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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Frank_GibneyFrank Gibney - Wikipedia

    Frank Bray Gibney (September 21, 1924 – April 9, 2006) was an American journalist, editor, writer and scholar. He learned Japanese while in the US Navy during World War II when it was stationed in Japan. As a journalist in Tokyo, he wrote Five Gentlemen of Japan, a popular book about the Japanese that was welcomed for its humanism ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Alex_GibneyAlex Gibney - Wikipedia

    Frank Gibney (father) Philip Alexander Gibney ( / ˈ ɡ ɪ b n i / ; born October 23, 1953) is an American documentary film director and producer. In 2010, Esquire magazine said Gibney "is becoming the most important documentarian of our time."

  3. The Pacific Century is a 1992 PBS Emmy Award winning ten-part documentary series narrated by Peter Coyote about the rise of the Pacific Rim economies. Alex Gibney was the writer for the series, and Frank Gibney, his father, wrote the companion trade book, The Pacific Century: America and Asia in a Changing World.

  4. 15. Mai 2020 · Foremost among these is the personal papers of PBI’s founder Frank Gibney. By the time he founded the Pacific Basin Institute in 1979, Gibney (1924-2006) already enjoyed a distinguished career as a journalist and editor.

  5. Frank B. Gibney, the late founder and president of Pacific Basin Institute at Pomona College, spent most of his life attempting to bridge the gap between Americans and the countries and cultures of East Asia.

  6. Gibney ist der Sohn des Journalisten und Schriftstellers Frank Gibney. [1] Alex Gibney studierte an der Yale University japanische Literatur und später an der UCLA Graduate School of Film and Television. [2] 1980 entstand sein erster Film The Ruling Classroom, bei dem er das Drehbuch schrieb, Regie führte und als Produzent fungierte.

  7. Honda’s work has played a significant role in a textbook controversy in Japan where, as Frank Gibney, in the editor’s introduction, describes an “apparent historical amnesia of most Japanese about the wartime misdeeds of their troops.” Understandably, war is ugly, but there are agreed-upon restrictions to the horrors man can inflict upon man.