Otmazgin was born and raised in Dimona, to a family of seven. His father worked in the Dead Sea Works, and his mother was a kindergarten assistant teacher. After graduating high school and completing his military service in the IDF Otmazgin travelled to Japan, which held a fascination for him from a young age. In 1995–1997 he spent 2 years studying Japanese language and Culture studies at the Tōyō Gengo Gakuin school in Tokyo. Following that, Otmazgin returned to Israel and entered the Hebrew University, completing his B.A. in Political Science and Asian Studies in 2001.[2]
For his graduate studies, Otmazgin attended Kyoto University, founded by a scholarship from Japan's Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (Monkashō). During his six years in Kyoto University, Otmazgin studied and wrote his Ph.D. dissertation under the guidance of Shiraishi Takashi, who specializes in political and social change in the Asian region. His dissertation, which examined the export of Japan's popular culture to Asia, won the Iue Asia Pacific research prize (October 2007) for outstanding dissertation on society and culture in Asia.[3][4] After completing his PhD, Otmazgin returned to Israel and became a postdoctoral fellow at the Louis Frieberg Center For East Asian Studies in the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Otmazgin's research interests include Japanese and Korean media industries, cultural regionalization in East Asia, and Japan-Southeast Asian Relations, and cultural diplomacy in East Asia.[5] His background in Political Science and East Asian Studies, throughout his studies he has been interested by the possibility of combining social science methodologies and area specialization with the goal of analyzing and explaining social and cultural phenomena.[6]
In addition to these grants, he has won the Taiwan Fellowship Award to conduct field research in Taiwan in 2017,[8] The Korea Foundation Award to conduct research in Korea in 2015, The Japan Foundation Award to conduct research in Japan in 2014.[8]
Professor Yoram Ben-Porat's Presidential Award for Outstanding Young Researcher for the year 2012–2013.[8]
Sir Zelman Cowen University Fund for academic exchange fellowship at The University of Sydney (2010).[1]
Bibliography
Books
Daliot-Bul, Michal; Otmazgin, Nissim (2017). The anime boom in the United States : lessons for global creative industries. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Asia Center Press. ISBN978-0-674-97699-3. OCLC 982089124[10]
Otmazgin, Nissim, and Eyal Ben-Ari, eds. Popular Culture Co-productions and Collaborations in East and Southeast Asia. Singapore: National University of Singapore Press and Kyoto University Press, 2013.[13]
Otmazgin, Nissim and Eyal Ben-Ari, eds. Popular Culture and the State in East and Southeast Asia. London: Routledge, 2012.[14]