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Vera Schwarcz
Vera Schwarcz (born 1947[1])
is Freeman Professor of East Asian Studies at Wesleyan University. Her
BA was from Vassar College with a MA from Yale, a MAA from Wesleyan
University and a Ph.D. from Standford Univerisity.
Born in Romania, Schwarcz has taught Chinese history at Stanford
University, Wesleyan University, as well as at Hebrew University in
Jerusalem, Beijing University and Centre Chine in Paris. She is
serving currently as Director of the Freeman Center for East Asian
Studies and Chair of the East Asian Studies Program at Wesleyan. She
is the author of eight books, including the prize-winning Bridge
Across Broken Time: Chinese and Jewish Cultural Memory (Yale
University Press, 1999) as well as Time for Telling Truth Is Running
Out: Conversations with Zhang Shenfu (Yale, 1986); The Chinese
Enlightenment (Berkeley, 1984) and most recently --Place and Memory in
Singing Crane Garden (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008). She is
also the author of three books of poetry including A Scoop of Light
and In The Garden of Memory-- a collaboration with the Prague-born
Israeli artist Chava Pressburger.[3]
Her most recent book (Schwarcz,
Vera (2008). Place and Memory in the Singing Crane Garden.
Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
ISBN 9780812241006. )
centers on the problem of truth in comparative history:
The Singing Crane Garden in northwest Beijing has a history
dense with classical artistic vision, educational experimentation,
political struggle, and tragic suffering. Built by the Manchu
prince Mianyu in the mid-nineteenth century, the garden was
intended to serve as a refuge from the clutter of daily life near
the Forbidden City. In 1860, during the Anglo-French war in China,
the garden was destroyed. One hundred years later, in the 1960s,
the garden served as the "oxpens," where dissident university
professors were imprisoned during the Cultural Revolution.
Peaceful Western involvement began in 1986, when ground was broken
for the Arthur Sackler Museum of Art and Archaeology. Completed in
1993, the Museum and the Jillian Sackler Sculpture Garden stand on
the same grounds today.
[4]
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SELECTED BOOKS:
- Garden of Flourishing Grace
(forthcoming, Red Feather Press)
-
Place and Memory in Singing Crane
Garden
(University of
Pennsylvania Press, 2008)
Truth is Woven (Premier Poets
Chapbook Series, 2005)
In the Garden of Memory
(March
Street Press, 2004)
A Scoop of Light (March
Street Press, 2000)
Fresh Words for a Jaded World
- and selected poems
(Blue Feather Press, Co., 2000)
Bridge Across
Broken Time: Chinese and Jewish Cultural Memory (Yale University
Press, Spring 1998)
Time for Telling Truth is Running
Out:
Conversations with Zhang Shenfu
(Yale
University Press, 1992)
The Chinese Enlightenment: The
Legacy of the May Fourth Movement in Modern China (University of
California, Berkeley Press, 1986)
Long Road Home: A
China
Journal
(Yale University Press, 1984)
SELECTED RECENT
ARTICLES:
- “The Art of Poetry, Part II,
poetrysky.com (July 2007)
- “Truth and History: The Chinese
Mirror,” History and Theory, Volume 46; Number 2 (2007) pp.
281-291
- “Travels in China,” Binah
(March 19, 2007) pp. 18-25
- “The Art of Poetry Part I, A
Conversation with Yidan Han,” poetrysky.com (January 2007)
- “Jiu ji mang mang” (Blurred
and boundless traces from the past – historical trauma in the work
of the Manchu Prince Yihuan) in Bijiao wenxhe yu shijie wenxhe
(Comparative Literature and World Literature) Bejing University
Press, (2005) pp. 154-167
- "Wu si liang dai zhi shi Jen zi"
(Two generations of May Fourth intellectuals) in Xi Jilin,
editor 20 Shi Dai Zhong quo zhi shi Jen zi liang (Essays on 20th
Century Intellectual History) (Shang hai, 2005)
- "Zamen you zhiyin" (A
Wordless Connection) in Chen Lai, ed. Bu Xi Ji: Huiyi Zhang
Dainian Xiansheng (Unbroken Threads: Essays in Memory of Professor
Zhang Dainian). Beijing, 2005. pp. 340 - 346.
- "Historical Memory and Personal
Identity," B'or Ha'Torah No 15. (2005) pp.56 - 60
- “Through and Against the Tide of
History: Zhu Guanqian and the Legacy of May Fourth," China
Studies, No. 5 (1999)
- "Garden and Museum: Shadows of
Memory at Peking University," East Asian History 17/18
(1999)
- “The Burden of Memory: The
Cultural Revolution and the Holocaust,” China Information (Summer
1996)
- “The Pane of Sorrow: Public Uses
of Personal Grief in Modem China," Daedalus (Winter, 1996)
- “Di er ci shi Jie da zhan: zai bo
wu guan de guang zhao zhi wai (World War II: Beyond the Museum
Lights) in Dong Fang (The Orient)” Vol. 5 (1995)
- “Chinese History, Jewish
Memory": Shapes of Memory, ed. Geoffrey Hartman
(London: Basil Blackwell Ltd., 1994)
- "No Solace from Lethe," in
The Living Tree: The Changing Meaning of Being Chinese Today,
edited by Tu Weiming (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1994)
- “Amnesie historique dans la Chine
du XX e siecle,” Genre Humain, special issue, “Politiques
de L'Oubli," No. 18 (Paris, 1988)
SELECTED
FELLOWSHIPS:
- Guggenheim Fellowship (1989-90)
- Poetry Fellowship, Great River Arts Institute, Patzcuaro,
Mexico (January, 2000)
- Wesleyan Writers Conference - Poetry Fellowship (1999)
- American Council of Learned Societies (Summer 1996)
- Founders Fellowship, American Association of University Women,
1988-89
- Danforth Foundation: Kent Fellowship (1971-1973)
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