Susan Jolliffe Phelps was born in October 1955, the daughter of Reginald H. Phelps (1909–2006), a historian and educational administrator, and Julia Phelps (née Sears; d. 1995).[2][3] She was raised in Cambridge, Massachusetts,[4] graduated from Radcliffe College,[5] and obtained her A.B., A.M., and PhD degrees from Harvard University.[6] She married Ron Wells Napier on August 20, 1977, at King's Chapel,[5] and their daughter, Julia Diana Napier, was born on December 29, 1989.[7][8] Napier taught Japanese and video at the University of Texas at Austin, and began working at a university in New York around 1985.[9]
Napier met her husband, Steve Coit, the year she started researching her book Miyazakiworld: A Life in Art, which was released eight years later in 2018.[8]
Works
——— (1996). The Fantastic in Modern Japanese Literature: The Subversion of Modernity. London: Routledge. p. 272. ISBN978-0-415-12458-4.
——— (2001). "Confronting Master Narratives: History As Vision in Miyazaki Hayao's Cinema of De-assurance". Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique. 9 (2): 467–493. doi:10.1215/10679847-9-2-467. S2CID144130648.
——— (March 11, 2008). From Impressionism to Anime: Japan as Fantasy and Fan Cult in the Mind of the West. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 272. ISBN978-1-4039-6214-0.
——— (2006). Meet Me on the Other Side: Strategies of Otherness in Modern Japanese literature. London: Routledge. pp. 38–55. ISBN978-0-415-36185-9.
——— (2007). "When the Machine Stops: Fantasy, Reality, and Terminal Identity in Neon Genesis Evangelion and Serial Experiments: Lain". Robot Ghosts and Wired Dreams: Japanese Science Fiction from Origins to Anime. University of Minnesota Press. p. 269. ISBN978-0-8166-4973-0.