• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

  • ABOUT
    • Greetings from the Department Chair
    • Department History
    • News
    • Affiliates
    • Support
    • Contact EALAC
  • PEOPLE
    • Faculty
    • Administration
    • Graduate Students
    • Recent Alumni
  • PROGRAMS
    • Undergraduate
    • Graduate
    • Language Programs
    • Academic Year 2025-2026 Courses
  • EVENTS
  • SUPPORT

admin

Filed Under: recent-phds

Allison Bernard

bernard

Allison Bernard

Field: Chinese Literature
Advisor: Shang Wei
Email: aeb2197@columbia.edu

Allison is a Ph.D. candidate in premodern Chinese literature, focusing on the Ming and Qing periods. Her research interests include the intersections of literary and historical writing, book history and print culture, and the world of Chinese theater. Her dissertation engages the literary world of Kong Shangren’s seminal historical drama The Peach Blossom Fan, using the play and its network of related texts to examine ideological resonances among stage, society, and writerly legacy. The dissertation begins by assessing connections between theater and politics in Kong’s work, framed through its engagement with the notorious politician and playwright Ruan Dacheng, and Ruan’s infamous romantic comedy, The Swallow Letter. The project then considers some of the diverse discursive contexts in which Kong situated his play: its connections and responses to Tang Xianzu and the Linchuan drama school; how issues of history writing and historical legacy are figured in chuanqi drama; and Kong’s own expertise in ritual and music, which is closely tied to his family background as a member of the Confucian Kong lineage. Before joining Columbia’s PhD program in the fall of 2012, Allison received her BA from Middlebury College in Chinese and History (2010), and an MA from Columbia’s EALAC department in Chinese Literature (2012). She also has research interests in Japanese literature and theater, poetry, art history, translation, and media studies.

07/11/2017 by admin

Filed Under: recent-phds

Sau-yi Fong

Sau-yi Fong

Field: Chinese History
Email: sf2686@columbia.edu

Sau-yi Fong is a doctoral student in Chinese history. She received her BA from the Chinese University of Hong Kong (2008) and her Mphil from the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (2013). Her research interests lie in the intersection of military history, intellectual history and the history of science and technology, with a focus on late imperial gunpowder technology, the manufacture of armaments and literati conceptions of war and violence in Qing China. She worked as a translator in Hong Kong for more than 5 years before joining Columbia in 2014.

07/10/2017 by admin

Filed Under: In Memoriam

Wm. Theodore de Bary

debaryWm. Thedore de Bary

SPECIAL SERVICE PROFESSOR, ASIAN HUMANITIES

Office: 502 Kent
Teaching Hours: M 2:10-4:00, W 2:10-4:00
Phone: (212) 854-3671
Email: wtd1@columbia.edu

Educational Background

BA: Columbia University (’41)
MA: Columbia University (’48)
PhD: Columbia University (’53)

Research Interests

East Asian Humanities, Neo-Confucian thought

Wm. Theodore de Bary (D. Litt St. Lawrence ’68; LHD Loyola – Chicago ’70; D. Litt. Columbia ’94) teaches Asian humanities and civilizataions, Chinese and Japanese thought, and Neo-Confucianism in China, Korea, and Japan. Recent publications include Sources of Chinese, Korean, and Japanese Tradition (Columbia, 1999-2001), Asian Values and Human Rights (Harvard 1998), Confucianism and Human Rights (Columbia 1997), Waiting for the Dawn (Columbia 1992), The Trouble with Confucianism (Harvard 1991), and East Asian Civilizations (Harvard 1987).

Pending Edits

archive page

07/05/2017 by admin

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 31
  • Go to page 32
  • Go to page 33
  • Go to page 34
  • Go to page 35
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 62
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Before Footer

EALAC – Columbia University
407 Kent Hall 1140 Amsterdam Ave.
MC 3907  New York, NY 10027
tel:212.854.5027

Footer

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • ABOUT
  • PEOPLE
  • PROGRAMS
  • EVENTS
  • SUPPORT

Copyright © 2025 · Columbia University Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures

Copyright © 2025 · EALAC on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in