Fabian Drixler
近世・近代日本史専攻。
学位:
PhD in History, Harvard University, 2008
MA in International Relations, Yale University, 2002
BA in Japanese Studies, Oxford University, 2000
著作:
Mabiki: Infanticide and Population Growth in Eastern Japan, 1660–1950. Berkeley: University of California Press, May 2013.
Samurai and the Culture of Japan’s Great Peace, co-authored with William Fleming and Robert Wheeler. New Haven: Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, March 2015.
“Conjuring the Ghosts of Missing Children: A Monte Carlo Simulation of Reproductive Restraint in Tokugawa Japan,” Demography 52, no. 1 (2015), pp. 667–703.
“Hidden in Plain Sight: False Stillbirths and Family Planning in Imperial Japan,” Journal of Economic History 76, no. 3 (2016), pp. 651–696.
“A Lost Family-Planning Regime in Eighteenth-Century Ceylon” (with Jan Kok), Population Studies 70, no. 1 (2016), pp. 93–114.
“The Politics of Migration in Tokugawa Japan: The Eastward Expansion of Shin Buddhism,” Journal of Japanese Studies 42, no. 1 (2016), pp. 1–28.
“Lost Regimes of Low Reproductivity: How Past Societies That Did Not Replace Themselves Matter for the Future,” in Koen Matthijs, Saskia Hin, Hideko Matsuo, and Jan Kok, eds., The Future of Historical Demography: Upside Down and Inside Out. Leuven: Acco, 2016, pp. 180–182.
“Encomium Oomphis: Regressions, Measure, and Meaning in Historical Demography” (with Anne C. McCants), in Koen Matthijs, Saskia Hin, Hideko Matsuo, and Jan Kok, eds., The Future of Historical Demography: Upside Down and Inside Out. Leuven: Acco, 2016, 136–140.
“The Discourse of the Louse: Regional Pride and Conflicting Cultures of Parenthood in Mid-Tokugawa Japan,” in Michael Kinski, Eike Großmann, and Harald Salomon, eds., Kindheit in der japanischen Geschichte: Erfahrungen und Vorstellungen. Wiesbaden, Germany: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2016, pp. 159–190.
“Postmortem Cartography: ‘Stillbirths’ and the Meiji State,” in Kären Wigen, Fumiko Sugimoto, and Cary Karacas, eds., Cartographic Japan: A History in Maps. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016, pp. 237–241.
“Imagined Communities of the Living and the Dead: The Spread of the Ancestor-Venerating Stem Family in Tokugawa Japan,” in Mary Elisabeth Berry and Marcia Yonemoto, eds., What is a Family? Answers from Early Modern Japan. University of California Press, 2019.