Rotem Kowner

Rotem Kowner (רותם קובנר; born 11 July 1960) is an Israeli historian and psychologist specializing in the history of modern Japan, and a full professor in the Department of Asian Studies at the University of Haifa.

Early life
Rotem Kowner was born in Mikhmoret and lived his early years in the Kibbutz of Ma'ayan Tzvi. At the age of three, his family moved to Haifa, where he grew up and went to the Hebrew Reali School. Upon graduation, he entered the Israeli Navy and subsequently served as an officer on a missile boat.

Academic career
After majoring in East Asian Studies and psychology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, he studied for a year at the Free University of Berlin and then for six years at the University of Tsukuba in Japan. Upon receiving his PhD, he continued in postdoctoral studies at the Center for East Asian Studies, Stanford University, and at the Hebrew University. In 1998 he began teaching at the University of Haifa as a senior lecturer and was promoted to professor in 2004. Kowner worked extensively to mark the centenary of the Russo-Japanese War and to stress its regional and global repercussions. He was involved in organizing international conferences, initiated collaborative works, and published several books as well as many articles about this topic. Since 2010, his research focus has shifted to the examination of the development of race and racism in modern East Asia and in Japan in particular. Kowner maintains that the question of race, the distress over foreign racism, and the implementation of racist policies in its own colonies have been among the most critical and painful issues in the history of modern Japan and that they were also among the determinants of its national decision-making, at least until the end of World War II.

Kowner has been as a visiting professor at Tokyo's Waseda University, the University of Geneva, and the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and serves on the editorial board of several academic journals. He is the co-founder of the biennial conferences of Asian Studies in Israel and the Israeli Association of Japanese Studies (IAJS). He has been member of the university's Senate, Board of Governors, and executive committee of his own university and currently serves as the director of its liberal arts program. He sits on the executive committee of the Maritime Policy & Strategy Research Center (HMS).

Selected books

 * 1997 – On Ignorance, Respect, and Suspicion: current Japanese attitudes towards Jews. Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism. ASIN B007HF0B82.
 * 2005 – The Forgotten War between Russia and Japan and Its Legacy. Ma'arachot. 539 pp.
 * 2006 – Historical Dictionary of the Russo-Japanese War. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0-8108-4927-5. 640 pp.
 * 2007 – The Impact of the Russo-Japanese War. Routledge, UK. ISBN 978-0-415-36824-7. 369 pp.
 * 2007 – Rethinking the Russo-Japanese War 1904/05. Brill/Global Oriental. ISBN 978-1-905246-03-8. 539 pp.
 * 2008 – Globally Speaking: Motives for Adopting English Vocabulary in Other Languages. Multilingual Matters. ISBN 978-1-84769-051-7. 349 pp.
 * 2009 – The A to Z of the Russo-Japanese War. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-6841-0. 640 pp.
 * 2013 – (with Walter Demel) Race and Racism in Modern East Asia: Western and Eastern Constructions. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-23729-2. 618 pp.
 * 2014 – From White to Yellow: The Japanese in European Racial Thought, 1300–1735. McGill Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-4455-0. 706 pp.
 * 2015 – (with Walter Demel) Race and Racism in Modern East Asia (Vol. II): Interactions, Nationalism, Gender and Lineage. Brill. ISBN 978-9-0042-3741-4. 674 pp.
 * 2017 – Historical Dictionary of the Russo-Japanese War, 2nd rev. and expanded edition. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1442281837. 898 pp.
 * 2019 – (with Guy Bar-Oz, Michal Biran, Meir Shahar, Gideon Shelach). Animals and Human Society in Asia: Historical, Cultural and Ethical Perspectives. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-3030243654. 466 pp
 * 2022 – Tsushima. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198831075. 336 pp
 * 2022 – (with Iris Rachamimov) Out of Line, Out of Place: A Global and Local History of World War I Internments. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-1501765421. 333 pp.
 * 2023 – Jewish Communities in Modern Asia: Their Rise, Demise and Resurgence. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1009162586. 446 pp.
 * 2023 (with Yoram Evron) Israel-Asia Relations in the Twenty-First Century: The Search for Partners in a Changing World. Routledge. ISBN 978-1032328805. 330 pp.
 * 2024 – (with Yoram Evron and P.R. Kumaraswamy) East-West Asia Relations in the Twenty-First Century: From Bilateral to Interregional Relationships. Routledge. ISBN 978-1003326595. 270 pp.

Selected articles

 * 1998 – "Nicholas II and the Japanese Body: Images and Decision Making on the Eve of the Russo-Japanese War." The Psychohistory Review 26, 211–52.
 * 2000 – "Lighter than Yellow, But Not Enough: Western Discourse on the Japanese 'Race', 1854–1904." The Historical Journal 43, 103–31.
 * 2000 – "Japan's Enlightened War: Military Conduct and Attitudes to the Enemy during the Russo-Japanese War. In The Japanese and Europe: Images and Perceptions., edited by Bert Edström, 134–51. Japan Library.
 * 2001 – "Becoming an Honorary Civilized Nation: The Russo-Japanese War and Western Perceptions of Japan." The Historian 64, 19–38.
 * 2004 – "The skin as a metaphor: Early European racial perspectives on Japan, 1548–1853." Ethnohistory 51, 751–78.
 * 2011 – An Obscure History – Jews in Indonesia. Inside Indonesia 104.
 * 2017 – "When Strategy, Economics, and Racial Ideology Meet: Inter-Axis Connections in Wartime Indian Ocean." Journal of Global History 12, 228–50.
 * 2017 – "Race and Racism (in Modern Japan)." In Routledge Handbook of Modern Japanese History, edited by Sven Saaler and Christopher Szpilman, 92–102. Routledge.
 * 2022 – "Time to Remember, Time to Forget: The Battle of Tsushima in Japanese Collective Memory since 1905." The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus 20, issue 12, no. 3. Article 5716.
 * 2022 – "The Mir Yeshiva’s    Holocaust Experience: Ultra-Orthodox Perspectives on Japanese Wartime     Attitudes towards Jewish Refugees." Holocaust and Genocide Studies 36, no. 3, 295–314.
 * 2023 – “A Holocaust Paragon of Virtue’s Rise to Fame: The Transnational Commemoration of the Japanese    Diplomat Sugihara Chiune and Its Divergent National Motives.” American Historical Review 128, no. 1, 31–63.