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验证码:

GEORGE E. DUTTON

职称:professor

所属学校:University of California-Los Angeles

所属院系:humanties

所属专业:Asian Studies/Civilization

联系方式:310-825-0523

简介

I am a professor in the UCLA Department of Asian Languages and Cultures where I specialize in early modern through early colonial Vietnamese history. I teach courses on early and contemporary Vietnam, and a range of courses in Southeast Asian studies. These include courses on Southeast Asian religions in contemporary society and on Zomia, which involves critical issues relating to upland ethnic communities in mainland Southeast Asia and Southwest China. My first book was about the Tây Sơn uprising in late 18th century Vietnam, but I have also explored topics in 19th and early 20th century Vietnamese history. These have ranged from military technology to poetry to visual humor in the form of newspaper caricature. Beyond UCLA, I am currently serving as the Southeast Asia representative on the Program Committee of the Association for Asian Studies.

职业经历

My most recent academic project was as editor of a sourcebook of primary literary sources from across Southeast Asia. This volume, entitled Voices of Southeast Asia: Essential Readings from Antiquity to the Present (M.E. Sharpe, 2014) includes more than 25 literary selections from across the region, and ranging from the 8th century to the 21st. I am also the co-editor of the recently published Sources of Vietnamese Tradition. This volume contains several hundred documents relating to all periods of Vietnamese history and was recently published by Columbia University Press (2012). My current, nearly completed project is a biography of Philiphê Bỉnh, a Vietnamese Jesuit priest who spent more than thirty years in Lisbon as an emissary of the northern Vietnamese Jesuit community in the first decades of the nineteenth century. Other projects I am working at the moment are revisions of articles on historiography of early twentieth-century Vietnamese collective actions, and on the neologisms that emerged from the Tonkin Free School at the beginning of the twentieth century. The latter focuses on the concept of “society” and the ways in which it was introduced into the Vietnamese vernacular and how it was understood. As may be clear, while I have a special interest in eighteenth and nineteenth-century Vietnamese history, my research interests are fairly eclectic as I explore numerous facets of Vietnamese society, culture, and literature.

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