Haun Saussy


Caleb Powell Haun Saussy is University Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Chicago.

Research

Saussy's first book, The Problem of a Chinese Aesthetic, discussed the tradition of commentary that has grown up around the early Chinese poetry collection Shi jing. This was followed by Great Walls of Discourse and Other Adventures in Cultural China, an account of the ways of knowing and describing specific to China scholarship, and Sinographies, co-edited with Steven Yao and Eric Hayot. Other interests are reflected in the edited books Women Writers of Traditional China: An Anthology of Poetry and Criticism, Partner to the Poor: A Paul Farmer Reader and Ernest Fenollosa / Ezra Pound, The Chinese Written Character: A Critical Edition. Saussy and Perry Meisel supplied introductions, notes and errata to the reissue of Wade Baskin's translation of Ferdinand de Saussure's Course in General Linguistics. In 2016 he published The Ethnography of Rhythm: Orality and Its Technologies, which subsequently won the Scaglione Prize for Comparative Studies of the MLA. In 2017 followed Translation as Citation: Zhuangzi Inside Out. With Rivi Handler-Spitz and Pauline Chen Lee, he edited and translated A Book to Burn And A Book to Keep : Selected Writings of Li Zhi. He is an avid cyclist, memorizer of verb paradigms and lyric poetry, and contributor to a variety of art installations including the innovative Martin Luther King, Jr. Library in San Jose, California. His articles range widely, from the imaginary universal languages of Athanasius Kircher to Chinese musicology to the great Qing dynasty novel Honglou meng and the history of oral-poetry theory. He edited the American Comparative Literature Associations 2004 report on the state of the discipline. With others, he maintains a blog, . Among his editorial responsibilities are: co-editor, Chinese Literature: Essays, Articles, Reviews; co-editor, Critical Inquiry; editorial board member, Zhongguo xueshu / China Scholarship, Comparative Literature, Warring States Papers, Modern Philology, Cross-Currents'', and ', etc. With Lazar Fleishman of Stanford University, he edits a series, "Verbal Art," now published by Fordham University Press.

Biography

Saussy is the son of socialite Lola Haun Saussy and Tupper Saussy, an American musician and conspiracy theorist. Raised in suburban Nashville, Tennessee, he attended Deerfield Academy and then received his B.A. at Duke University in 1981. He received his M.Phil and Ph.D. at Yale University in comparative literature. Between college and graduate school, he studied linguistics and Chinese in Paris and Taiwan. Saussy was previously an assistant professor and associate professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. He was an associate professor, full professor, and chair of the Department of Comparative Literature at Stanford University, prior to joining the Yale faculty in 2004. Saussy moved to the University of Chicago in 2011.

Honors