Academic Staff
Dr. Bin CHEN
Research Assistant Professor
History of modern China, Islam in China, Religion and technology, China’s relationships with the Middle East and Africa
- HJ626
- +852 3400 8956
- bin-b.chen@polyu.edu.hk
Biography
Bin CHEN(陈斌) received his BA from Xiamen University, China, MA from the University of Macau, and Ph.D. from the Pennsylvania State University. Before joining The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, he worked as an Assistant Professor (Teaching) at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen, and as a post-doctoral teaching fellow at the Pennsylvania State University.
Education and Academic Qualifications
- 2018 Ph.D. Department of History, Pennsylvania State University
- 2012 M.A. Department of History, University of Macau
- 2010 B.A. Department of History, Xiamen University
Academic and Professional Experience
- 2023 Research Assistant Professor, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
- 2019 - 2023 Assistant Professor (Teaching), School of Humanities and Social Science, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen
- 2018 - 2019 Post-Doctoral Teaching Fellow, Department of History, Pennsylvania State University
- 2016 (Summer) Visiting Scholar, Institute of Advanced Studies in Humanities and Social Sciences, Nanjing University, China
Research Interests
Research Output
- 2023 “Forgotten Leaders: Chinese Hui Muslim Merchants in the Yangzi River Region, 1880s–1940s,” International Journal of Asian Studies 20, no. 2: 439–57. A&HCI
- 2022 “The Chengda Teachers School and Modern China’s Frontier Politics: Ethnicity and Religion in the Implementation of Republican Law, 1925-1949,” The Journal of Asian Studies 81, no. 2: 323-340. A&HCI, SSCI
- 2021 “Lost Voices: Chinese Muslim Modernists and the Issue of Polygamy in the Republican Era,” International Journal of Asian Studies 18, no. 1: 103-17. A&HCI
- 2020 “Understanding the Character Yi in Pre-Opium War Period Canton: A Study of The Merchant Newspaper the Canton Register,” Review of Culture International Edition, no. 62: 90-100.
- 2019 “When the Rule of Law Met Rule by the Party: The Conflicts between Baptist Schools and the Local Guomindang in Republican Suzhou,” Journal of Modern Chinese History 13, no. 2: 274-95. ESCI
- 2018 “The Calendar Reform in Republican China and Its Impact on Religion: A Study of the 1913 Birth Anniversary for Buddha” 论民初历法变革对佛教发展的影响—以1913年佛诞纪念会为例 (Lun minchu lifa biange dui Fojiao fazhan de yingxiang: yi 1913 nian fodan jinian hui weili), Anhui shixue 安徽史学, no.6: 83-90. CSSCI
• November 2022 - “Revisiting Urban Elite Activism in Republican China: A Case Study of Merchant Chen Jingyu, 1880s-1940s”
The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen, Modern Chinese History Research Workshop
• October 2021 - “Chinese Muslim Merchants in the Yangzi River Region”
Historical Society for Twentieth-Century China (Biennial Conference)
• August 2020 - “The Chengda Teachers’ School and the Frontier Policies of the Nationalist Regime”
Association for Asian Studies-in-Asia (Hong Kong) [Paper accepted – conference canceled]
• May 2020 – “Muslim National Salvation during the Second Sino-Japanese War: The Case of Chengda Teachers’ School”
International Young Scholars Forum (Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou)
• December 2018 – “When Judicial Independence Met Rule by the Party”
Qujiang Scholars Forum (Shaanxi Normal University, Xi’an)
• September 2018 – “The Calendar Reform in Republican China and Its Impact on Religion,”, Qujiang Scholars Forum, Xi’an, China.
Association for Asian Studies (National Conference – Washington D.C.)
• March 2018 – “Protestant Schools and the Gender Segregation in Republican Suzhou”
Association for Asian Studies-in-Asia (Seoul, South Korea)
• June 2017 – “Struggling with Nationalism: Chengda School and the Cult of Sun Yat-sen”
New England Region Association for Asian Studies Annual Conference (Boston.)
• January 2017 – “Grassroot Modernity: The Founding Story of the Chengda Teachers’ School”
Nanjing University (Nanjing, China): Invited Lecture
• June 2016 – “WWI and Chinese Intellectuals’ Understanding of Superstition”
American Academy of Religion - Eastern Regional Conference (Pittsburgh, USA)
• May 2016 – “Understanding Western Superstition in Modern China”