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CHU Guofei
International Relations, Nanjing University
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Guofei Chu (褚國飞) is a Ph.D. candidate studying the history of international relations at Nanjing University, China. At the Harvard-Yenching Institute, her dissertation research will be on the U.S.-Japan alliance in the post-Cold War era, from theoretical and historical perspectives.
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DO Thu Hien
Literature, Vietnam National University, Hanoi |
Thu Hien Do is a lecturer from the faculty of literature, University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Vietnam National University (Hanoi), where she is also working toward her Ph.D. Her dissertation is on the formation of Confucian tradition in Vietnamese literature. During her stay at Harvard, she'll focus on the characteristics of Confucian literature in general. |
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HUR Yoonjin
Literature, Sogang University
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Yoonjin Hur (许允溍) has lectured at Hanyang Women's College and made presentations at a number of conferences. While at the Harvard-Yenching Institute, she will continue her dissertation research project, which is titled "Economic Structure of Literary Text: On Communicative Economy and Libidinal Economy." |
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KIM Jinhee ( 金鎮熙 ) Korean Literature, Yonsei University
mississipi@hanmail.net
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KIM Jinhee is working on her doctoral dissertation at Yonsei University in South Korea. Her major is Korean medieval poetry. The subject of her Master thesis was the influence of music on Ballads in Koryo dynasty. She has been studying the relationships between the music and
literature since then. She is also interested in the oral tradition in Korean literature because
Korean medieval poetry recorded in Hangul, Korean alphabet were very much influenced by
music and oral performance. Harvard University and the Harvard-Yenching Institute have
great curriculum and plentiful materials in this field, so she'd like to learn a lot from them and broaden her academic perspective.
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LEE Chia-Hua
History of Science, University of Tokyo |
Chia-Hua Lee (李佳桦) is a Ph.D. candidate in history and philosophy of science at the University of Tokyo, Japan. Her research topic is the transmission of Western mathematics to Japan in the 19th century. She is interested in the triangular relationship between the West, China, and Japan in the process of this transmission. At Harvard, she will focus on further investigation into the mathematical textbooks published in 19th century America.
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MARUMOTO Mika ( 丸本美加 ) International Studies, Yonsei University
marumoto@fas.harvard.edu
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MARUMOTO Mika is a Ph.D. candidate in international studies at Yonsei University, Seoul, Korea. Her fields of specialization are Northeast Asian political economy, private sector development, and human rights and development. At the Harvard-Yenching Institute, she continues to work on her dissertation on China's Role in North Korea's Institutional Change and Economic Reform, from a multidisciplinary approach. Previously, as a business consultant and development practitioner, she handled project evaluation encompassing corporate social responsibility, reproductive health rights, and private sector development, for organizations including the United Nations Development Programs, United Nations Population Fund, the Asian Development Bank, the International Finance Corporation, and McKinsey and Company. She studied at Tsuda College (B.A. in International Relations), International Christian University (M.A. in Public Administration), University of California (M.A. in Economics), and Renmin University of China. She speaks and reads Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. |
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NAITO Mariko ( 內藤Mariko ) Japanese Literature, Tokyo University
mnaito@fas.harvard.edu
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Ms. Naito is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Tokyo, Japan. After receiving college education from Hitotsubashi University, Japan, I studied medieval Japanese poetry at the University of Tokyo, and earned the degree of M.A. Now she is working on her Ph.D. dissertation while teaching as a part-time lecturer. During her stay at Harvard, she'll focus her research on one of the aesthetic ideas in medieval Japanese poetics and explore the theoretical framework for the conception of time and memory. She is also interested in investigating the formation of medieval Japanese poetry under the literary influences of East Asian region from historical perspectives. |
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NGUYEN Ngoc Tho
Cultural Studies, Vietnam National, University, HoChiMinh City |
Ngoc Tho Nguyen is from the Institute of Cultural Studies, University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Vietnam National University-Ho Chi Minh City. At the Harvard-Yenching Institute, Nguyen, a Ph.D. candidate, will work on his dissertation on ancient Baiyueh cultures in Ling'nan (South China) and their relations to traditional culture in Vietnam.
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RHO Kyung Hee
Literature, University of Kyoto |
Kyung Hee Rho (盧京姬) is a Ph.D. candidate both in the Department of Chinese Literature at Kyoto University, Japan, and in the Department of Korean Literature at Seoul National University, Korea. Her ongoing research theme is the intersection between Chinese, Korean, and Japanese classical literatures from the 16th to the 18th century. She aims to reconstruct classical literary societies by focusing on the external conditions of the literary worlds.
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SHEN Yifei
Sociology, Fudan University |
Yifei Shen (沈亦斐) is a lecturer and Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Sociology, Fudan University, Shanghai. Her current research interests include gender and family models in Chinese cities. Her dissertation - "Parents in My House" - is focused on a new family model and discusses urban family life under the one-child family policy and economic reform
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XU Pei ( 徐沛 ) Cultural Studies, Sichuan University
peixu@fas.harvard.edu
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XU Pei is a Visiting Fellow from the School of Literature and Journalism, Sichuan University, China. He received his Master's Degree at Sichuan University in 2002, and now is a lecturer in Sichuan University. He is also attending a Ph.D. program of Cultural Studies in Sichuan University. His dissertation research mainly focuses on the visual culture in pictorials of early modern China. He attempts to find the relationship between image and the modernization of China. |
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