Entitled Opinions (about Life and Literature)

Thomas Mullaney on the Invention of the Chinese Typewriter

05.04.2016 - By Robert HarrisonPlay

Download our free app to listen on your phone

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play

Thomas S. Mullaney is Associate Professor of Chinese History at Stanford University. He is the author of Coming to Terms with the Nation: Ethnic Classification in Modern China and principal editor of Critical Han Studies: The History, Representation and Identity of China’s Majority. He received his BA and MA degrees from the Johns Hopkins University, and his PhD from Columbia University under the direction of Madeleine Zelin.

His most recent project is a two-part volume on China’s development of a modern, nonalphabetic information infrastructure encompassing telegraphy, typewriting, word processing, and computing. This project has received three major awards and fellowships, including the 2013 Usher Prize, a three-year National Science Foundation fellowship, and a Hellman Faculty Fellowship. The first of these two books – The Chinese Typewriter: A Global History of the Information Age, Part I – is to be published on MIT Press (forthcoming, 2017) and will be featured in the Weatherhead Asian Series. The second – The Chinese Computer: A Global History of the Information Age, Part II – will be released at MIT Press later.

He also directs DHAsia, a new Digital Humanities initiative at Stanford University focused on East, South, Southeast, and Inner/Central Asia. The program is supported by the Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis (CESTA). DHAsia 2016 will center around a series of intellectually intensive 3-day visits by a core group of scholars incorporating three components: (a) a 45-minute talk on their research; (b) a hands-on Digital Humanities clinic for faculty and graduate students (focused on the particular tool/technique/method/platform employed in their work); and (c) a schedule of one-on-one meetings with interested faculty and graduate student researchers.

He is also the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of Dissertation Reviews, which publishes more than 500 reviews annually of recently defended dissertations in nearly 30 different fields in the Humanities and Social Sciences.

For more, see his page -- https://history.stanford.edu/people/tom-mullaney

More episodes from Entitled Opinions (about Life and Literature)