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Faculty-Discipline

Ying Qian

ying_qianYing Qian

Associate Professor

Office: 930 IAB
Office Hours: F 4 PM-6 PM, Appointment required

Phone: (212)854-5027
Email: yq2189@columbia.edu

Educational Background

AB: Harvard University
MPhil: University of Cambridge, UK
PhD: Harvard University (’13)

Classes Taught

EAAS UN3322 East Asian Cinema
EAAS GU4572 Chinese Documentary Cinema
EAAS GR8998 Media Cultures in China

Research Interests

Chinese-language cinema and media; transnational media histories; media of activism, reform
and critique; media ecology and knowledge formation
As a scholar of cinema and media, Ying Qian is interested in the role of media and mediation in
shaping politics, forming knowledge, and connecting realms of experience. Her first
book, Revolutionary Becomings: Documentary Media in Twentieth-Century China (Columbia
University Press, 2024) excavates documentary’s multi-faceted productivities in China’s
revolutionary movements, from the toppling of the Qing Empire in 1911 to the political
campaigns and mass protests in the Mao and post-Mao eras. It approaches documentary as an
“eventful medium,” and as a prism to examine the mutual constitution of media and revolution:
how revolutionary movements gave rise to specific media practices, and how these media
practices in turn contributed to the specific paths of revolution’s actualization. She’s now
working on a new monograph on media and the ecologies of knowledge in China’s reform and
opening. Ying Qian’s articles have appeared in Critical Inquiry, New Left Review, China
Perspectives, New Literary History of Modern China, Oxford Handbook of Chinese
Cinemas, and other journals and websites. At Columbia, she teaches classes on East Asian
cinema, Chinese media cultures, documentary media, media of science and technology, and
comparative media theory and history. Drawing from her experiences in filmmaking, she has
incorporated creative assignments in her classes, guiding students to try their hands on media
productions.

Selected Publications

Revolutionary Becomings: Documentary Media in Twentieth-Century China (Columbia
University Press, 2024)

“When Taylorism Met Revolutionary Romanticism: Documentary Cinema in China’s Great Leap
Forward”, Critical Inquiry (Spring 2020).

“The Spectre of Liu Shaoqi,” in A New Literary History of Modern China (Harvard, 2017)
“Working with Rubble: Montage, Tweets, and the Reconstruction of an Activist Cinema,”
in China’s iGeneration: Filmmakers, Films and Audiences in a New Media Age (Continuum,
2014)

“Power in the Frame: Independent Documentary in China,” The New Left Review (2012)

Andrew Plaks

Andrew Plaks

Adjunct Professor
Office: 410A
Office Hours: WF 9:00-10:00
Email: ap3606@columbia.edu

Educational Background

AB: Princeton University (’67)
PhD: Princeton University (’73)

Research Interests

Chinese and Japanese Classical Literature

Selected Publications

Pu Andi Zixuanji (Collected Works of Andrew Plaks). Beijing: Sanlian shuju (2011)

“Zheng Xuan’s Commentary on the Zhouli,” in Statecraft and Classical Learning: the Rituals of Zhou in East Asian History, ed. Benjamin A. Elman and Martin Kern (Leiden: Brill, 2010).

“Why the Chinese Gods Don’t Suffer?,” in Studies in Chinese Language and Culture: Festschrift in Honor of Christoph Harbsmeier (2006).

“Xin as the Seat of the Emotions in Confucian Self-cultivation,” in Love, Hatred, and Other Passions, ed. Paolo Santangelo and Donatella Guida (Leiden: Brill, 2006), pp.113-25.

“Completeness and Partiality in Traditional Commentaries on Honglou meng,” Tamkang Review (XXXVI:1-2), Fall-Winter 2005. pp. 117-35

“Xin as the Seat of the Emotions in Confucian Self-cultivation,” in Love, Hatred, and Other Passions, ed. Paolo Santangelo and Donatella Guida (Leiden: Brill, 2006), pp.113-25.

The Highest Order of Cultivation and On the Practice of the Mean. London: Penguin Classics (2003)

Filed Under: Adjunct, Tibet

Karl Debreczeny

Karl Debreczeny

Adjunct Lecturer of Tibetan Art

Office: 401 Kent Hall
Office Hours: M 5-6 PM
Email: kdebreczeny@rubinmuseum.org

Educational Background

PhD: University of Chicago (Art History)
MA: Indiana University (Central Eurasian Studies)
MA: Indiana University (Art History)
BA: Oberlin College (East Asian Studies)

Classes Taught

HSEA GU4815 Faith and Empire: Art and Politics in Tibetan Buddhism

Research Interests

Exchanges between Tibetan and Chinese artistic traditions; Tibetan Art; Sino-Tibetan relations;
Karl Debreczeny is Senior Curator, Collections and Research, at the Rubin Museum of Art, New
York, where he has worked since 2006. He completed a Double-Masters in Art History and
Tibetan Studies at Indiana University (1994); and his PhD in Art History at the University of
Chicago (2007). He was a Fulbright-Hays Fellow to China (2003–2004) and a National Gallery
of Art CASVA Ittleson Fellow (2004–2006). His has conducted field research in various
locations along the Sino-Tibetan border.

Selected Publications

Faith and Empire: Art and Politics in Tibetan Buddhism. (ed.) NY: Rubin Museum of Art, 2019.

The Tenth Karmapa and Tibet’s Turbulent 17th Century. (ed. with Gray Tuttle) Serindia
Publications, 2016.

The All-Knowing Buddha: A Secret Guide (with Elena Pakhoutova, Christian Luczanits, and Jan
van Alphen). Antwerp: Museum Aan de Stroom. MAS: 2014.

Situ Panchen: Creation and Cultural Engagement in 18th-Century Tibet. (ed.) Guest Editor of a
special issue of the Journal of the International Association of Tibetan Studies no. 7 (August
2013). http://www.thlib.org/collections/texts/jiats/#!jiats=/current/

The Black Hat Eccentric: Artistic Visions of the Tenth Karmapa NY: Rubin Museum of Art,
2012.

“Wutaishan: Pilgrimage to Five Peak Mountain” Journal of the International Association of
Tibetan Studies, Issue 6 (Dec 2011): 1-133. http://www.thlib.org/collections/texts/jiats/#!jiats=/06/debreczeny/

04/08/2016 by Nicole Roldan

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