• Skip to main content
  • 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

China

Lu Kou

Lu Kou

Director Of Undergraduate Studies, Assistant Professor

Office: 412 Kent Hall
Office Hours: Undergraduate students: R 10:00am-12:00pm; Class office hours: W 4:15-6:15pm

https://calendly.com/lk2950-columbia/office-hours?month=2025-10

Email: lk2950@columbia.edu

Educational Background

BA: Peking University (2010)
MA: Harvard University (2012)
PhD: Harvard University (2018)

Classes Taught

EAAS UN3935 The Fantastic in Pre-Modern China
EAAS GU4031 History of Chinese Literature

Research Interests

As a medievalist and a scholar of premodern Chinese literature, Lu Kou’s research interests include medieval Chinese literature and culture, poetry and poetics, historiography, and comparative studies of China’s Middle Period and medieval Europe. He is currently at work on two book projects: War of Words: Courtly Exchange, Rhetoric, and Political Culture in Early Medieval China, which examines the “discursive battles” fought among rival states in China’s early medieval period and investigates how rhetoric constructed and contested political legitimacy in this age of multipolarity; and (tentatively titled) Locked Seal, Heart of Poetry: Bureaucracy and the Representation of Work in Medieval Chinese Poetry, 400-900 CE, which studies the dialectic between poetry and bureaucratic systems, between the lyrical and quotidian renderings of “work” in medieval poetry. Before joining the faculty at Columbia, he was Assistant Professor of Chinese at Bard College (2019-2022) and Visiting Assistant Professor at Williams College (2018-2019).

Selected Publications

“The Poetics and Politics of Space: Writing Imperial Visits of Private Estates in Early Tang Court Poetry.” The Nanyang Journal of Chinese Literature and Culture. 2023. Special issue on “court culture.”

“Audible Empire: Musical Orthodoxy and Spectacle in the Sui Dynasty.” Early Medieval China, vol. 28 (2022): pp. 73-96.

“Epistolary Exchange and Psychological Warfare: Tuoba Tao’s 拓跋燾 (408–452, r. 423–452) Letters to his Southern Audience.” Journal of Chinese Literature and Culture, 7.1 (2020): pp. 34-59.

[Chinese version:] “Shuxin zhong de junwang xingxiang yu xinli zhan: Tuoba Tao (408–452, r. 423–452) de guoshu he ta de nanfang duzhe” 書信中的君王形象與心理戰:拓跋燾(408–452)的國書和他的南方讀者. Lingnan xuebao 嶺南學報, 13 (2020): pp. 51-72.

Dorothy Ko

Dorothy Ko

Professor of Chinese History

Office: Milstein 803
Office Hours: T 2-4 PM

Phone: (212) 854-9624
Email: dk2031@columbia.edu

Educational Background

BA: Stanford University
MA: Stanford University
PhD: Stanford University

Classes Taught

HIST BC2861 Chinese Cultural History
HIST BC2865 Gender and Power in China
HIST BC3514 Historical Approaches to Feminist Questions
HIST BC3864 Feast and Famine: Food and Environment in Chinese History

Research Interests

History of China, Gender, History of science, technology and medicine

Professor Ko’s research interest is the everyday lives of women in China –along with the domestic objects they made by hand–as a significant part of country’s cultural, economic and political development. She works at the intersections of anthropology, history, and women’s studies. Ko’s 2005 book, Cinderella Sisters: A Revisionist History of Footbinding, won the Joan Kelly Memorial Prize of the American Historical Association. Recently, she has been turning her attention to the skills of women’s artisans such as embroiderers, stone carvers, and ceramic artists. She is also co-editor of Women and Confucian Cultures in Pre-modern China, Korea, and Japan. Ko’s courses include Chinese cultural history, body histories, women and culture in 17th century China, and Confucian cultures.

Ko earned undergraduate and advanced degrees at Stanford University, including the doctorate. Her honors include lifetime memberships at the Academia Sinica and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 2022 she served as the Kluge Chair in Countries and Cultures of the North at the John W. Kluge Center, Library of Congress. She has received fellowships from the Institute for Advanced Study (2000-2001), the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation (2000-2001), the American Council of Learned Societies (2012-13), and the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin, among others. Before joining the Barnard faculty in 2001, Professor Ko taught at Rutgers University.

Selected Publications

The Social Life of Inkstones: Artisans and Scholars in Early Qing China (Washington, 2017)

Cinderella’s Sisters: A Revisionist History of Footbinding (University of California, 2005)

Teachers of the Inner Chambers: Women and Culture in Seventeenth-century China (Stanford, 1994)

Robert P.W. Hymes

Robert Hymes

Carpentier Professor of Chinese History

Office: 504 Kent Hall
Phone: (212) 854-2580
Email: rph2@columbia.edu

Office hours: R 12-2:00PM, Please make an appointment in advance by email.

Educational Background

BA: Columbia College (’72)
MA: University of Pennsylvania (’75)
PhD: University of Pennsylvania (’79)

Classes Taught

EAAS UN3990 Approaches to East Asian Studies
HSEA GU4893 The Family in Chinese History
HSEA GR8883 Topics in the Middle Period of Chinese History

Research Interests

Middle-Period China, Social and Cultural History, Social Networks, Family and Kinship

Robert Hymes’ work focuses on the social and cultural history of middle period and early modern China, drawing questions and sometimes data from cultural anthropology as well as history, and using the methods of the local historian to study elite culture, family and kinship, medicine, religion, gender, and (currently) the changing role and form of Chinese social networks from the tenth through the seventeenth centuries. His monographs Statesmen and Gentlemen and Way and Byway won the Joseph Levenson Prize of the Association for Asian Studies for the best book on pre-1900 China in their years of publication.

Selected Publications

“Thoughts on the Problem of Historical Comparison between Europe and China,” in Political Communication in Chinese and European History, 800–1600 (Oxford, forthcoming 2018)

Way and Byway: Taoism, Local Religion, and Models of Divinity in Sung and Modern China (University of California, 2002)

Statesmen and Gentlemen: The Elite of Fu-chou, Chiang-hsi, in Northern and Southern Sung (Cambridge, 1987)

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 6
  • Go to page 7
  • Go to page 8
  • Go to page 9
  • Go to page 10
  • Go to Next Page »

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 © 2026 · Columbia University Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures

Copyright © 2026 · EALAC on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in