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Literature
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Name
Research Interests
Assoc Prof Adam Joel Knee
Current research interests include new Southeast Asian cinemas (especially Thai cinema); film genre (especially horror and science fiction) and genre theory; race and gender in American film; film stardom; American television in the 1950s-60s.
Asst Prof Andrew Corey Yerkes
Professor Yerkes's areas of interest are nineteenth and twentieth century American literature and culture, realism, naturalism, modernism, postmodernism, narratology, sociological theories the novel, philosophical determinism, and ideological critique.
Asst Prof Angela Anne Frattarola
Modernism, Auditory Technology, Twentieth-Century Literature
Asst Prof Bede Tregear Scott
Postcolonial literature and theory, with an emphasis on South Asian and African literature; colonial literature and narratives of empire; magical realism; decolonization theory; and narratives and theories of social violence.
Asst Prof Brian Keith Bergen-Aurand
His primary research interests include Comparative Studies, Film Theory and Criticism, Ethics, and Embodiment.
Assoc Prof Cheung Chiu-Yee
Since 1982, my research has concentrated on a comparison of Lu Xun and Nietzsche. Because of my extensive study of Lu Xun, I am also familiar with the history of modern Chinese literature, Western influence on Chinese writers and thinkers, the intellectual history of modern and contemporary China, and ancient Chinese philosophy. Related to their comparison, I have been working on modern Chinese intellectual history, the problems of Chinese culture and modernisation, the influence of Western philosophy and literary theories in China, and Lu Xun’s legacy in contemporary China.
Assoc Prof Cornelius Anthony Murphy
Neil Murphy is the author of Irish Fiction and Postmodern Doubt (2004) and has co-edited two collections of scholarly essays, British-Asian Fiction: Framing the Contemporary (2008), and Literature and Ethics (2008). He is currently editing a collection of essays on the novelist Aidan Higgins, and is acting as advisor for the scholarly edition of Higgins' novel, Balcony of Europe. In addition he has published numerous articles and book chapters on Irish literature, contemporary fiction, postmodernism, and theories of reading and is currently writing a book on contemporary fiction.
Assoc Prof Crossland-Guo Shuyun
Dunhuang Studies (Dunhuang Manuscripts & Cave Arts) Chinese Oral Literature Folk Operatic Performance Arts Oral-Formulaic Theory Modern & Contemporary Chinese Literature
Asst Prof Daniel Keith Jernigan
Modern and Contemporary British Literature; Modern and Postmodern Drama; Narrative Theory; Playwriting
Asst Prof Emma Jane Flatt
Emma Flatt's research concentrates on the History of South Asia, with a special emphasis on the Medieval Deccan. Her work focuses on the social and cultural history of Indo-Islamicate courts and courtiers including investigations into practices of letter-writing, perfume making, astrology and magic, and the use of courtly social spaces like gardens. She is interested in the history of emotions and the cultural constructions of the five senses. She is about to commence a research project into the philosophies and practices of friendship and sociability in Medieval India. Selected publications: 'The Ethic of Jawanmardi: Wrestling and Sword fighting in the Ta?lim of the Deccan,' in Anand Pandian and Daud Ali eds., Genealogies of Virtue: Ethics in South Asia, Indiana University Press, (in press). 'Heavenly Gardens: Astrology and Magic in the Garden Culture of the Medieval Deccan,' in Daud Ali and Emma Flatt, eds., Fragrance Symmetry and Light: The History of Gardens and Garden Cultures in the Deccan (in press).
Asst Prof Goh Geok Yian
Assistant Professor Goh Geok Yian's areas of expertise are: early history of Burma and Southeast Asia, modern Southeast Asian history, China-Southeast Asia relations, early Buddhist networks in mainland and island Southeast Asia, and Burmese historical chronicles and novels. Her current research focuses on the study of Buddhist architecture and mural paintings of Bagan, a medieval Burmese kingdom. Her other research work includes the study of early urbanization and cities in Burma, particularly on comparison made with other contemporary Southeast Asian polities and the applicability of theoretical models. She is also working on an English translation of a 20th-century Burmese novel by a well-known author, Ma Sandar.
