Phi Beta Kappa

2025 Visiting Scholar Lecture – Prof. Martin Kern

University of Washington Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar

Professor Martin Kern

Department of East Asian Studies, Princeton University

Prof. Martin KernUW Phi Beta Kappa is honored to host Professor Martin Kern of Princeton University for a day of stimulating discussion and talks on Thursday, February 20, 2025.

Prof. Kern will run an invitation-only lunchtime workshop for interested UW faculty and students on ancient Chinese writing. If you are interested in attending, contact uwpbk@uw.edu for more information.

Prof. Kern will present a free public lecture on early Chinese manuscripts in the late afternoon. See below for details.

UW Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar Lecture

Material History: Ancient Manuscripts and the Rewriting of the Ancient Chinese Past

Over the past fifty years, an ever-increasing number of ancient Chinese manuscripts on bamboo, wood and (rarely) silk have been discovered. Found in waterlogged tombs and wells in south central China as well as in above-ground ruins in the arid Central Asian northwest, these manuscripts date from the fourth century BCE through the third century CE, when paper finally became the dominant stationery for Chinese writing. Their contents cover virtually all areas of knowledge: historical, philosophical, and literary writings that can be compared to the received tradition; technical works on medicine, divination, mathematics, and other disciplines; and an enormous and still growing body of administrative and legal writings that give us unprecedented insights into the sociopolitical and economic structures of ancient China.

Thursday, February 20, 4:00pm  |  CMU 120, UW campus

Free and Open to the Public

MORE ABOUT PROFESSOR KERN

Martin Kern is the Joanna and Greg ’84 P13 P18 Zeluck Professor in Asian Studies at Princeton University. He specializes in the study of Chinese antiquity. The author and editor of numerous books and articles crossing the disciplines of literature, history, religion, and art, he studies the practices of textual composition, transmission, and hermeneutics in the Chinese manuscript culture of the first millennium BCE. He is further interested in the comparative study of antiquity and currently co-edits Philological Practices: A Comparative Historical Lexicon, a project spanning more than twenty premodern philological traditions from around the globe. His current monograph projects include Performance, Memory, and Authorship in Ancient China: The Formation of the Textual Tradition and The Chinese “Classic of Poetry” in Ancient Manuscripts: Studies in Poetry, Poetics, and the Sociology of Text. Kern also served as President of the American Oriental Society (2023–2024) and directs the “International Center for the Study of Ancient Text Cultures” at Renmin University of China (Beijing).