Fellowship / Fellows

David Cheng Chang

  • 2021–2022
  • History
  • Radcliffe-Harvard Yenching Institute Fellow
  • Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (China)
Portrait of David Chang
Photo courtesy of David Chang

This information is accurate as of the fellowship year indicated for each fellow.

David Cheng Chang is an associate professor in the Division of Humanities at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. He studies the Cold War, US–China relations, and the social history of war and revolution as experienced by ordinary people. The Hijacked War: The Story of Chinese POWs in the Korean War (Stanford University Press, 2020) is his first book.

At Radcliffe, Chang is working on his next book, “Between Worlds: China’s WWII Interpreters and Their Divergent Fates in China, Taiwan, and the United States.” Focusing on the more than 3,000 Chinese college students, including 22 women, mobilized to serve as interpreters for the American and British allied forces in the China-Burma-India theater, he examines their diverse backgrounds, varied wartime experiences, and divergent postwar trajectories. Using interdisciplinary source materials, including documents, oral histories, memoirs, reportage, poetry, and literature, he will weave together the interpreters’ personal histories with the larger military, political, diplomatic, and social history of the Second World War, the Chinese Civil War, the Korean War, and the Cold War.

Chang received a BA in economics from the University of Michigan in 1998, an MA in East Asian studies from Stanford University in 2006, and a PhD in modern Chinese history from the University of California, San Diego, in 2011. He was the Center for East Asian Studies Postdoctoral Fellow at Stanford University in 2011–2012. His work has been funded by the Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation, the Fulbright Program, and the Research Grant Council of Hong Kong.

Our 2023–2024 Fellows

01 / 09

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