Asst Prof Ho Wen-Shing
Assistant Professor Ho Wen-Shing's areas of expertise are Music, Dance and Film. Her current research works focus on film semiotics, visual music and the poetic body movement.
Assoc Prof I Lo-fen
My research interest is Chinese literary work on the paintings, literature, and culture of the Tang and Song dynasties in China; Su Shi studies; the art of Chinese literature and painting; and East Asian literature written in Chinese characters (including that of Japanese and Korean origins). I have published five books on these themes in Taiwan and Mainland China, one of which involved collaboration with scholars from China, the U.S.A., Japan, and Korea.
Asst Prof Jennifer Megan Crawford
Jen Crawford's research interests are in contemporary poetry and poetics, New Zealand and Australian literature, and creative, experimental and multimedia writing. Her current research focuses on collaborative and improvisational poetics.
Asst Prof Jessica Morgan-Owens
As a professional photographer with a PhD in American culture, Jessie Morgan-Owens’s research integrates photographic images into her approach to the study of American literature. Her research focuses on the effects of the media shift ignited in 1839 with the introduction of the photograph, and pursues an interdisciplinary and intermedial approach to the study of writing and photographs in both literary and political contexts. Photography’s impact on American literary practice necessarily had repercussions in persuasive rhetoric and political debate. Her current research project focuses on instances of discourse between photography and writing that appear in the diverse print culture produced by the campaign to abolish slavery in the 1850s. She is also interested in nineteenth century social reform texts; travel writing and photography; concepts of the archive, the narrative, and genre; representations of the photographer in literature and film; and the development of the novel.
Asst Prof John Richard Tangney
John Tangney's research interests are in intellectual history and the history of ideas as they relate to the literature of the late medieval and early modern periods. His PhD dissertation looked at the influence of Aristotelian ontology on Elizabethan and Jacobean writers. In the past few years he has given papers on Aristotle, Shakespeare, Spenser and Tourneur at conferences in the US, Canada and Ireland.
Asst Prof Kwan Sze Pui Uganda
20th Century Chinese literature; The history of translation in the 20th century China; Comparative literature on Japanese literature and Chinese literature in the late 19th to early 20 century; Hong Kong literature and culture.
Assoc Prof Lee Guan Kin
Dr. Lee Guan Kin's areas of expertise are Lim Boon Keng, Singapore Chinese intellectuals, History of Nanyang University, Ethnic Chinese in Southeast Asia, and Southeast Asian Chinese and modern China. She is currently working on two research projects, the first, "The History of Nanyang University", funded by the NTU Academic Research Fund, and the other, "Cultural Transplant and the Construction of Chinese Communities: A Project of Documents & Research on Singapore Chinese Communities", sponsored by the Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation.
Asst Prof Lee Hyun Jung
Dr. Lee's research focuses on theatre studies, literature, and popular culture and her articles have been appeared in the Journal of Popular Culture and in Situations. She is now working on a book manuscript which deals with representation, reception, and consumption of Broadway musical productions in contemporary East Asia.
Prof Paul Kohl
Prof Kohl's areas of expertise are photography, both digital and analog, ink-jet printing, and web page design. His current research work focuses on fine art printing using the ink-jet printer and high quality papers.
Vg Assoc Prof Peter van de Kamp
Anglo-Irish Literature (specialising in 19th and early 20th century--Mangan, Yeats, Joyce, et al) English Literature (particularly 19th and early 20th century). Language Philosophy Pragmatics and Stylistics Contemporary world fiction and poetry Scholasticism and esthetics (from Aristotle to Husserl) Translation of Poetry
Asst Prof Philip Michael Collins Steer
Philip Steer specialises in Australian and New Zealand literature, with a particular interest in the nineteenth century novel.
