Monday, June 01, 2009

Ronald Takaki, Ethnic Studies Pioneer, Dies

Ronald Takaki, Ethnic Studies Pioneer, Dies: Dr. Ronald Takaki, a pioneer in the field of ethnic studies who taught the University of California system's first Black history course, has died. He was 70.

Takaki killed himself Tuesday in his Berkeley home after suffering for two decades from multiple sclerosis, a debilitating neurological disease, according to his son, Troy Takaki.

After joining UC Berkeley's faculty in 1971, Takaki established the Ethnic Studies department’s Ph.D. program, the first of its kind in the United States, and worked to draw talented scholars to teach there. He was the author or editor of nearly 20 books, most of them dealing with marginalized Americans, including the Pulitzer Prize-nominated Strangers from a Different Shore: A History of Asian Americans.

Takaki began his teaching career in 1966 at UCLA, where he taught the UC system’s first Black history class in the wake of the city's deadly 1965 Watts riots.