
BA Hon (HKU); MA, MPhil, PhD (Columbia University)
Associate Professor, Department of History, CUHK
I study modern and contemporary China’s multiple revolutions, nation-building, inter-Asia connections from an intellectual and cultural perspective. I am interested in the issues of global modernity and decolonial processes, exploring ways in which historians could situate China — including imaginations of the country — in them.
Born and raised in Hong Kong, I received an undergraduate degree at the University of Hong Kong before earning a doctorate at Columbia University in the City of New York. I also spent a stint as a postdoctoral fellow at the Australian National University.
Monograph and Edited Works
Articles
Book Chapters
Book Reviews
| Year | Research Project |
|---|---|
| 2025 | Bridging Cold War Divides: Perceptions of "New China" in a Decolonizing British Empire Humanities and Social Sciences Prestigious Fellowship Scheme (HSSPFS), HKSAR Research Grants Council |
| 2022-2024 | “Red” Christianity and “New China” in the 1950s: The Case of Hewlett Johnson General Research Fund (GRF), HKSAR Research Grants Council |
| 2019-2022 | Embracing "New China": An Intellectual History of China-India Friendship, 1950—1955 General Research Fund (GRF), HKSAR Research Grants Council |
| 2016-2018 | Turncoats: Political Conversion and Anti-Communism in Nationalist China, 1927—1949 Early Career Scheme (ECS), HKSAR Research Grants Council |