Assoc Prof Quah Sy Ren
Modern Chinese literature and culture, theatre and performance, Singapore studies. Dr Quah is currently working on theatre and cultural activism in Singapore between 1950s and 1970s.
Asst Prof Samara Anne Cahill
Professor Cahill's area of expertise is literature written in England during the "long" eighteenth century (1660-1800). She focuses particularly on representations of women and the centrality of religion, education, and the concept of immortality to women's representations of themselves. Currently, she is researching the relationship between proto-feminism, "feminist orientalism," and Anglo-Ottoman representational strategies. More broadly, she is interested in proto-feminism and its relation to the Renaissance querelle des femmes; women writers and women's education; Anglo-Ottoman relations and representations; and representations of Catholics, Jacobites, and marginalized religio-political "others."
Asst Prof Sim Wai Chew
British-Asian fiction, Singapore literature and culture, Postcolonial theory and literature.
Assoc Prof Stephen Teo Kian Teck
Associate Professor Stephen Teo's current research work focuses on several aspects of theoretical interest in film. Firstly, contributing to the discourse on Asian Cinema as an alternative paradigm to Hollywood as the global form, and thus to evolve a concept of Asian Cinema as a viable cinematic and media theory supporting pedagogical and creative modules. Asian cinema and the concept of national cinema are inter-related forces but it is the latter that tends to subsume the former in theoretical discourse. Teo's research work seeks a concentrated, rigorous approach to defining Asian cinema as a specialized norm of aesthetics and thematic field that can be broadly applied to Asian films produced by diverse national film industries in Asia. How do Asian cinemas transcend national interests and become an Asian Cinema as a unitary and unifying element? With Asian film industries modelling themselves on Hollywood,how can an Asian cinema stand up as an alternative model to Hollywood? A second area of Teo's reasearch interest revolves around the nature of film in relation to cultural theory and other fields of cultural interest, including literature, history and popular arts. The literary and visual contrast inherent in cinema is a striking anomaly that calls for more theoretical investigation. Teo's work has concerned itself with how historical literary works are transposed into the cinema and how historical prototypes are transfigured as cinematic personalities but retaining essential qualities. A third area of Teo's work lies in genre and auteur studies. Teo is interested in standard Hollywood genres such as the Western, the action-adventure film, the thriller, the epic, the musical, and he seeks to explore their inter-textual connections with Asian genres such as the martial arts film, the gangster action film, the melodrama, horror, and historical epic. How do auteurs transform genre? A fourth area of research interest lies in the study of emerging Asian "New Waves" in traditionally ignored film industries such as those in Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, and the Philippines. Can these Southeast Asian cinemas make a lasting impact on the discourse of Asian cinema?
Assoc Prof Tamara Silvia Wagner
Victorian literature & culture Eighteenth- and nineteenth-century fiction
Assoc Prof Terence Richard Dawson
Terence Dawson's main fields of interest are the application of Jungian psychology to literature and the relation between literature and the other arts. He is the author of The Effective Protagonist in the Nineteenth-Century British Novel (2004), and co-editor, with Polly Young-Eisendrath, of The Cambridge Companion to Jung (1997; 2nd ed. 2008).
Asst Prof Walter Philip Wadiak
Medieval literature The history and theory of romance Medieval and early-modern popular culture Economic criticism
Asst Prof Yow Cheun Hoe
Chinese overseas and Chinese diaspora; Relations between Chinese overseas and China; Southeast Asia, particularly Singapore and Malaysia; Qiaoxiang(ancestral homeland)areas in China, particularly Guangdong and Wenzhou; Chinese education in Southeast Asia; Chinese writers and their works in Southeast Asia; New Chinese migrants in Singapore; Chinese business networks; Transnationalism.
Dr Yuan Jinhong
TCM treatment of endocrine metabolic disease
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