Masuda Hajimu, "Purity and Order: Toward Social-Cultural Understandings of the Cold War, 1950-1953"

Event Date: 

Tuesday, October 20, 2015 - 4:00pm to 5:30pm

Event Location: 

  • HSSB 4020

Masuda photoMasuda Hajimu argues that it was more than an international confrontation between West and East blocs. It was also a social mechanism of purity and ordering at home, in the chaotic post-WWII world. The suppression of counterrevolutionaries in China, the White Terror in Taiwan, the Red Purge in Japan, McCarthyism in the United States--these were not merely end results of the Cold War, but forces that brought the Cold War into being, as ordinary people throughout the world strove to silence disagreements and restore social order under the mantle of an imagined global confrontationch soldiers who refuse to continue a suicidal assault. 

Masuda Hajimu (family name Masuda) received his Ph.D. from Cornell University in 2012 and currently is assistant professor of history at the National University of Singapore, where he specializes in the history of Japan, student movements in Asia, decolonization, and the Cold War. He is the author of Cold War Crucible: The Korean Conflict and the Postwar World (Harvard University Press, 2015) and has published articles in Diplomatic History, Journal of Contemporary History, Journal of Cold War Studies, and Journal of American-East Asian Relations.