Humanities.- Education.- Chinese contexts.- East/West comparative education.
Evelyn Chan is Assistant Professor in English literature at
The Chinese University of Hong Kong. Her monograph on Virginia
Woolf entitled Virginia Woolf and the Professions has recently been
published by Cambridge University Press, and she is now working on
Joseph Conrad’s fictional engagements with changing modes of
inheritance in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Britain.
However, she has also recently shifted some of her attention to the
exploration of the question of the significance of humanities
education. She teaches an undergraduate course called Literature
and Education, which she created to allow students to explore their
own personal and social roles as literary students through
literature itself.
Chin-jung Chiu is Professor of English at National Taiwan
University where she is currently the associate dean of the College
of Liberal Arts. Her recent publications include “Shakespeare in
the ESL Classroom: Bridging the LanguageGap for L2 Learners”
(2013), “Freud on Shakespeare: An Approach to Psychopathetic
Charactersâ” (2012), and “Appropriating Theories in the Name of
Shakespeare: The Case of Doctoral and MA Theses on Shakespeare by
Taiwan Students” (2010).
Stuart Christie is Professor and Head of the Department of
English Language and Literature at Hong Kong Baptist University
where he has been teaching since 1999. He is the co-editor, along
with Zhang Yuejun, of American Modernist Poetry and the Chinese
Encounter (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012), Plural Sovereignties and
Contemporary Indigenous Literature (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009),
Worlding Forster (Routledge, 2005) and numerous other peer-reviewed
publications in the fields of English literary modernism,
contemporary indigenous literature, and comparative sovereignty
studies. A literary critic by training, his latest research
addresses how the teaching and learning of anglophone literatures
is “necessarily” and “creatively”transformed by global contexts,
particularly that of a rising China.
Yangsheng Guo is professor and director of the Key Research
Base for the Study of Translation and Globalization at the
Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, China. He
received his PhD from the University of Alberta, Canada. Guo has
published extensively in areas ranging from curriculum and pedagogy
in English language and literature education to translation
studies, including “The Politics of Translation in a Global Era: A
Chinese Perspective” (The Translator, 2009) and “Translation as
Vaccination: The Political Dialectics of Translation under Chairman
Mao” (Translation Studies, 2016). He has taught in China, Canada
and Japan, and has won a number of prestigious honours and awards
for his teaching and research.
You Guo Jiang, S.J., Ph. D is an Assistant Director at
University Academic Advising Center and Professor of education and
philosophy at Boston College. Prior to his doctoral studies in the
USA he worked in UNESCO, UNHCR, and other international
organizations related to higher education, spirituality, student
development, liberal arts, and international studies in Asia and
Europe. He has studied at Harvard, Oxford and Boston College, and
has published several books on international and liberal arts
education and translations of works on higher education and
leadership, student development and spirituality.
Leo Ou-fan Lee is currently the Sin Wai Kin Professor of
Chinese Culture at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, having
joined the CUHK faculty since 2004 when he took early retirement
from Harvard. He has also taught at a number of US universities,
including Chicago, UCLA, Princeton; he has also served as visiting
professor at HKU (2001) and HKUST (2003), where he also received an
honorary degree. He is the author, among other books, of
Shanghai Modern, and City between Worlds:My Hong Kong. He is
planning to edit a similar volume in Chinese on university
education in Chinese.
Michael O’Sullivan is an Associate Professor in the
department of English at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He
has taught on humanities subjects for universities in
Ireland, the UK, the US, Japan and Hong Kong. He has published
widely in literary studies and also in the fields of philosophy and
education. His recent publications include Weakness: a literary and
philosophical history (Bloomsbury, 2012), The humanities and the
Irish university: anomalies and opportunities (Manchester
University Press, 2014), The Future of English in Asia:
perspectives on language and literature ([co-edited with David
Huddart and Carmen Lee] Routledge 2016) and Academic barbarism,
universities and inequality (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016).
Donald Stone who received his BA at the University of
California, Berkeley, and his PhD from Harvard, taughtfor
thirty-eight years at Queens College and the Graduate Center of the
City University of New York. He has been a Visiting Professor at
Harvard and New York University. Since 1982 he has lectured and
taught all over China (Capital Normal University, the Foreign
Studies University [Beiwai], and the Central Academy of Fine Arts
in Beijing; Hangzhou [later renamed Zhejiang] University, Hangzhou;
Fudan and the Teachers College, Shanghai; Langzhou University and
Northwest University, Langzhou; Sichuan University, Chengdu;
Tianjin Normal University; Nanjing University and the Nanjing Art
Institute; Xian Teachers College; Kaifeng University; Zhengzhou
University; Tianshui Normal University, etc.). He has also lectured
at National Taiwan University, the Chinese University of Hong Kong,
and the City University of Hong Kong. In 1991 he was a guest
of the Chinese Academy of Social Science (the last professor to
serve on an exchange program set up from 1979 to 1989 between CASS
and the Academy of Science, Beijing). Since 2006 he has been on the
faculty of the English Department at Peking University; his current
rank is Senior Professor. In 2011 he received an award for his
contributions to Chinese education by the Beijing Municipality; in
2014 he receives an award from the Chinese Government at a ceremony
in the Great Hall of the People. Among his awards in America,
Professor Stone received a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial
Fellowship. He is the author of two books published by Harvard
University Press (Novelists in a Changing World, 1972; The Romantic
Impulse in Victorian Fiction, 1980) and scores of articles ranging
from Hong lou meng to Jonathan Swift to Anthony Trollope to Julian
Barnes. For nearly twenty years he has been a regular contributor
to Sewanee Review. He is particularly proud of his Henry James
chapter in the new Cambridge History of Literary Criticism, vol. 6
(2013); his book on Matthew Arnold (Communications with the Future,
University of Michigan Press, 1997), and his study of "The Theme of
Forgiveness in Western Culture" (in The Concept of Humanity in an
Age of Globilization, ed. Zhang Longxi, National Taiwan University
Press, 2012). Since 2007 he has assembled a collection of over 300
western prints and drawings (from Durer to Picasso) and organized
eight exhibitions for the Arthur Sackler Museum at Peking
University. (Some of these prints have been sent on exhibition to
museums in Xinjiang, Macau, and Shanghai.)
Limin Su is currently a PhD student in philosophy of
education in the Department of Educational Policy and Leadership
Studies at the University of Iowa. She obtained her MA in Applied
Linguistics and BA in English at the Southwestern University of
Finance and Economics in Chengdu, Sichuan, China. Her research
interests include multicultural education, philosophy of John
Dewey, and translation and intercultural studies.
Kirill Thompson received his advanced degrees from the
University of Hawaii. He is currently a professor in language
and literature and the Associate Dean for the Humanities of the
Institute for Advanced Studies in Humanities and Social Sciences at
National Taiwan University. He is a philosopher but broadly
interested in the humanities. He is specialized in the
philosophy of Zhu Xi and Neo-Confucianism but also investigates
early Chinese thought and later traditions such as Buddhism. Well
trained in western philosophy as well, he is particularly
interested in early Greek thought through Plato, modern philosophy
and much 19th and 20th century philosophy, such as
transcendentalism, existentialism, and early analytic philosophy.
He has published numerous book chapters, articles and reviews
in Chinese philosophy in such prominent journals as Philosophy East
and West, Asian Philosophy, China Review International, etc., but
also has written on Samuel Beckett, Thorstein Veblen, and related
topics.
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