I am an interdisciplinary scholar of sound studies and Chinese literature.

I am currently finishing my position as a postdoctoral fellow in the Society of Fellows at Dartmouth College. During the academic year 2025-26, I will be a lecturer in Comparative Literature at Dartmouth College.

As a scholar, I am invested in exploring sound and media theory latent in premodern Chinese literature for enriching our contemporary understanding of the human voice and language. I am currently completing my first book, Voice Gone Awry: Theorizing Human Expression in Premodern China. Taking a media-theoretical approach, Voice Gone Awry theorizes the notion of the voice and the role it plays in human expression by delving into the implications of having a human voice—especially through the act of speaking and writing—in a non-western and premodern world where both “the human” and “the voice” were incoherent and unstable concepts.