Teaches courses on Japan and East Asian history, with particular interests in labor and business
history.
Professor Kinzley teaches surveys of East Civilization and Modern East Asia as well as
courses on Modern Japan and seminars on Japanese social history, World War II in the Pacific,
and the United States and East Asia in World War II and its aftermath. His first book
Industrial Harmony in Modern Japan: The Invention of a Tradition examined state-sanctioned
ideologies concerning industrial relations in the first half of the twentieth century.
Current Activities:
The focus of my current research is Japan’s national railroad. I am interested in the
structure and operation of state owned firms and the impact and influence of those firms
on private companies. In addition my work examines railroad health care programs along
with systems for disability and retirement benefits and their influence on broader state
social welfare initiatives. I have published recently articles on Japanese ‘welfare
capitalism’ and on railroad nationalization in comparative perspective.
To see Professor Kinzley's CV, click here.
http://www.cas.sc.edu/hist/faculty/kinzley.htm