Campus
- Downtown Toronto (St. George)
Areas of Interest
- Late imperial Chinese history and literature
- East Asian book history
- Intellectual history
- Manchu studies
- History of linguistic thought
Biography
Nathan Vedal is broadly interested in the intellectual, cultural, and literary history of late imperial China and early modern East Asia between roughly the fifteenth and nineteenth centuries. He employs approaches from book history and the history of science/humanities to his research on the circulation of knowledge and books. His first monograph, The Culture of Language in Ming China, examines the history of language study and the formation of scholarly disciplines in China from the sixteenth through eighteenth centuries, demonstrating how the boundaries surrounding linguistic study shifted according to contemporary intellectual trends. His current research, which stems from a set of shared materials, investigates how early modern scholars and literary figures managed information in a period of substantially increased textual production. Specifically, he examines the concrete practices underlying how scholars compiled reference works, such as encyclopedias, and how readers and writers put them to use. Other research interests include Manchu intellectual and literary culture, historical practices of commentary and annotation, and early modern forms of visualizing knowledge.
Education
Awards
- 2021 American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS)
- 2021 Mellon Fellowship for Assistant Professors Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton), School of Historical Studies
- 2020 National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Stipend The National Endowment for the Humanities
- 2018 Junior Fellow Center for Humanities and Information, Pennsylvania State University
Publications
- “Literati of the Garrisons: The Civil Service Translation Examination and Manchu Literary-Intellectual Culture in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries,” ( : 2023)
- “Dame Wang’s Dumplings: Mediating the Obscene in Manchu Translations of Erotic Literature at the Turn of the Eighteenth Century,” ( : 2022)
- The Culture of Language in Ming China: Sound, Script, and the Redefinition of Boundaries of Learning (Columbia University Press : 2022)
- “The Manchu Reading of Jinpingmei: Glossing, Script, and Encyclopedism in the Early Eighteenth Century” ( : 2021)
- “From Tradition to Community: The Rise of Contemporary Knowledge in Late Imperial China” ( : 2020)
- “New Scripts for All Sounds: Cosmology and Universal Phonetic Notation Systems in Late Imperial China" ( : 2018)
- "Never Taking a Shortcut: Examination Poetry of the Tang Dynasty” ( : 2015)