词条 | Rudolf G. Wagner |
释义 |
Professional careerRudolf G. Wagner studied sinology, Japanese studies, political science and philosophy in Bonn, Heidelberg, Paris and Munich between 1962 and 1969. Wagner was head of the student government (AStA) of Ludwig Maximilian University Munich from 1968-1969, where he completed his dissertation on the Buddhist studies topic “Hui-yuan慧遠's Questions to Kumarajiva鳩摩羅什” in 1969. As Harkness Fellow of the Commonwealth Fund, he did research for one year each at Harvard University and the University of California, Berkeley. From 1972 on, Wagner was Assistant Professor of Sinology at the Free University Berlin for five years. His habilitation thesis “Philology, Philosophy and Politics in the Zhengshi正始 Era”, which he completed at the Free University Berlin in 1981, deals with the Laozi 老子commentary by Wang Bi 王弼 (226-249). It was published in English and translated into Chinese.[1][2] During the following years, Wagner was a Fellow at the Society for the Humanities at Cornell University (1981–1982),[3] a Research Fellow at the John K. Fairbank Center for East Asian Research at Harvard (1984, 1986–87) and Research Linguist at the Center for Chinese Studies at Berkeley (1984–1986). He also worked as a freelance science journalist for the radio station Sender Freies Berlin. From 1973-1981, he was editor of the journal Befreiung. Zeitschrift für Wissenschaft und Politik. In 1987, Wagner accepted the Chair of Sinology at Heidelberg University. He worked at the Academy of Social Sciences Beijing in China and was a Visiting Professor at Harvard University. In 1993, he received the highest German academic award, the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize of the German Research Foundation.[4] This award, supplemented by a large grant from the Alfried Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach Foundation, was used to develop the library and the digital research environment at the Heidelberg Institute of Chinese Studies.[5] He was elected member of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences in 1995.[6] Wagner’s reputation as a Sinologist goes far beyond the German borders. From September 1992 until August 1996, he was Secretary General and from 1996 until 1998 President of the European Association of Chinese Studies. Since 2010, Wagner is editor of Transcultural Studies.[7] He also was or is a member of the Editorial Board of scholarly journals in the US (Early China), France (Extreme Orient/Extreme Occident),[8] the UK (China Quarterly),[9] the PRC (Zhongguo xueshu中國學術(simplified: 中国学术)), and Taiwan. Since 2007, Wagner is Co-Director at the Cluster of Excellence "Asia and Europe in a Global Context" and since 2009 he is Senior Professor at the Department of Sinology of Heidelberg University.[1][2] ResearchIn his research, Rudolf G. Wagner focuses on interface of politics and culture in China. Owing his hermeneutical approach much to his study with Hans-Georg Gadamer in Heidelberg, Wagner’s main works deal in the pre-modern period with the philosopher Wang Bi, and in the modern period with transcultural linkages of the modern Chinese media, political movements, and key terms of state and society. Supported by the Volkswagen Foundation, he published three volumes on Wang Bi’s works:
Other publications deal with the Taiping Rebellion; contemporary Chinese literature (prose and historical drama); the development of the early Chinese press, in particular the Shenbao newspaper in Shanghai under Ernest Major; the literature of the “socialist camp”; and the development of a transculturally shared canon of political keywords and images.[13] PublicationsSelected Publications
Personal lifeWagner is married to Catherine Vance Yeh, Ph.D., Harvard University, who is now a professor at Boston University.[20] He has two daughters from his first marriage.[1] He loves playing squash. References1. ^1 2 3 “Curriculum Vitae”. Department of Chinese Studies, Heidelberg University. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 2. ^1 "Personal Profile". Cluster of Excellence “Asia and Europe in a Global Context”. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 3. ^“Society Fellow”. Cornell University. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 4. ^“List of the Leibniz Price Winners 1986 – 2012”. German Research Foundation. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 5. ^“Krupp-Stiftung unterstützt Ausbau des Sinologischen Seminars der Universität Heidelberg mit 1,5 Millionen Mark” (German). Heidelberg University, 20 Dec 1999. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 6. ^“Rudolf G. Wagner”. Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 7. ^“Editorial Team”. Transcultural Studies. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 8. ^"Extrême-Orient Extrême-Occident". Open Edition. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 9. ^“The China Quarterly”. Cambridge Journals Online. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 10. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=3DvtkuXRfBsC&printsec=frontcover "The Craft of a Chinese Commentator". Google Books.] Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 11. ^“Language, Ontology, and Political Philosophy”. SUNY Press. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 12. ^“A Chinese Reading of the Daodejing”. SUNY Press. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 13. ^1 “Publications”. Department of Chinese Studies, Heidelberg University. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 14. ^“China Asleep and Awaking”. Transcultural Studies, 2011. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 15. ^“The Zhouli as the Late Qing Path to the Future”. Brill. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 16. ^“Joining the Global Public”. SUNY Press. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 17. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=7zFiHwkpo88C&printsec=frontcover “The Contemporary Chinese Historical Drama”. Google Books.] Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 18. ^"The Contemporary Chinese Historical Drama". University of California Press. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 19. ^“Inside a Service Trade”. Harvard University Press. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. 20. ^“Catherine Yeh”. Boston University. Retrieved: 06 Feb 2012. External links
6 : German academics|German sinologists|Harkness Fellows|1941 births|Living people|Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize winners |
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