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Professor Leigh K. Jenco

Professor Leigh K. Jenco

Professor of Political Theory (on sabbatical 2024/25)

Department of Government

Room No
CBG 4.25
Office Hours
(on sabbatical 2024/25)
Connect with me

Languages
Classical Chinese, English, Mandarin
Key Expertise
Chinese Thought, Taiwan, Political Philosophy, Global Intellectual History

About me

Leigh Jenco (BA, Bard College; MA and PhD, University of Chicago) joined ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ in 2012, after teaching at the National University of Singapore. She has held visiting positions at the Institute of Modern History, Academia Sinica, Taiwan; the Department of History, National Taiwan University; and the University of Heidelberg. She was associate editor of the flagship journal (2016-2020) and principal investigator for the Humanities in the European Research Area grant project "," funded by the European Commission. She is currently Project Lead for the three-year, £1.5 million global convening project funded by the British Academy.

Her first two monographs— (Cambridge UP, 2010) and (Oxford UP, 2015)—pioneered the engagement of normative political theory with the intellectual history of modern China. Her current research explores late Ming neo-Confucian ideas about equality, including how they are manifest in poetic and literary theory. She is beginning a new project on the 20th century rediscovery of early modern Chinese folksong compendia, as a means of exploring alternative genealogies of social science.


 

Research interests

  • Chinese political thought (Ming, Qing and Republican periods)
  • Comparative and postcolonial political theory
  • Global intellectual history
  • Taiwan studies
  • Discourses of empire in East Asia

Teaching responsibilities

  • GV4K2: Postcolonial and Comparative Political Theory
  • GV267: Global Political Thought

Selected publications

  • “,” (with Jonathan Chappell), Journal of Asian Studies (July 2020). DOI: 10.1017/S0021911820000066
  • The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Political Theory (New York: Oxford University Press, 2020). Co-edited with Murad Idris and Megan C. Thomas.
  • “Chen Di’s Record of Formosa (1603) and an Alternative Chinese Imaginary of Otherness,” The Historical Journal (August 2020).
  • “Can the Chinese Nation Be One? Gu Jiegang, Chinese Muslims, and the Reworking of Culturalism,” Modern China, February 2019.
  • Changing Referents: Learning Across Space and Time in China and the West (New York: Oxford University Press, 2015).