Brian Walsh has lived, worked, and studied in Japan for seventeen years. He received a master's degree in Japan Studies from the University of Washington in 2003 and a Ph.D. in modern Japanese history from Princeton University in 2016. His principal areas of study are U.S.-Japanese relations in the 1940s and 1950s and the postwar development of a new Japanese national identity in the wake of World War II. He currently teaches Japanese history and international relations at Kwansei Gakuin University and lives in Hyogo Prefecture, Japan.
"""This deeply researched and carefully documented study conclusively refutes the myth of mass rape by American soldiers in occupied Japan after World War II. Walsh shows that projection by Japanese men in a patriarchal society, anti-American propaganda by Japanese communists and socialists, and the image of rape as a metaphor for conquest and submission created a false memory of sexual predation that was in reality far less common among American occupation forces than the legend.""--James M. McPherson, George Henry Davis Professor of History Emeritus, Princeton University"