Yue, Gang
Dr. Gang Yue
Professional Biography
My present interest in research falls into two broad categories, namely, modern Tibet and the rise of China. I write primarily in English on Tibet to focus on its representation in Chinese literature, film, and popular culture (by Tibetans and Han alike). Because I try to engage cultural studies of Tibet with China’s nationality policies and ethnic formation, the issues of governance and “uneven development” figure centrally in my intellectual concern. As a result I travel extensively, mostly in Tibetan regions of Amdo (of Qinghai Province) and the Kham (of Sichuan and Yunnan Provinces), to collect ethnographic data beyond what a text-centered humanistic discipline would require me to.
My work on the rise of China, on the other hand, takes a top-down approach. It has developed from my collaboration with scholars inside China, lately supported by a national-level research grant (hence I publish primarily in Chinese, in the PRC). From a humanist perspective, the rise of China is both a cultural(ist) discourse and an emerging reality. The former (the discourse) embeds some deep-seated fantasy and everlasting anxiety of the Oriental Other while the latter (the reality) has been inflated by an unlikely alliance of investment bankers, national security hawks, and leftist intellectuals looking for an alternative to U.S. hegemony—all for different reasons. How the two topics of Tibet and the rising China, or Tibet in a rising China more appropriately, can mesh and be brought to bear upon one another remains an open-ended question I would like to explore further.
Courses
- ASIA 52: First-Year Seminar: Food in Chinese Culture
- ASIA 52: First-Year Seminar: Food in Chinese Culture
- CHIN 244: Introduction to Modern Chinese Culture through Cinema
- ASIA 453: Global Shangri-La: Tibet in the Modern World
- CHIN 525: Ancient Philosophers and Their Modern Reincarnation
- CHIN 525: Ancient Philosophers and Their Modern Reincarnation
- CHIN 631: Writing Chinese (in) America: Advanced Studies of a Foreign Literature from United States Homeland
- CHIN 631: Writing Chinese (in) America: Advanced Studies of a Foreign Literature from United States Homeland
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