The Chinese Studies Institute at San Diego State University

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Director (2000, 2004 - present): 

Dr. Li-Rong Lilly Cheng, Department of Communicative Disorders.

E-mail:   lcheng@mail.sdsu.edu  

Web: http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/~csi/lillycheng.htm

Professor,  School of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences  (Click Here to see the bio of Dr. Cheng)

 

Members:

Dr. Albert Chang, Public Health

Dr. Howard  Chang,  Civil and Environmental Engineering
Phone:Office: E-421B
E-mail:    changh@mail.sdsu.edu  Web: http://chang.sdsu.edu

Dr. Howard Chang is Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at San Diego State University, and a registered civil engineer in California and Arizona.  He has taught 17 different courses at San Diego State University.  Dr. Chang’s research is in the area of water resources engineering pertaining to river hydraulics, sedimentation, and erosion.  Dr. Chang has been active in floodplain mapping, hydrology and watershed modeling, hydrological simulation, flood control channel design, floodwater detention basin and sediment basin design, river channel erosion analyses, and sedimentation studies.  He has also served as a consultant for consulting firms; local, state and federal governmental agencies; and the United Nations.

Dr.  Fang Chou, Engineering

 

Dr. Chee Chow, Accounting

Dr. Pao-chin Chu, History   (link to Dr. Chu's Photos)

(B.A., National Taiwan University; M.A. and Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania).  Dr. Chu is Professor in the Department of History at San Diego State University.  He was the Founding Director of the China Study Institute in 1988 and the Director of Center for Asian Studies between 1981-1984.  Dr. Chu also served as the advisor for the Chinese Students and Scholar Association at SDSU, consultant for local Chinese communities in San Diego, and the Chairperson of China Opera Club in San Diego.  His research interests focus on historical Sino-American relationships and the Diplomacy of Warload China.  Recently, he published his memoir "From Cave Refugee in North China to American Professor" in January 2001 (ISBN 7-201-03562-2).

 

  Dr. Kevin G. Cai.   Dr. Cai is Assistant Professor in the Department of Asia Pacific Studies at SDSU. His research interests include  regional integration and institution-building in the Asia Pacific, China's integration with the regional and global economy, and various political, security and economic issues in the Asia Pacific region. Dr. Cai has published in a variety of professional journals and elsewhere. 

For more information about Dr. Cai, please visit his personal web at http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/~kevincai.

 

 

Dr. KATHRYN EDGERTON-TARPLEY (Indiana University, 2002) teaches Chinese History, Asian History, and World History for Teachers. Her research interests lie in Late Imperial and Modern Chinese history, cultural, social, and gender history, and comparative responses to trauma and disaster. She spent much of 1999-2001 conducting research in China, and returned to Beijing and Shanxi in the summer of 2004 to complete additional archival research. Her current research, based on her dissertation, "The Semiotics of Starvation in Late-Qing China: Cultural Responses to the 'Incredible Famine' of 1876 to 1879," explores local and trans-national reactions to famines in nineteenth-century China and Ireland. A recent article, "Family and Gender in Famine: Cultural Responses to Disaster in North China, 1876-1879" is forthcoming in the Journal of Women's History.
 

 

Dr.  Lei Guang, Department of Political Science.  Professor Lei Guang received his Ph.D in political science from the University of Minnesota in 1999.  Since then he has been teaching in the department of political science at San Diego State.  His research focuses on various aspects of the Chinese politics, including issues of migration, rural-urban relations, labor, the Chinese diaspora, nationalism and democracy.  He has published or has articles forthcoming in journals such as International Migration Review, Modern China, the China Quarterly, positions, Pacific Review, Journal of Contemporary China, etc., as well as articles in edited volumes on migrant labor.  His teaching repertoire includes courses on the East Asian politics, international relations of the Pacific Rim, the politics of developing countries, globalization and the international political economy.

 

Dr. Ming Ji is Assistant Professor in the Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Graduate School of Public Health, San Diego State University.  He got his MS in control theory from East China Normal University, MS in mathematics from Kansas State University and PhD in statistics from University of California, Davis.  He joined GSPH, SDSU in 2001.  His research interests include biostatistics and health behavior.  He is working on developing an international health program between SDSU and universities in mainland China."

 

Dr. Hiroko Johnson, received her Ph.D. in Art History from University of Southern California in 1994.  Her area of emphasis is in the eighteenth century painting.  She focused how the Dutch influenced Japanese art when Japan was practicing isolationism.  The book on ‘The Dutch Influence on Japanese Art: the Akita ranga art School and Foreign Books” will be coming out in November 2004.  Her current research is on the Westernization of Japan during the nineteenth century.  Dr. Johnson is currently teaching Asian Art history, covering China, India, Korea and Japan,  Chinese Art history and Japanese Art history.  She also has seminars on Images of Women and Ukiyo-e art.

