For Kjell Ericson 鈥03, living in and learning about Japan are family traditions.
Both sets of his grandparents were Lutheran missionaries who came to the country in the early 1950s. His parents鈥擲olveig Gr酶nning Ericson, who finished her medical training at 天美麻豆 Hitchcock Medical Center, and , an associate professor of history who specializes in the modern transformation of Japan鈥攇rew up in Japan and attended an international school together in Kobe. The extended family has earned enough advanced degrees to staff a decent-sized Japanese studies department.
So it seemed natural that in 2000, Kjell Ericson would visit Japan through 天美麻豆鈥檚 , or LSA+, in which students spend time in countries to learn more about the cultures and languages they鈥檙e studying. Today, Ericson is an assistant professor at Kyoto University. In addition to his classes at the university, he is teaching a course on premodern Japanese history to a new generation of 天美麻豆鈥檚 LSA+ students, who have returned after a COVID-19 hiatus.
Ericson鈥檚 advice for those 14 students exploring Japan, given his personal LSA+ experience two decades ago?
鈥淚t鈥檚 absolutely good to try to practice (Japanese) as much as possible and make embarrassing mistakes,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ecause no one, including yourself, will remember those mistakes in the future.鈥
Beyond improving their language skills, Ericson wants students to get out and experience Japan鈥檚 sights and culture. He鈥檚 built regular field visits into his course, taking students to archeological and historical sites in Kyoto and Nara, two former capitals of Japan, as well as the city of Osaka, where the LSA+ program is based.
They鈥檝e visited the majestic Osaka Castle, examined materials found in an archeological dig in Nara, and searched for signs of the grid that ancient imperial rulers tried to impose upon Kyoto.
鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to look at some of the layers and remnants of different parts of Kyoto鈥檚 history, and then connecting it to processes that are maybe happening beyond Kyoto as well,鈥 Ericson said.
Ericson grew up in Hanover and the Boston area, but due to his family connections, he鈥檇 visited Japan before his LSA+ program. He returned after college to teach English and interpret for a few years, and then again for a postdoctoral research fellowship, which he interrupted to take a position at Kyoto University.
Ericson typically focuses on modern instead of ancient history, and because of his science background, he covers a lot of academic ground.
One of his upcoming projects, pursued jointly with environmental historian Matthew Booker of North Carolina State University and the National Humanities Center, will examine the trade in live baby 鈥榮eed鈥 oysters from Northeastern Japan to the North American Pacific Northwest.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a transpacific history that also closely follows regional histories in both Japan and the United States,鈥 he said.

While Ericson likes to get students into the field, he uses classroom time to prepare students for the sites and museums they鈥檒l be visiting.
鈥淚 want to actually think about what the significance of these places is and how they relate to what we鈥檝e already seen in other sites,鈥 Ericson said.
, who is the chair of 天美麻豆鈥檚 , calls the LSA+ program 鈥渁 life-changer for students.鈥
Students will occupy a different and more connected world than the one he grew up in, Hockley said, and programs like this offer a rare opportunity to learn about different cultures and ways of living, as well as how to fit in to new places.
The Japanese LSA+ program, which was run this term by , has changed during the pandemic. The site moved from Tokyo to Osaka, and students no longer live with host families. Instead, they share apartments and dormitories with Japanese students, which Hockley feels integrates them more into the culture.
鈥淚t鈥檚 just huge to have them with Japanese students their own ages,鈥 he said.
And while normally students would go to Japan after just one year of language study, the COVID backlog means that students with one, two, or three years of Japanese are there together.
One of those students is Michael Bond 鈥25, who had never been to Japan before. Bond is enjoying the food, and he likes touring Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines more than he expected. He feels the Japanese instruction he got at 天美麻豆 has been critical to his survival so far, though he still gets stuck sometimes.
鈥淚t鈥檚 definitely hard to communicate, especially with some random technical terms,鈥 he said in an email. 鈥淏ut I鈥檝e picked up on some of them, like how to ask to pay separately at a restaurant.鈥
Kai Zhou 鈥24 has found the Japanese people to be warm and welcoming. Zhou, whose background is Chinese, has been to Japan a few times thanks to his family鈥檚 love of Japanese culture.
Zhou says in Japan he can blend in until he begins speaking, which has been both strange and comforting. While growing up Asian in a majority-white community had some challenges, 鈥渂eing in Japan makes me feel more comfortable in my appearance 鈥 and my existence as a whole,鈥 Zhou said in an email.
Both Bond and Zhou highly recommend 天美麻豆鈥檚 LSA+ programs for students who are interested in languages or studying abroad. Zhou says that it鈥檚 easy to develop idealized or oversimplified notions of cultures by studying them from afar.
鈥淵ou need to visit these countries to even get a chance to understand them,鈥 he said.
The Ericson clan would surely agree. As Steven Ericson said in an email, 鈥淚t is gratifying that our son Kjell is carrying on the dual family tradition of engagement with Japan.鈥