David Wolff
Professor
Field of Specialization
1) Russian, Soviet and Emigre; 2) Siberia and the Far East; 3) Cold War; 4) Northeast Asian Region ConstructionCareer
BA. Harvard University (History and Literature), 1981; PhD. University of California at Berkeley (Late Modern Europe, Post-Ming China, Kremlinology), 1991.
Publications
2009
- Open Jaw: A Harbin-centered View of the Siberian- Manchurian Intervention, 1917-22, Russian History, 36(3):339-359
2008
- Riding Rough: Portsmouth, Regionalism and the Birth of Anti-Americanism in Northeast Asia (The Treaty of Portsmouth and Its Legacies, 125-141, Hanover, NH: Dartmouth College Press)
- (with Sergey Radchenko) To the Summit via Proxy-Summits: New Evidence from Soviet and Chinese Archives on Mao's Long March to Moscow, 1949, Cold War International History Bulletin, 16:105-182
- Cultural and Social History on Total War's Global Battlefield, Russian Review, 67:70-77
2006
- "From Regional to Global: The 20th Century History of Soy as a Commodity" Gendai Chugoku Kenkyu 18(June 2006), 64-76.
- The KGB Reports from Lithuania, Acta Slavica Iaponica, 23:219-240 (2006)
2005-2007
- World War Zero: The Russo-Japanese War in Global Perspective, Vol.I and IIcoedited with Steinberg, Marks, Menning, Schimmelpenninck, and Yokote (Brill: Leiden, 2005-7)
2003
- "Interkit: Soviet Sinology and the Sino-Soviet Split, 1967-1986"Russian History 30,4(2003)
2001
- "American Policy and Ryukyu Identity, 1944-1951" in iuqiu rentong yu guiyu lunzheng (2001)
1999
- To the Harbin Station: The Liberal Alternative in Russian Manchuria, 1898-1914 (Stanford University Press, 1999)