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Dr CHANG Tsung Chi Hawk

Qualifications:
  • BA (English and American Literature, National Central University)
  • MA (English and American Literature, National Taiwan Normal University)
  • PhD (English and American Literature, National Taiwan Normal University)
  • Post-doctoral Research (Irish Literature, Trinity College, Dublin)

 

Contact

Email:

htcchang@ied.edu.hk

Office:
B4-2/F-25 Department of English 
Hong Kong Institute of Education 
10 Lo Ping Road, Tai Po Hong Kong
Tel:
2948 6151

 


Teaching Interests

  • Irish Literature
  • English Literature
  • Language and Culture
  • Romantic Literature

 


Research Interests

  • Modern Irish Literature
  • Romantic Literature
  • Language and Culture
  • 20th-century English and American Poetry
  • Irish Short Stories

 

 

Selected Publications

  • Chang, T. C. H. (2011). Landscape, nation, and women in J. M. Synge’s One-Act Plays. Hwa Kang English Journal, 17(1), 159-178.

  • Chang, T. C. H. (2010). Cultural clash: From comparative culture to foreign language learning in Taiwan. Chung Tsing Journal of Humanities, 44, 267-288.

  • Chang, T. C. H. (2010). Romanticism/Nationalism/Ireland: On Thomas Moore’s The Irish Melodies. Studies in English Language and Literature, 25, 1-15.

  • Chang, T. C. H. (2009). Irish women, perception, and religion: On Edna O’Brien’s Sister Imelda. Proceedings of the 17th Annual English and American Literature Association Conference, 179-194.

  • Chang, T. C. H. (1994). A romantic poem oscillating between Neoclassicism and Romanticism: On Shelley’s Ode to the West Wind. English Teaching and Learning, 19(1), 63-69.


Paper Presentations at Conferences

  • Chang, T. C. H. “Where Is My Country: From Everyday Life to Emigration Complex in Brian Friel’s Philadelphia, Here I Come.” Accepted and to be presented at the 18th Annual English and American Literature Association Conference, Chung Hsing University, Nov., 2010.

  • Chang, T. C. H. “Unsettling Irish Poetic Tradition: On Eavan Boland’s Domestic Violence.” Paper presented at 2010 Tamkang—Beijing University Foreign Languages and Literature Symposium, 2010.

  • Chang, T. C. H. “Irish Women, Perception, and Religion: On Edna O’Brien’s ‘Sister Imelda.’ ” Paper presented at the 17th Annual English and American Literature Association Conference, Soochow University, 2009.

  • Chang, T. C. H. “Irish Landscape, Nation, and Women in John Millington Synge’s One-Act Plays.” Paper presented at the 15th Annual English and American Literature Association Conference, Chung Cheng University, 2007.

  • Chang, T. C. H. “19th Century Romanticism/Nationalism/Ireland: On Thomas Moore’s The Irish Melodies.” Paper presented at the 14th Annual English and American Literature Association Conference, Cheng Kung University, 2006.

  • Chang, T. C. H. “Subjectivity and Difference: Identity Transformation in Modern Irish Women.” Paper presented at the 30th Annual Comparative Literature Association Conference, Tamkang University, 2006.

  • Chang, T. C. H. “Can Women Speak?: Gender Construction/ Deconstruction in Twentieth Century Irish Literature.” Paper presented at the 13th Annual English and American Literature Association Conference, Tung Hai University, 2005.

  • Chang, T. C. H. “From Literature through Translation to College Writing.” Speech delivered at the 14th International Symposium and Book Fair on English Teaching, English Teacher’s Association, Taipei, Taiwan, 2005.

  • Chang, T. C. H. “Cultural Clash: From Post-structuralism and Post-colonialism to Foreign Language Learning in Taiwan.” Paper presented at the Conference on Cultural Clash, Soochow University, 2005.

  • Chang, T. C. H. “Challenge and Strategy: Literature Courses for Non-English Majors.” Speech delivered at the 12th International Symposium and Book Fair on English Teaching, English Teacher’s Association, Taipei, Taiwan, 2003.

  • Chang, T. C. H. “Multi-Reading Approaches for Freshman English” Paper presented at the First Conference on College Freshman English Teaching, Soochow University, 2002.


Research Projects

  • 2009—2010  “Identity Politics in Contemporary Irish Woman Writing.” (NT $ 1300,000; National Science Council Post-doctoral Research Abroad Grant—NSC 97-2917-I-564-13)

 

 
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