Jessey Choo (Ph.D., Princeton) is Associate Professor of Chinese History and Religion at Rutgers University-New Brunswick. As a historian specializing in China’s medieval period (200–1000 CE), her research centers on cultural and religious practices related to childbearing, death, and memory, as well as women’s acquisition and exercise of personal agency in everyday life. Her first book, Inscribing Death: Burials, Representations, and Remembrance in Tang China, 618–907 CE (University of Hawaii Press, 2022), explores how people in late medieval China used burial and entombed epitaph inscriptions (or muzhiming) to fashion and preserve the identities and memories of the dead, themselves, and their families. She is currently working on two book-length monographs. The first, “From Damnation to Transcendence: Childbearing and Women’s Salvation in Chinese Religions, 600–1300,” traces the rise and popularization of a Buddho-Daoist soteriology centered on childbearing. The second, with Alexei Ditter, “Immortalized in Stone: Memory Making in Late Medieval China,” theorizes memory practices in late medieval China by examining how, through constructing, circulating, and consuming muzhiming, people generated and manipulated memory. She is also a co-editor of Early Medieval China: A Sourcebook (Columbia University Press, 2014), and Tales from Tang Dynasty China: Selections from the Taiping Guangji (Hackett Publishing Co., 2017). Her research has been supported by multiple grants and fellowships, most recently the Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation for International Scholarly Exchange Scholar Grant (2018–19) and a fellowship from the Morphomata Center for Advanced Studies in the Humanities at the University of Cologne in Germany (2019).


Education


Areas of Specialization


Books

early_medieval_china .    talesfromtang    Inscribing death   


 Selected Publications


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Selected Awards and Distinctions