Liping Wang B.A. Peking University M.A. Peking University Ph.D. The University of Chicago Area of Expertise Political Sociology; Social Theory; Comparative Historical Sociology; Ethnic Studies; Sociology of Knowledge and Culture; Modern and Contemporary China Biography Liping Wang is assistant professor of Sociology at the University of Hong Kong. She earned a Ph.D. degree in Sociology from the University of Chicago. Her dissertation, Ethnicizing the Frontier: Imperial Transformation and Ethnic Confrontations in China-Inner Mongolia, 1890s-1930s, was completed in 2013. It is now turning into a book manuscript. It examines forms and causes of Mongol-Han confrontation in Inner Mongolia during the Chinese imperial transition. In it she questions general theories of empire to nation transition in an historical examination of the Chinese case. Her alternative approach focuses on the maintenance and dissolution of the relations that sustained crosscutting identities on the frontier. In addition to that, she has been working on transnational movement of knowledge in modern academic disciplines, the indigenization of that knowledge, and, most especially on the creation of a knowledge regime dealing with ethnicity in Republican China (1912- 1949). She is now embarking on a project that compares patterns of luxury trade binding various frontiers to the Chinese imperial center in the 17thcentury. Her future research includes a comparative study of how elites mediated minority politics under the Qing and how they do so in contemporary China. These studies uncover path dependence that links contemporary Chinese society to its imperial legacies and the dramatic transformations it underwent throughout the long twentieth century. Her research has been published in The American Journal of Sociology, Comparative Studies in Society and History, and The Annals: The American Academy of Political and Social Sciences. Before joining the University of Hong Kong she was Harper-Schmidt Fellow in the Society of Fellows at the University of Chicago. She was visiting assistant professor at Haverford College in 2013-2014. Publications 2015 “From Masterly Brokers to Compliant Protégées: The Frontier Governance System and the Rise of Ethnic Confrontation in China-Inner Mongolia, 1900-1930.” The American Journal of Sociology 120 (6),1641-1689. 2014 “’State, Relational Governance and Nomads’ Sedentarization: Land Reform in Inner Mongolia, 1900-1911.” Comparative Studies in Society and History 56(3): 714-744. 2011 “Interlocking Patrimonialisms and State Formation in Qing China and Early Modern Europe.” The Annals: The American Academy of Political and Social Sciences 636:164-181. (First author, written with Julia Adams.) 2011 “Bridging the Gap Between China and Europe.”(Podcast, with Julia Adams) http://aapss.org/the-annals/recent-volumes/2011/08/11/julia-adams-andliping-wang-bridging-the-gap-between-china-and-europe 2015 Review of Qinghai Across Frontier: State- and Nation-Building under the Ma Family, 1911-1949, by William Brent Haas. Tibetan and Himalayan Dissertation Reviews (online), forthcoming. In Chinese: 2006 “From Trauerspiel to Asceticism: a Comparison of Walter Benjamin’s Theory of German Tragedy and Max Weber’s Theory of Science.” Society and Thought, Vol.6, 308-382. 2004 “The Sacredness of Society: an Interpretation of Emile Durkheim’s The Elementary Forms of Religious Life.” Society and Thought, Vol.4, 517-535. 2002 “The ‘Stranger’ in Georg Simmel’s Texts.” Society and Thought, Vol. 2, 398-424. Translation 2002 Weber, Mariane. Max Weber: A Biography. (Chapters 14-16). Nanjing: Jiangsu renmin chubanshe. Manuscripts in Progress “Disunifying the Nation: Modern Disciplines and Knowledge Transplantation in China, 1912-1949.” “Sovereignty of Boundaries in European and Chinese/Mongolian Empires.” (with Julia Adams) “Legal Pluralism or Crossing Jurisdictions? Legal Practices in China-Inner Mongolia and its Modern Transformation.” Teaching SOCI 12001 History of Social Thought SOCI 12052 Traditional Chinese Society SOCI 13024 Modern Social Theory