Welcome to the start of the new academic year! This fall, the Department
of Anthropology is delighted to welcome three new faculty members, whose diverse expertise will enhance course
offerings and expand the scope of research of the department. Browse
the profiles below to learn more about them, including their research and educational
interests.
CHENG Sea Ling (Associate Professor, Ph.D. University of Oxford)
Prof. Sealing Cheng received her doctorate from the Institute of Social
and Cultural Anthropology, Oxford University. She was then a Rockefeller
postdoctoral fellow in Gender, Sexuality, Health, and Human Rights at the
Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University. In January 2005, she
began teaching at Wellesley College in the US. Her research is focused on
sexuality with reference to sex work, human trafficking, women’s activism, and
policy-making. Her book, On the Move for Love: Migrant Entertainers and the
U.S. Military in South Korea (University of Pennsylvania Press 2010) received the
Distinguished Book Award of the Sexualities Section of the American
Sociological Association in 2012.
Areas of Interest:Sex work, human trafficking, women’s activism, and
policy-making, HIV/AIDS campaigns and policies, The Vagina Monologues and
transnational feminism, the politics of representation in anti-trafficking
discourses, pedagogical issues in women's and gender studies and Asian studies.
Geographical Areas of Research: South Korea, Hong Kong SAR.
Languages: Cantonese, English, Korean
Prof. Huang Yu's research concerns China in global context, the politics
of knowledge production, labor value, and the governance of risks. She received
Ph.D. from the University of Washington, Seattle with her dissertation entitled
"Vibrant Risks: Scientific Aquaculture and Political Ecologies in
China," examining how the dissemination of science in shrimp aquaculture
is intertwined with issues of sustainability and risks in south China. Using
methodologies developed in Science and Technology Studies to study laboratory
scientists, she adapted these to the study of field science to examine how the
science and technology of disease control and food safety standardization might
generate new risks. While predicated on excluding the observed pathogens and
hazards, these technologies disregarded the vitalities of unobservables. She
observes how forms of nonhuman agency emerge from developmental schemes pushing
for high-intensity production by looking at the complex dynamics between the
biological materiality of the shrimp species themselves, the emergence of new
pathogens, and the innovation of pharmaceutical technologies as a means of
"crisis management" that mimic the increasingly unstable conditions
of global capital accumulation.
Areas of Interest: Science and Technology Studies (STS), labor studies,
governmentality, environmental anthropology, agrarian studies.
Geographical Areas of Research: Mainland China.
Languages: English, Cantonese, Putonghua, Hakka, and Minnan
Teresa KUAN (Assistant Professor, Ph.D. University of Southern
California)
Prof. Teresa Kuan majored in Anthropology at UC Berkeley and received
her Ph.D. in Anthropology from the University of Southern California at the end
of 2008. She was originally trained in medical anthropology but has since then
become interested in expertise as a cultural phenomenon. She is currently
working on a book project that examines the intersection between popular
childrearing advice and the lived experience of parenting amongst urban,
middle-class families in China. She situates this project in relation to
broader questions concerning moral experience and the government of human
subjectivity. Dr. Kuan was a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow at Whittier College
between 2009-2011, and a Hunt Postdoctoral Fellow between 2011-2012. She joined
the Department of Anthropology at CUHK in the Fall of 2012.
Areas of Interest: Anthropology of China, childhood studies,
psychological anthropology, medical anthropology.
Geographical Areas of Research: Mainland China.
Languages: English, Putonghua