New Perspectives on Contemporary Chinese Poetry

(Chris Devlin) #1
xviii About the Contributors

The Chinese Poetry of Bei Dao, 1978–2000: Resistance and Exile
(2006, Edwin Mellen).

Andrea Lingenfelter (Ph.D. University of Washington) is an independ-
ent scholar. In addition to her Chinese poetry scholarship, she has
translated Chinese poetry (Chicago Review, Frontier Taiwan,and Full
Tilt) and fiction, such as Farewell My Concubine(1994, Harper
Perennial) and Candy(2003, Bay Back).

Christopher Lupke (Ph.D. Cornell University) is Associate Professor of
Chinese at Washington State University in Pullman and has edited a
book on the Chinese notion of Ming(fate, command, life’s allotment)
(2005, Hawai‘i). He has translated Ye Shitao’s A History of Taiwan
Literature(UCSB Center for Taiwanese Studies) and is finishing a book
on filmmaker Hou Hsiao-hsien (University of Illinois Press).

Paul Manfredi (Ph.D. Indiana University) is Associate Professor of
Chinese at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington, and
has been the recipient of grants from the National Endowment of
Humanities and Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation. His articles have
appeared in Modern Chinese Literature and Cultureand the Journal
of Modern Literature in Chinese. His current work is on contemporary
Chinese poetry and visual art.

Steven L. Riep (Ph.D. UCLA) is Assistant Professor of Chinese at
Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, where he teaches modern
and contemporary literature, film, and culture. He is currently work-
ing on religion and woman’s emancipation in the work of Xu Dishan,
environmental themes in the essays of Yang Mu, and disability in
transnational Chinese cinema.

Afaa Michael Weaver (M.F.A. Brown University) is the Alumnae
Professor of English at Simmons College in Boston and founder and
Director of the Zora Neale Hurston Literary Center. His tenth collec-
tion of poetry, The Plum Flower Dance/poems 1985 to 2005 is
forthcoming (University of Pittsburgh Press). He has convened an
international symposium on contemporary Chinese poetry; this
volume represents the scholarly fruits of that symposium.

Michelle Yeh (Ph.D. University of Southern California) is Professor of
Chinese at the University of California, Davis. Her prolific scholarship
on modern Chinese poetry from mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong,
and the Chinese Diaspora has met with international acclaim. Most
recently, she has coedited the anthology Sailing to Formosa: A Poetic
Companion to Taiwan(2006, University of Washington Press).

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