Languages: Chinese (Wu dialect and Mandarin), Japanese, English
My teaching centers broadly on Asian and Asian diasporic experiences, with particular attention to migration, identity formation, and cultural consumption and production. My research is grounded in multi-sited ethnographic fieldwork conducted across diverse geographic contexts, particularly among Chinese immigrant and diasporic communities. I tackle processes of transnationalism, the construction and negotiation of identity, the production of ethnic space, and the dynamic interplay between global and local forces.
I received graduate training at Nagoya University, Japan, where my coursework had a focus on intercultural studies and ethnographic fieldwork, while my MA and PhD research projects tackled Australian multiculturalism and identity among people of ethnic Chinese background, immigrants and the 1.5- and second-generation Chinese Australians in particular. Recently, I have been broadly exploring transnational Chinese migration and different agents, investigating intertwined forces behind the formation of ethnic space and places as well as international students and tourists and their impact on global consumer cultures and reshaping transnational spaces.