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Benjamin Ridgway, Ph.D.
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University of Michigan
Assistant Professor of Chinese
Professor Ridway joined the Department in 2007.
He teaches in the MACS
Graduate Program. |
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EDUCATION
Dissertation: "Imagined
Travel: Displacement, Landscape, and Literati
Identity in the Chinese Song Lyrics of Su Shi
(1037-1101)"
Ph.D., 2005, University of Michigan
M.A., 1999, University of Minnesota
B.A., 1994, Grinnell College
RESEARCH INTERESTS
My area of specialization is Chinese poetry of the
Song dynasty (960-1279). More broadly I am interested
in the intersections between geography and literature.
My dissertation research was on the interaction between
practices of official travel during the Song dynasty
and imagined travel through memory and the historical
past in the song lyrics of Su Shi (1037-1101). Recently,
I have begun work on a cultural history of the city
of Hangzhou during the 12th and 13th centuries, a
period of massive population displacement from North
to South, examining the city through a range of genres,
including song lyrics, shi poetry, local gazetteers,
strange tales, maps, as well as painting.
RECENT PRESENTATIONS, PUBLICATIONS,
AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES
• Contributed entries for two Song dynasty
poets, Su Shi and Xin Qiji (1140-1270), as well as an
entry on the song lyric genre to the Berkshire Encyclopedia
of China, ed. Linsun Cheng (Berkshire Publishing
Group, forthcoming).
• In Spring 2007 presented
the paper "Strange Tales of Two Cities: The Movement
of Populations and Memories between Kaifeng and Hangzhou
in 12th century China" at the Annual Association
for Asian Studies Conference held in Boston, MA.
• In Spring 2005 presented
the paper "Restoration Aesthetics: The Reception
of Su Shi's Song Lyrics (Ci) by Early Southern Song
(1127-1279) Literati" at the Annual Association
for Asian Studies Conference held in Chicago, IL.
• In Summer 2004 presented
the paper "Two Frameworks for Remembrance: Travelers
in the Song Lyrics (Ci) of Liu Yong (987-1053)
and Su Shi (1037-1101)" at the Asian Studies Conference
Japan (ASCJ) hosted by Sophia University, Tokyo, Japan.
• In Spring 2003 presented
a paper in Chinese while studying at the International
Chinese Language Program in Taipei, Taiwan, entitled,
"Dreams and Historical Reverie in the Song Lyrics
(Ci) of Su Dongpo (1037-1101)"
• Coordinated the Chinese
Film Series for the Center for Chinese Studies at the
University of Michigan for four semesters as a graduate
student, designing theme-based films series, contacting
film distributors, and introducing the films to the
public. I look forward to participating in Valpo's International
Film Series organized by faculty members of the
Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures.
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