 
Ron Moffatt, is the Director of International Student Center at San Diego State University.  He has a personal web page on the International Student Center web site for more information:  http://www.sdsu.edu/isc/moffatt.htm .
 

 

Dr. William N. Rogers II  (B.A., Stanford University; M.A. and Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley) is Professor in the Department of English and Comparative Literature.  He has on two occasions served as Chair of the Department of Asian Studies and is a founding member of the China Institute.  Courses he has taught, in his own department and in the Department of Asian Studies, include Modern Asian Literature, Modern Chinese and Japanese Literature, The Chinese Short Story, Classical Chinese Literature, and Women in Modern Chinese and Japanese Literature.  His current research interests in Asian literature concern the literature of the May 4th Movement and short stories by women writers of China and Japan.  He has lived in both Japan and Taiwan.  E-mail: rogers@mail.sdsu.edu.  Office phone: (619) 594-6232.

 

Dr. Wesley Shu is Assistant Professor at Information and Decision Systems Department. He got his Bachelor's degree from National Taiwan University, MBA from Indiana University, and Ph.D. in MIS from University of Arizona.  He has a personal website showing his Chinese literature works and photography. The address is http://balrog.sdsu.edu/~shu.

 

Julie C. Su  (Master of Librarianship from UC Berkeley; Specialist degree in LIS from Indiana Universityis  Digital Resources / Serials Librarian /Asian Studies Librarian  and the Head of the Serials Unit at San Diego State University Library.  She is an active member in the American Library Association (ALA) serving on the Association for Library Collection and Technical Services ( ALCTS)’s Committee to Study Serials Standards (CSSS), Continuing Resource Cataloging Committee, Cataloging Policy and Planning Committee, Cooperative Online Serials (CONSER) Publication Pattern Initiative and served on the Workflow Task Force.  Ms. Su is the President of Southern California Technical Processing Group and Active member of Association for Asian Studies, Chinese American Librarians Association. Her email address is <jsu@mial.sdsu.edu>.

 

Dr. William Tong, Department of Chemistry
Phone: (619) 594-2442, Fax: (619) 594-2442 or -2725 or -4634
E-mail: william.tong@sdsu.edu  OR wtong@home.com 
Web: http://rohan.sdsu.edu/~tong

Dr. William Tong is  Professor in the Department of Chemistry.  His research focuses on the application of novel nonlinear multiphoton spectroscopic methods in the development and understanding of new methods in laser analytical spectroscopy. Emphasis is placed on the understanding of fundamental principles and experimental observations of new spectroscopic phenomena. Integration of innovative nonlinear laser techniques and computer interfacing of high-precision instrumentation provides many advantages with new experimental possibilities over conventional laser spectroscopic methods in analytical problem solving.

 

Ming-Hsiang Tsou Dr. Ming-Hsiang Tsou, Department of Geography
Phone: (619)
594-0205  Fax: (619) 594-4938
E-mail: mtsou@mail.sdsu.edu
Web: http://geography.sdsu.edu/People/Pages/tsou/index.html
Dr. Tsou is 
Associate Professor in the Department of Geography.  His research interests focus on Internet-based Geographic Information Systems (GIS), Cartography, distributed computing, intelligent agents, and metadata modeling. He has several ongoing research projects supported by  National Science Foundation, NASA, and The City of San Diego.   Recently, he created a Web-based Mapping Tool for San Diego Wildfire 2003 at http://map.sdsu.edu .

 

Dr. Sandra A. Wawrytko, M.A., Ph.D. (Philosophy, Washington University at St. Louis; Phi Beta Kappa, Mortar Board) is on the faculties of Philosophy and Asian Studies at San Diego State University.  She has authored several books, including a CRYSTAL: Spectrums of Chinese Culture Through Poetry (Peter Lang, 1995), The Buddhist Religion (Wadsworth, 1996), and Chinese Philosophy in Cultural Context (Peter Lang, forthcoming), and has edited more than ten volumes.  Currently she is Editor of the Asian Thought and Culture series published by Peter Lang.  She is a member of the Executive Committee of the International Society for Chinese Philosophy and President of the Charles Wei-hsun Fu Foundation, a non-profit educational foundation dedicated to promoting scholarship on Asia.  Recent publications include: Language and Logic in the Lotus Sutra: A Hermeneutical Exploration of Philosophical Underpinnings,  Chung-Hwa Buddhist Journal; prudery and Prurience: Historical Roots of the Confucian Conundrum Concerning Women, Sexuality, and Power,  Confucius and the Second Sex (Open Court); and Kong Zi as Feminist: Confucian Self-cultivation in a Contemporary Context, Journal of Chinese Philosophy.

