Current NYU Shanghai Global Research Initiatives Fellows

Jennifer Huang (she/her/hers)
PhD Candidate, Department of Performance Studies, Tisch School of the Arts

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (March 10 - April 4):

Jennifer Huang’s dissertation proposal, entitled “Looping the Strands: Text/ile Tactics and the Politics of Everyday Life,” concerns looping as a textile practice, such as in embroidery and lacemaking, as well as a recurring theme in speculative literature.  Huang considers the movement of looping – of selectively picking up the past into the present, as a way of bringing forth alternative ways of living. Looping is a tactic that challenges and unravels the dominant narratives that maintain systems of capitalism and imperialism. The GRI Fellowship in Shanghai enables her to further develop the first half of her dissertation, as it focuses on histories of early lacemaking industries in China. Needle lacemaking traditions, first brought into China by European missionaries and capitalists in the mid to late 19th century, share a strong resemblance to Chinese needle-loop embroidery techniques that date back to the 12th century. Their similarities have been written about in Chinese academic journals, but there is still not much scholarship on this subject available in English. As it currently stands, textile historians have noted that this area is shrouded in “extreme secrecy,” as many of the handmade lace coming out of China was and still is sold as made in Ireland, Belgium, or Italy. Huang is interested in these gaps within textile histories, and her dissertation will hopefully provide a different lens with which to understand needlework in China.

Andrew Ross (he/him/his)
Professor, Department of Social & Cultural Analysis, Faculty of Arts & Science

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai: March 30 - April 27

The purpose of Professor Ross’s  research stay at NYU Shanghai is to conduct research for a book on Population and Climate Change. The field of demography is responding to the challenges of climate change, and so government policy on immigration, migration, and sustainable population growth is overlapping frequently and inevitably with policies that address climate change mitigation and adaptation. East China is one of the five field sites he has chosen for a comparative study of regions, cities, and territories: the other four are Israel/Palestine, Scotland, Arizona, and New York City. The book will report on the lessons to be learned from each of these sites. China is still pivoting from its one-child policy, and facing considerable challenges in balancing a graying population against economic development quotas on the one hand, and meeting the goal of “ecological civilization” on the other. This makes it a particularly fertile case study for his project, and Shanghai’s area universities boast several centers and initiatives that are key sources of expertise. Residence at NYU Shanghai will afford him close access to these resources.

Siwei Cheng (she/her/hers)
Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, Faculty of Arts & Science

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (July 8 - July 26):

Professor Siwei Cheng’s research project, "Inequality and Connectedness," combines daily mobility data collected via mobile device and the American Community Survey to create comprehensive measures of activity space segregation across geographic areas in the United States. The project extends conventional measures of spatial segregation to incorporate exposure in individuals' routine activities, weighted by the flows of individuals between census block groups. At NYU Shanghai, several scholars and research teams are collecting similar data to understand communities in urban China. Professor Cheng looks forward to the opportunity to connect with these scholars and engage in a broader conversation about inequality and connectedness in the global context.

 
Xinyi Zhang
PhD Candidate, Department of Sociology, Graduate School of Arts & Science

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai: October 23 - December 15

In Shanghai, Xinyi Zhang will be revising her manuscript of a research project “Who can(not) be Chinese and Why? The Construction of Symbolic Boundaries Against Immigrants in Chinese Online Discourse.” The paper uses social media data collected in 2020 from Sina Weibo and provides qualitative and computational content analysis on online discussion about loosening regulations on permanent residency in China. Zhang hopes to strengthen the paper by conducting additional literature review on racial discourse in China, using NYU Shanghai’s library. She also hopes to workshop her paper draft with scholars who focus on race and immigration in a global context in Shanghai.

 
Shuting Li (she/her/hers)
PhD Candidate, Department of Anthropology, Graduate School of Arts & Science

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai: January 15 - March 1

“Jiqiren/robots” as a techno-scientific solution has become a keyword for the Chinese government, scientists, robotics entrepreneurs, elderly Chinese, and their families concerned with China’s aging issue and care crisis. Shuting Li’s research project aims to examine the entanglement of aging, care, family reconfiguration, and modernization in the development of robotic technology in post-reform China. As one of the four municipalities, Shanghai represents the diversity of social and cultural lives in contemporary China. The myriad of elders living in Shanghai will provide Li with a point to observe tensions between the traditional and the modern, between the urban and the countryside. Shanghai has become one of the pilot cities for the implementation of new eldercare policies and for the testing of the innovative technology used to satisfy the needs of the increasing population of elders.