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David Roxburgh

David Roxburgh

· Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Professor of Islamic Art History

Harvard University · History of Writing

Active 1930–2024

h-index7
Citations322
Papers929 last 5y
Funding
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About

Eugene Yuejin Wang is the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Professor of Asian Art at Harvard University and the founder and director of Harvard FAS CAMLab. His extensive publications range from early Chinese art and archaeology to modern and contemporary Chinese art and cinema. His book, Shaping the Lotus Sutra: Buddhist Visual Culture in Medieval China (2005), explores Buddhist worldmaking and has received the Sakamoto Nichijin Academic Award from Japan. His current research focuses on the cognitive study of art and consciousness as well as biocentric art that integrates visual, biological, and ecological systems. As the founding director of Harvard FAS CAMLab, he explores the nexus of cognition, aesthetics, and mindscape, leading projects that investigate multimedia storyliving and immersive artistic and spiritual experiences, integrating humanistic research with sensorial media practice.

Research topics

  • Geography
  • Computer Science
  • Sociology
  • Social psychology
  • Psychology
  • Mathematics
  • Archaeology
  • Pedagogy
  • Linguistics
  • Mathematics education

Selected publications

  • The transformative power of local language encounters

    Routledge eBooks · 2024 · 1 citations

    • Sociology
    • Pedagogy
    • Computer Science

    Scotland’s “1+2 Approach” introduces a second language (L2) for primary school pupils at age 5 and a third (L3) at age 9. While L2 has received most attention, L3 offers schools flexibility and more creativity. This chapter explores L3 as a radical space for pedagogical innovation, drawing on three Scottish studies of projects which actively engaged local communities, fostering encounters with local languages. They empowered students and teachers to learn and use languages in locally relevant ways, reshaping their identities as learners and educators. Through adopting a secondary analysis of teachers’ oral data, we illustrate how these local language encounters provided opportunities for potentially transformative experiences, for both teachers and pupils alike, and consider the implications for those involved in various teacher education contexts.

  • Literary and Material Poetics

    2024-01-11

    book-chapterOpen access1st authorCorresponding

    The six essays making up this section of the companion address its thematic focus in varied ways, which is not surprising given the very broad scope of “literary and material poetics” across human geographies and time, as well as the spectrum of interpretations that the rubric itself accommodates and invites. The essays are formed as case studies, focused inquiries built around single, unique objects or as sets of like objects related by a common function or medium. Approaches to literary and material poetics also differ, chiefly in the conceived relation between literature and the material object. The object may manifest language visibly—as an element within the object's physical matrix (e.g., illustrated printed book, manuscript, scroll painting, ceramics)—or invisibly through a discursive framework that proposes an interrelationship between an object and oral or written language (e.g., the essay on Kashmiri carpets). Apart from these direct relationships formed between literature and material, there are of course a host of other written primary sources employed by the authors for the light they shed as evidence of historical contexts and conditions. And of course the poetics of literature and material could be treated wholly independently of each other by examining the form, structure, and discourse of literature and material artifacts separately. The pronounced attention given to questions of medium and materiality, artisanal knowledge, and embodied making, especially in the last 20 years, has generated an ever-expanding scholarly discourse—largely freed from literary approaches or linguistic theories—whose proliferation shows no sign of abatement. The poetics of materiality has thus become a fertile analytical category like never before. To differing degrees, such approaches also inform these essays.

  • Developing a Rationale for Teaching Local Languages to Young Language Learners: A Case Study of Teaching and Learning Chinese Language and Culture in a Scottish Primary School

    New language learning and teaching environments · 2024-01-01

    book-chapterOpen access1st authorCorresponding
  • NOVEMBER 1869:

    Indiana University Press eBooks · 2022

    1st authorCorresponding
    • Geography
  • Innovative approaches to support the linguistic development of young plurilinguals

    2020-04-30

    article
  • Creative use of the L3 curriculum space for local linguistic encounters

    2020-11-14

    article1st authorCorresponding
  • Stepping out of their comfort zones: the role of pastoral care in supporting UK students studying in China

    2020

    1st authorCorresponding
    • Geography
    • Archaeology
  • Alison Ohta, J.M. Rogers, and Rosalind Wade Haddon, eds. Art, Trade, and Culture in the Islamic World and Beyond: From the Fatimids to the Mughals: Studies Presented to Doris Behrens-Abouseif (London: Gingko Library, 2016). Pp. 224. $85.00 cloth. ISBN 9781909942905.

    Review of Middle East Studies · 2019-05-21

    article1st authorCorresponding

    Alison Ohta, J.M. Rogers, and Rosalind Wade Haddon, eds. Art, Trade, and Culture in the Islamic World and Beyond: From the Fatimids to the Mughals: Studies Presented to Doris Behrens-Abouseif (London: Gingko Library, 2016). Pp. 224. $85.00 cloth. ISBN 9781909942905. - Volume 53 Issue 1

  • Teachers as change agents: reflections on the delivery of a CPD programme promoting STEM innovation within the Chinese curriculum

    Strathprints: The University of Strathclyde institutional repository (University of Strathclyde) · 2018-05-29

    articleOpen access1st authorCorresponding

    Over recent years there has been increased attention globally on professional learning experiences for teachers with initiatives focused on improving the quality of teaching in the hope that this will lead to improved educational outcomes. Whilst research accounts of Continuing Professional Development (CPD) activities within local/ national/ international contexts are relatively common place, there is a need to further consider the impact of such programmes on the teachers involved in terms of their capacity to act as ‘agents of change’ in their classrooms and wider school contexts. This presentation will draw upon evaluation data from a recent programme of professional learning centred on approaches to curricular integration and pupil engagement within STEM based subjects. This was delivered in China to a mixed group of 50 primary and secondary teachers by the School of Education at the University of Strathclyde as an international pilot of its CPD work in this area. In attempting to critically review the programme, current thinking relating to the issues of teacher autonomy and teacher agency will be drawn upon with suggestions offered on how similar initiatives could be handled in future to maximise their potential for positive impact on all those involved.

  • Yuka Kadoi (ed.): Arthur Upham Pope and a New Survey of Persian Art. (Studies in Persian Cultural History.) xxiv, 417 pp. Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2016. €146. ISBN 978 90 04 30990 6.

    Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies · 2018-05-25

    article1st authorCorresponding

    Yuka Kadoi (ed.): Arthur Upham Pope and a New Survey of Persian Art. (Studies in Persian Cultural History.) xxiv, 417 pp. Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2016. €146. ISBN 978 90 04 30990 6. - Volume 81 Issue 2

Frequent coauthors

  • Malika Pedley

    Centre Interuniversitaire de Recherche et d’Ingénierie des Matériaux

    4 shared
  • Lorna Anderson

    3 shared
  • Simon Ringland

    Innovate UK

    3 shared
  • Gülru Neci̇poğlu

    2 shared
  • S. Beddus

    2 shared
  • Oleg Grabar

    2 shared
  • Joanna McPake

    2 shared
  • Ru Ying Cai

    2 shared

Education

  • Ph.D., Art History

    University of Chicago

    1991
  • M.A., Art History

    University of Chicago

    1987
  • B.A., Art History

    University of California, Los Angeles

    1983
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