 

Dr.  Allen Wittenborn, Asian Studies.  (B.A. San Francisco State Univ., M.A. University of Oregon, Ph.D. University of Arizona).  Dr. Wittenborn is a faculty member of the Department of Asian Studies and History.  Dr. Wittenborn's interests include research on Tang and Song intellectual history and foreign relations, in particular with Turkic peoples in Central Asia. He is also active in studying modern China and its relations with Southeast Asia, especially the role of overseas Chinese. In this regard, Dr. Wittenborn serves as an expert witness in testifying at political asylum cases with the INS.  In addition, he is currently conducting research on Tang-Arab relations, on the rise of the Nationalist Chinese army in Burma, and on the position of Chinese in Malaysian and Indonesian society.

Dr.  Cathy Woo, Linguistics

 

Dr. Ruey-Jiuan Regina Wu, the Department of Linguistics and Oriental Languages
Office: BAM 329 
E-mail:
rwu@mail.sdsu.edu 
Phone: (619)594-2735


 

Ruey-Jiuan Regina Wu (B.A., National Taiwan Normal University; M.A., University of Washington; Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles) is Associate Professor in the Department of Linguistics and Oriental Languages.  Prior to joining SDSU, Professor Wu taught English in Taiwan and Mandarin Chinese at UCLA and the University of Washington and was also heavily involved in curriculum development.  Professor Wu's research interests include conversation analysis (CA), pragmatics, functional linguistics, interpersonal communication in Chinese communities, language assessment, and TESL (teaching English as a second language)/TCSL (teaching Chinese as a second language) methodologies.

Dr. Wu’s recent book, Stance in Talk: A conversation analysis of Mandarin final particles (2004, John Benjamins), explores how participants in Mandarin conversation display stance in the unfolding development of action and interaction through the use of Mandarin final particles, and is one of the pioneering CA studies of Mandarin Chinese.  Her work on pragmatics and interpersonal communication in Mandarin conversation has also appeared in the Journal of Pragmatics, Discourse Processes, Studies in Language, and Issues in Applied Linguistics. (Click here to link to the book page: Stance in Talk: A conversation analysis of Mandarin final particles.) (http://www.benjamins.com/cgi-bin/t_bookview.cgi?bookid=P_bns_117)

 

 

Dr.  Russell Young, Policy Studies in Language and Cross-Cultural Education. 

Dr. Russell Young is a Professor in the Department of Policy Studies in Language and Cross-cultural Education and Department of Asian Studies.  He has taught courses in multicultural education, educational research, and language policy.  His research interests include ethnic identity, mutlicultural strategies in teaching, and sociology of language among Asians.  His fieldwork for his thesis was at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and in Taiwan for his dissertation.  He has lived in Asia, mostly in Taiwan, for six years. He has taught education and English courses at the National Taiwan Normal University, National Chengchi University, and National Kaohsiung Normal University.  He is also an award winning Children's story writer, having published in Chinese and English.

 

Dr. Elena Yu,  Graduate School of Public Health.  E-mail: eyu@mail.sdsu.edu. Phone: (619) 594-2711.  Dr. Elena Yu is Professor of Epidemiology with academic degrees in economics, sociology, and epidemiology.  She has conducted research on Alzheimer’s disease and dementia in China, aging and mental health of Asian Americans, and cancer control on Chinese and Korean Americans.  Her areas of current research interest are on Health Policy, Social Epidemiology, the Epidemiology of Minority Health, and Asian American and Pacific Islanders’ Health Disparities.      

 

Dr.  Zheng-sheng Zhang, Linguistics 
Office: BA 418A,  Phone: (619) 594-1912 
Email: zzhang@mail.sdsu.edu 
Web:  http//www-rohan.sdsu.edu/dept/chinese/zhang/zhang.html 

Professor Zhang received his Ph.D. in 1988 from Ohio State University, where he was trained in theoretical linguistics. He joined the Chinese program at SDSU in the fall of 1990. His research interests include the linguistic structure of the Chinese language, Chinese language pedagogy and computer-aided language instruction. Since his arrival, he has actively participated in projects supported by the Language Acquisition Resource Center.  His current projects include the development of business Chinese VOCI and a reading program for Chinese based on the authoring software of GALT and LIBRA. In addition to these development activities, he has also presented at CALICO and contributed a number of software reviews and a critical survey of CALL for Chinese for the Journal of Chinese Language Teacher's Association.

Dr.  Mei Zhong, (Ph.D. 1996, Kent State University)

Mei Zhong obtained her Ph.D. degree (1996) at Kent State University, OH in communication studies. She was assistant professor at Iowa State University (1997-1999). She currently teaches intercultural communication and nonverbal communication at the School of Communication, San Diego State University. She has established and main three educational exchange programs between SDSU and three Chinese universities. She was elected and served as vice president (2000-2001) and president (2001-2002) of the Association for Chinese Communication Studies, a nationally affiliated organization for communication researchers. She also serves as faculty advisor for the Chinese Students and Scholars Association of SDSU (1999-present).

 


 

San Diego State University

Send mail to mtsou@mail.sdsu.edu with questions or comments about this web site.
Last modified: October 11, 2004