Michael Nylan | |||||||
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Born | 1950 (age 73–74) | ||||||
Nationality | American | ||||||
Alma mater | University of California, Berkeley (B.A.) University at Buffalo (M.A.) Princeton University (Ph.D.) | ||||||
Awards | Guggenheim Fellowship | ||||||
Scientific career | |||||||
Fields | Early Chinese History | ||||||
Institutions | University of California, Berkeley | ||||||
Chinese name | |||||||
Chinese | 戴梅可 | ||||||
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Michael Nylan is the Jane K. Sather Chair of History at the University of California, Berkeley. She writes about history, literature, philosophy, art and archaeology of early imperial China.[1]
Nylan was born in 1950 and named after Saint Michael by her mother, thankful for a successful birth after a series of miscarriages.[2] After undergraduate and masters study in history, she studied Classical Chinese with Michael Loewe and fell in love with the subject. Her doctoral work an Princeton University was in history and archaeology.[3] She was one of the first American scholars in China after the opening in the 1970s, but her stay at the Institute of Archaeology of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences was unsuccessful, due to her male colleagues' refusal to take a woman on excavations.[2] She was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2014.[4]