In Memoriam: Martha Chaiklin, August 9, 1960–February 4, 2026

88 views
Skip to first unread message

Paula R. Curtis

unread,
Feb 16, 2026, 9:49:24 AM (6 days ago) Feb 16
to pm...@googlegroups.com
Dear all,
I share the following announcement from H-Net by David Wittner:
Martha Chaiklin, August 9, 1960–February 4, 2026.

It is with heavy heart that I write to inform our community of the passing of Martha Chaiklin, an indefatigable research, writer, and friend. Martha earned her BA in Asian Studies from Washington University, St. Louis, two MAs; one from University of Michigan in Asian Studies, the second in Japanese history from Seijo University, Tokyo, where she continued her doctoral studies before ultimately earning her PhD from Leiden University in the Netherlands. Martha was a highly accomplished scholar, having written or edited eight books, contributing twenty chapters and authoring nearly two dozen scholarly articles. Her talents extended into the sphere of public history as well. She began her career as curator of Asian history at the Milwaukee Public Museum and continued to curate exhibits at various institutions, including most recently the Smithsonian's National Museum of Asian Art. 

I met Martha in the mid-1990s at a graduate student conference. As budding historians of technology, we leaned on, and learned from, each other for the entirety of our careers. To call her a historian of technology is a disservice, however. Her interests and research, while incorporating technology, went far beyond. She once called herself a historian of stuff—glass, shoes, ivory, feathers, and elephants to name a few—whose concern was the effect of technologies on people’s lives. Her concern for others was not simply the subject of her research, it extended to all aspects of her life. She was always there for her friends, colleagues, and students. Rarely saying no, and never to a friend, Martha joined H-Japan as review and list editor when she already had too much on her plate. She was also the editor and face of Shashi: The Journal of Japanese Business and Company History. Shortly before her passing, one of her greatest concerns was that the next issue of Shashi be published in fairness to the contributing authors. Martha joined her local board of elections because of a sense civic duty and fairness. 

Witty, unflaggingly enthusiastic, and a bit eccentric, Martha was always fun to be with. Conversations seemed to pick up where they left off even if we hadn’t spoken for months. I feel confident speaking for her many friends when I say we’ll miss her.

For H-Japan,

DGW


--
Dr. Paula R. Curtis
Academic Administrator
Department of Asian Languages & Cultures, UCLA

Operations Leader, Japan Past & Present
Yanai Initiative for Globalizing Japanese Humanities

Portfolio & Projects

Tim Screech

unread,
Feb 17, 2026, 9:51:36 AM (5 days ago) Feb 17
to pm...@googlegroups.com
That’s terrible news. I hardly knew her, but I has great respect for her work. Still very young and active. 
Timon screech 

--
PMJS is a forum dedicated to the study of premodern Japan.
To post to the list, email pm...@googlegroups.com
For the PMJS Terms of Use and more resources, please visit www.pmjs.org.
Contact the moderation team at mod...@pmjs.org
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "PMJS: Listserv" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to pmjs+uns...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/pmjs/CAL1MDVTum6kQWbFR4Y%3DfNOg_g%2B1Mf9w2PmrtFj%3DfV6qyV_jutA%40mail.gmail.com.

William Farris

unread,
Feb 17, 2026, 10:32:01 PM (4 days ago) Feb 17
to pm...@googlegroups.com
Hi folks:
           I knew Martha somewhat.  We skyped for about an hour on occasion.  She was a fine person, intelligent and a hard worker.  Her commitment to political involvement and election integrity were laudable.  I will miss her emails.  Sad news.
Wayne Farris

Travis Seifman

unread,
Feb 17, 2026, 11:46:41 PM (4 days ago) Feb 17
to pm...@googlegroups.com
This is sad news indeed. I only had the pleasure of meeting Martha a few times, but her enthusiasm for the richness of material culture - for studies of gift exchange, ivory and elephants, and so forth - was exciting and inspiring. I had eagerly looked forward to meeting her again, and to further discussions.

My sincere condolences to all who knew her well.

Sincerely,
Travis Seifman

jan goodwin

unread,
Feb 19, 2026, 1:55:41 PM (2 days ago) Feb 19
to pm...@googlegroups.com
Like many others, I mourn Martha's untimely passing.  In addition to being an accomplished and prolific scholar, Martha served the academic community as an editor of the H-Japan discussion list.  As her fellow editor, I was grateful for her diligence and her wisdom.  She will be sorely missed.

Janet Goodwin

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages