Antje Richter

  • Associate Professor
  • Director of Graduate Studies in Chinese
  • ASIAN LANGUAGES AND CIVILIZATIONS

Education

Ph.D., Ludwig Maximilians University, Munich

CAS Speaker Bureau Topic(s)

Premodern Chinese letter writing culture; premodern Chinese literary thought; medieval Chinese culture and literature

Regional and Thematic Interests

East Asia
Literature and the Arts

Profile

First trained in English and Germanic Studies at Friedrich Schiller University, Jena (East Germany), I embarked on a second career in Chinese Studies, Japanese Studies, and Chinese Art and Archaeology at Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich in 1989. After my doctorate in 1998, I taught at Christian Albrechts University in Kiel (where I habilitated in 2004) and Albert Ludwigs University Freiburg. In 2007, I joined the Department of Asian Languages & Civilizations at the University of Colorado at Boulder.

My main research interests lie in the rich literature and culture of early and medieval China. For the last several years, I was especially engaged in the study of correspondence. My first book in English, Letter Writing and Epistolary Culture in Early Medieval China, was published by Washington University Press in 2013. In 2015, an edited volume, also dedicated to letter writing, History of Chinese Epistolary Culture, came out with Brill. It collects 25 articles about a variety of epistolary topics through the ages. The prevalence of health reports and inquiries in Chinese personal letters has lead to my current research interest in medical narratives across genres in medieval China. I am studying how health and illness are represented in autobiography, literary criticism, poetry, historical accounts, fantastic tales, and religious texts to find out what role these representations play in larger narrative contexts and what they tell us about the medieval Chinese understanding of health, illness, and healing. In a second, related project I am also looking across genres—not so much because I am interested in a particular theme, but rather because I am exploring the role of imagination in a broad spectrum of medieval texts.

I am Editor for East Asia at (JAOS) and Secretary-Treasurer of the of the (AOS).

Selected Publications

2015. Richter, Antje, ed. A History of Chinese Letters and Epistolary Culture (Leiden: Brill).

2013. Letter Writing and Epistolary Culture in Early Medieval China (Seattle: U. Washington Pr.).

2012. “Empty Dreams and Other Omissions: Liu Xie’s Wenxin diaolong Preface” (Asia Major).

2011. “Beyond Calligraphy: Reading Wang Xizhi’s Letters” (T’oung Pao).