© photo by Jeff Day

Tatiana Linkhoeva

Faculty Fellow

Faculty Fellow; Assistant Professor, Department of History, Faculty of Arts & Science
Project: Between the Hammer and the Anvil: Nomadic Migration between the Soviet Union, China, and Manchukuo, 1900–1950

Tatiana Linkhoeva is Assistant Professor of modern Japanese History at New York University. Her book, Revolution Goes East. Imperial Japan and Soviet Communism will be published by Cornell University Press in March 2020. Native of the republic of Buriatia (Russia), Linkhoeva graduated from Moscow State University with honors, received her MA from the University of Tokyo, and PhD in History from UC Berkeley. She has been awarded fellowships from Japan’s Ministry of Education, the Japan Foundation, UC Berkeley, and the German Excellence Initiative. Her new research project focuses on colonial policies by the Soviet and Japanese regimes on the Mongolian territories (Buriatia, Outer and Inner Mongolia). The historiographical division between the communist bloc (Russia/Buriatia/Outer Mongolia/communist China) and the anticommunist bloc (Japan/Inner Mongolia/Manchuria/Republican China) has precluded identifying strategies and policies that great powers, regardless of their ideological preferences, deploy in dealing with “small people” caught in the regional power struggles. The project shifts away from these national/ist perspectives and places compartmentalized experiences of the Mongols in the center of a history.