Kakutani attended
Tohoku University in
Sendai, where his advisor was
Tatsujirō Shimizu. At one point he spent two years at the
Institute for Advanced Study in
Princeton at the invitation of the mathematician
Hermann Weyl. While there, he also met
John von Neumann. Kakutani received his
Ph.D. in 1941 from
Osaka University and taught there through
World War II. He returned to the Institute for Advanced Study in 1948, and was given a professorship by
Yale in 1949, where he won a students' choice award for excellence in teaching. Kakutani received two awards of the
Japan Academy, the
Imperial Prize and the
Academy Prize in 1982, for his scholarly achievements in general and his work on functional analysis in particular. He was a Plenary Speaker of the
ICM in 1950 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Kakutani was married to Keiko ("Kay") Uchida, who was a sister to author
Yoshiko Uchida. His daughter,
Michiko Kakutani, is a
Pulitzer Prize-winning former literary critic for
The New York Times. == Work ==