Current NYU Shanghai Global Research Initiatives Fellows

Jennifer Huang (she/her/hers)
PhD Candidate, Department of Performance Studies, Tisch School of the Arts

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (March 10 - April 4):

Jennifer Huang’s dissertation proposal, entitled “Looping the Strands: Text/ile Tactics and the Politics of Everyday Life,” concerns looping as a textile practice, such as in embroidery and lacemaking, as well as a recurring theme in speculative literature.  Huang considers the movement of looping – of selectively picking up the past into the present, as a way of bringing forth alternative ways of living. Looping is a tactic that challenges and unravels the dominant narratives that maintain systems of capitalism and imperialism. The GRI Fellowship in Shanghai enables her to further develop the first half of her dissertation, as it focuses on histories of early lacemaking industries in China. Needle lacemaking traditions, first brought into China by European missionaries and capitalists in the mid to late 19th century, share a strong resemblance to Chinese needle-loop embroidery techniques that date back to the 12th century. Their similarities have been written about in Chinese academic journals, but there is still not much scholarship on this subject available in English. As it currently stands, textile historians have noted that this area is shrouded in “extreme secrecy,” as many of the handmade lace coming out of China was and still is sold as made in Ireland, Belgium, or Italy. Huang is interested in these gaps within textile histories, and her dissertation will hopefully provide a different lens with which to understand needlework in China.

Zhong-Ping Jiang (he/him/his)
Professor, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Tandon School of Engineering

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (April 14 - May 16):

Prof. Jiang’s research falls into the general fields of control and dynamical networks, with a special focus on problems at the interface of AI/machine learning, nonlinear control and distributed feedback optimization for autonomous systems. His current research is focused on the following topics: Learning-based control aimed at learning adaptive optimal controllers directly from data with stability and robustness guarantees; Distributed feedback optimization for large-scale networks, such as robotic networks; Safe and resilient control for learning-enabled systems under uncertainty and DoS attacks.

Xiao Liu (she/her/hers)
PhD Candidate, Tisch School of the Arts

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (January 20 - May 16):

Xiao Liu is a third-year Ph.D. candidate and dance scholar. Her dissertation, titled "Ballroom Dance After Opening Up," explores how ballroom dance in post-socialist China has shaped and influenced the production of subjecthood. A central focus of her research is Lai Lai Dance Hall in Hongkou District, a venue that once served as a shelter for the older gay community in Shanghai. Though the hall has vanished, its legacy remains significant, despite the limited archival material available. Diverse sources that Liu can find in Shanghai will help reconstruct the cultural and social significance of Lai Lai Dance Hall and its role in shaping queer subjectivity in China.

Ravi Shroff
Associate Professor, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (February 3 - May 2):

Professor Ravi Shroff is mainly planning to work on the first draft of a planned textbook related to their research expertise, which concerns the statistical foundations of measuring discrimination and unfairness in human and algorithmic decision making.

Lyuwenyu Zhang (she/her/hers)
PhD Candidate, Department of Cinema Studies, Tisch School of the Arts

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (February 3 - May 2):

Lyuwenyu Zhang’s dissertation is titled Keeping Other Memories: Inside Unofficial Chinese Moving Image Archives, and during this fellowship, she will be writing and researching for one chapter focusing on the private film archive of a Shanghai collector, Liu Debao. Liu’s collection includes rarely-seen moving image materials of Chinese cinema from the 1960s and ’70s, spanning from thousands of film prints and several 8.75mm projectors to original movie posters. Drawing from disciplines like historiography and cultural studies, Zhang’s research project theorizes Liu’s archive as an important yet overlooked nexus point that functions as a site of memory-making activities that generate cultural discourses on nostalgia in contemporary China. Overall, Zhang’s dissertation seeks to dive into the afterlives of the moving image materials and questions the functions of the Chinese archives not only as vessels of storage and preservation but also as living and evolving cultural organisms that shape our understanding of past, present, and future.