Program in Early Cultures

Jeffrey Moser

Assistant Professor of History of Art and Architecture

Biography

Jeffrey Moser’s research attends, broadly, to the conceptual and material processes whereby past things are made present, with particular attention to the ways in which these processes intersect in the artistic practices and scholarly techne of medieval China. His recent book, Nominal Things: Bronzes in the Making of Medieval China (University of Chicago Press, 2023), examines the role that the rediscovery and decipherment of ancient bronzes in eleventh-century China played in restructuring medieval understandings of the relationship between words, images, and things. He is currently at work on a second book project, tentatively titled Moral Depths: Making Antiquity in a Medieval Chinese Cemetery, which examines the recently discovered family cemetery of the Neo-Confucian philosopher and antiquarian Lü Dalin (1040–1093). His other publications—on such subjects as ceramics, ink painting, antiquarianism, visual exegesis, and geography—are linked through their consistent interrogation of the ways in which new modes of attention to the material world, both past and present, catalyze new understandings of the past.

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