Current NYU Shanghai Global Research Initiatives Fellows

Dan Gao
PhD Candidate, Department of Cinema Studies, Tisch

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (October 3 - October 28): 

Positioned at the intersection of culture historiography, archival studies and ethnography, Gao’s dissertation looks at the formation of post-socialist Chinese subjects and the material culture of the People’s Republic of China after the Economic Reform through the lens of a cultural history of smuggling, piracy, and copycat manufacturing of media products in the past four decades. Her implements current studies on contemporary Chinese society with an investigation of a semi-underground yet gigantic cultural component - piracy culture - digging into the “mentality” of China’s persisting indifference to copyright protection, which had become notoriously famous worldwide.

Amir Moosavi
PhD Candidate, Department of Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies, GSAS

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (November 9 - December 18):

Moosavi’s dissertation, “Reimagining a War: Negotiating Ideology and Disenchantment in Literary Narratives of the Iran-Iraq War,” is the first study to comparatively treat the massive literary output of the Iran-Iraq War in both Arabic and Persian literatures. It sheds light on how Iraqi and Iranian writers have turned a genre of official literature that propagated state ideology into a literature of mourning and loss, and eventually, into a vehicle of protest. Moosavi creates a comparative framework for dealing with the Iran-Iraq war by juxtaposing the contemporaneous official war cultures of Iran and Iraq during the 1980s, highlighting the ways in which the Iraqi Ba‘thist Regime and the Islamic Republic of Iran sought to integrate the cultural spheres of each country into the state war machines. He then examines Iranian and Iraqi literary output in relation to the conflict in the postwar era, focusing on overlapping thematic concerns in both literatures, among them, representations of violence, battlefront death and martyrdom, literary disenchantment, and home front narratives written by women and veterans. Moosavi demonstrates how writers from these two countries, in the absence of an independent and critical historiography, have constructed counter-discourses to official state narratives of the war by employing analogous aesthetic techniques, such as fragmented and multivocal narratives, and the purposeful use of specific literary modes and forms that the official cultural establishment could not coopt.

Yuxi Lin
M.F.A. Candidate, Creative Writing Program, GSAS

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (Sept 3 - Nov 30):

Lin’s masters thesis is a collection of poetry on female Chinese American identity and its relationship to history and the body. Lin immigrated to the U.S. from China at the age of twelve, and has always felt like she was straddling two languages, not belonging to either one. Identity, then has become a central question that she explores in poetry, and a semester in Shanghai would provide her the access to historical documents and studies of Chinese language history. In particular, Lin is interested in researching the etymology of Chinese characters and how the bodies of the words inform our understanding of gender and identity. Moreover, she hopes to research the stories of Chinese immigrants who left China for the U.S. through the extensive historical archives at the Shanghai Library and by visiting the Shanghai Museum. In addition, an office space at the NYU Shanghai research site would give Lin a dedicated space to write and the opportunity to concentrate on her project.

Ravi Shroff
Associate Professor, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (February 3 - May 2):

Professor Ravi Shroff is mainly planning to work on the first draft of a planned textbook related to their research expertise, which concerns the statistical foundations of measuring discrimination and unfairness in human and algorithmic decision making.

Carlos Yebra Lopez
PhD Candidate, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, GSAS

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (September 7 - December 4):

Lopez’s research project, provisionally entitled "Metaphors We Kill By: A Critical Metaphor Analysis of (Counter) Jihadist Propaganda in Contemporary Spain (2004-2017)", aims at exposing the propagandistic nature of the current cultural and political uses of the notion of jihad in Contemporary Spain. In the grand scheme of things, however, the significance of his project is much larger: it is about raising awareness on the dangers of State-sponsored ideological manipulation and building peace and understanding at a global scale through the advancement of knowledge. China plays a key role in this in that its recent emergence as a global security actor does affect core European interests, particularly in the field counter-terrorist cooperation in the Middle East and South Asia.