Books
see page history

Overview edit see section history

Alexander Huang (Ph.D., Stanford) is Associate Professor of English, Theatre, and International Affairs at George Washington University, Research Affiliate in Literature at MIT, and General Editor of The Shakespearean International Yearbook. He is also Vice President of the Association for Asian Performance. His book "Chinese Shakespeares: Two Centuries of Cultural Exchange" received three international awards from the Modern Language Association, New York University, and International Convention for Asian Scholars.


Bibliography

  1. (2009)

    Chinese Shakespeares : two centuries of cultural exchange

  2. Class, Boundary and Social Discourse in the Renaissance (NSYSU Humanities and Social Science)

See complete bibliography (2)

Personal edit see section history

  • Legal name: Alexander Huang
  • Birthdate: (add)
  • Birthplace: (add)
  • Nationality: U.S.A.
  • Gender: Male
  • Official Website: http://alexanderhuang.org/
  • Genres: non-fiction, performance and film criticism, literature

Unbound edit see section history

This content section has been deprecated.
Please help us clean up the page by moving the content from this section into other relevant sections. Once it has been emptied this section will no longer appear on the page but the edit history will still be available in the page's history.

Educated in Taiwan, England, Germany, and the United States, Alex Huang is associate professor of English, Theatre and International Affairs at George Washington University, research affiliate at MIT, general editor of the Shakespearean International Yearbook, and Vice President of the Association for Asian Performance. His books include Chinese Shakespeares: Two Centuries of Cultural Exchange (2009; MLA Scaglione Prize for Comparative Literary Studies, an honorable mention of the Joe A. Callaway Prize for the Best Book on Drama or Theatre, and International Convention of Asian Scholars Colleagues' Choice Award), Shakespeare in Hollywood, Asia and Cyberspace (2009), and Class, Boundary, and Social Discourse in the Renaissance (2007). To learn more about Shakespeare and contemporary theater and film, visit the open-access digital video archive he co-founded: http://globalshakespeares.org/ He is the video curator for the exhibition "Imagining China: The View from Europe, 1550-1700" at Folger Library, Washington, D.C., September 17, 2009-January 9, 2010 (http://www.folger.edu/wosummary.cfm?woid=515). He writes about a variety of topics, including Shakespeare, modern China, and the transformations of literary and performance cultures in the global marketplace. Website: http://alexanderhuang.org/