Skip to main content
Skip to main menu Skip to spotlight region Skip to secondary region Skip to UGA region Skip to Tertiary region Skip to Quaternary region Skip to unit footer

Slideshow

Dr. Wai-yee Li (Harvard): “Gender and Friendship in Ming and Qing Literature”

photo
Dr. Wai-yee Li
Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations
Harvard University
Larry Walker Room, Dean Rusk Hall, UGA Law School

Keynote lecture: "Gender and Friendship in Ming-Qing literature"

Dr. Wai-yee Li, 1879 Professor of Chinese Literature at Harvard University, is a scholar of impressive range and depth with more than ten published volumes and over sixty essays and articles that engage Chinese history, literature, and culture from early times up to the 20th century. Winner of the Joseph D Levenson book prize for Women and National Trauma in Late Imperial Chinese Literature (2016) and the Patrick D. Hanan book prize for translation Plum Shadows and Plank Bridge; Two Memoirs about Courtesans (2022), her explorations of the discursive and imaginative spaces inhabited by women through the tumultuous Ming-Qing transition (ca. 1618-1683) have traced how notions of gender mediated political association and identity. Join us on February 24th at 3:45 p.m. in the Walker Room in Dean Rusk Hall for a lecture on Dr. Li’s recent research on gender and friendship in late imperial China.

The most famous examples of friendship in the Chinese tradition are male. The importance of friendship for the political imagination and the moral imagination means that the exclusion of women from the classic discourse of friendship also reflects their marginalization in conceptions of political agency or moral self-cultivation. Gender enters the discussion of friendship in new ways in Ming-Qing China, drawing attention to new dimensions of sociality, interiority, agency, literary self-consciousness, and the awareness of gender roles and gender boundaries in writings by and about women. 

This talk is the keynote lecture of the SEUSS FLIC Zhonghe Dragon Conference. For more information, please contact Dr. Karin Myhre: kmyhre@uga.edu.

flyer

This talk has been made possible by an award from the James P. Geiss and Margaret Y. Hsu Foundation and has been supported by the Office of the Provost, the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts, the Center for Asian Studies, and the Department of Comparative Literature and Intercultural Studies.

 

 

Support us

We appreciate your financial support. Your gift is important to us and helps support critical opportunities for students and faculty alike, including lectures, travel support, and any number of educational events that augment the classroom experience. Click here to learn more about giving.

Every dollar given has a direct impact upon our students and faculty.