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Chinese Literature at the ‘Rethinking Authorship’ Symposium

By: Allison Bernard (Premodern Chinese Literature)

New scholarship on medieval and early modern Chinese literature was among the exciting work showcased at EALAC’s March 10-11th international symposium, “Rethinking Authorship in East Asia and Europe.” While most symposium papers focused on Japanese literature, the event included presentations by several scholars of European literatures, as well as papers on Chinese literature by Columbia’s own Shang Wei and Princeton University’s Anna M. Shields. Professor Shields’s talk, “The Need for an Author: Creating Tang Dynasty Writers in the Five Dynasties (908-976) and Northern Song (976-1127)” examined the history of author biographies during the Tang-Song transition. Focusing on Tang poet Du Fu and Tang prose writer Han Yu, Shields argued that the revision of literati biographies from the 10th-c. Old Tang History in the 11th-c. New Tang History and in other later works strengthened connections between author and text and sought to stabilize narratives of these authors’ lives. Professor Shang’s talk, “The Story of the Stone and Issues of Authorship,” took up the complex matrix of authorial positions represented in the early chapters of The Story of the Stone. Asserting that the opening chapters manifest multiple authors and readers of the novel, Shang drew out the significance of the stone as both medium and protagonist. He also emphasized that the novel is uniquely positioned to engage issues of authorship alongside questions of media, genre, narrative, and commentary traditions of early modern China. Both papers were notable contributions to the symposium’s broader themes, which, among others, included the relationship between authorship and authority; the role of print media in making authors; and the historicity of concepts of authorship.

07/13/2017 by admin

Filed Under: recent-phds

Chelsea Zi Wang

Chelsea Zi Wang

Field: Chinese History
Advisor: Robert Hymes
Email: zw2159@columbia.edu

 

 

 

Chelsea Wang is a PhD candidate in Chinese history. Her research interests include communication networks, technologies of information management, and comparative models of government. Her dissertation, “Communication, Paperwork, and Administrative Efficiency in Ming China (1369-1644)” examines the Ming government’s infrastructures of information management and the bureaucratic costs that they produced. More broadly, she is interested in incorporating comparative East Asian perspectives into the study of Chinese history. Chelsea received her BA in History from the University of British Columbia and started PhD studies at Columbia in 2009. During the academic years 2013-15, she conducted dissertation research at the University of Tokyo with support of the Japanese MEXT Scholarship. Her personal academic blog can be accessed here.

07/12/2017 by admin

Filed Under: recent-phds

Luke Thompson

Luke Thompson

Field: Japanese Religion
Advisor: Bernard Faure
Email: lnt2106@columbia.edu

 

 

 

Luke Thompson’s research focuses on Japanese Buddhism during the tenth-to-fourteenth centuries. He is particularly interested in Buddhist historiography and the way in which Japanese Buddhists have thought about Buddhist history and their own place within it. His PhD dissertation examined Japanese views of Śākyamuni during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries in light of contemporaneous changes in Japanese understandings of Japan’s historical and geographical position within the Buddhist world. He is currently working on a second project focused on the rebuilding of Nara in the last decades of the twelfth century and is also teaching Buddhist Studies courses in New York State prisons through the Bard Prison Initiative’s undergraduate degree program.

07/12/2017 by admin

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