Article in the Journal of Japanese Studies Announced
The Pyle Center is pleased to share the following announcement from the Journal of Japanese Studies:
The Journal of Japanese Studies (JJS), a twice yearly publication by the Society for Japanese Studies in cooperation with the University of California Press, has announced a new annual award in honor of Jackson School Professor Emeritus Kenneth B. Pyle, who also was the founding editor of the JJS. The new Kenneth B. Pyle Prize for Best Article in JJS—accompanied by $250—will be awarded annually for a JJS research article published in the previous year.
Articles eligible for this prize are evaluated for their contribution to supporting the JJS mission of promoting the highest-quality scholarship through publication of empirical and interpretive work on Japan. Consideration is given to efforts to contextualize specialized research findings in ways that articulate their importance for the wider field of Japan studies.
Kenneth B. Pyle and his Japan studies colleagues at the University of Washington established JJS in 1974 through the generosity of the Japanese government’s million-dollar grant to the university. The UW faculty sought an innovative and enduring testament to the importance of this grant for the study of Japan around the world.
Professor Pyle served as Editor from 1974 to 1986 and subsequently in other positions with JJS, and he has been a regular contributor to JJS pages, most recently in 2020. His scholarship and teaching span more than 55 years, and his contributions to the study of Japan are profound. The journal he helped to establish looks forward to building this prize as a prestigious honor for both the founding editor and those engaged in new and exciting research on Japan.
For more information, visit the JJS website here.
About the Kenneth B. and Anne H.H. Pyle Center for Northeast Asia Studies
Named in honor of NBR’s founding president and his wife, the Pyle Center serves as the focal point for NBR’s Northeast Asia related activities, especially in Seattle. The Pyle Center has a dual mission: (1) to conduct forward-looking research on Northeast Asia, and (2) to serve as a hub through which the region’s emerging generation of scholars, analysts, and policymakers engage in dialogues, exchanges, and network-building opportunities.