I am a Special Research Fund (BOF) Postdoctoral Fellow (“Doctor-Assistant”) in the Department of Languages and Cultures (Sinology) at Ghent University, Belgium, and a member of the Ghent Centre for Buddhist Studies. I hold a Master of Arts in Religious Studies from the University of Louvain (2015, Summa cum laude) and a Ph.D. in Oriental Languages and Cultures (Sinology) from Ghent University (2023). My dissertation, "The Zutang ji 祖堂集: Aspects of Textual History, Genealogy, and Intertextuality," delved into the compilation history, structure, and sources of the Zutang ji (Collection of the Patriarchal Hall), a mid-tenth century twenty-juan 卷 (fascicle) Chan/Zen 禪 Buddhist text. This work is the earliest extant anthology of bio-hagiographic narratives and dialogues of the Chan patriarchs and masters structured around a complex, multi-branched genealogical framework.

My current research investigates the formation of Chan historiography during the Tang-Song transition period (ca. 750–1000). Specifically, I examine how Chan historians shaped and refined bio-hagiographies for the patriarchs and early Chan masters in the four earliest extant anthologies from this period: the Baolin zhuan 寶林傳 (Chronicle of the Baolin [Monastery]; ca. 795–96/801), the Shengzhou ji 聖冑集 (Collection of the Sagely Descendant [i.e., Bodhidharma]; ca. 899), the Zutang ji (Collection of the Patriarchal Hall; ca. 952), and the Jingde chuandeng lu 景德傳燈錄 (Jingde-Era Record of the Transmission of the Lamp; ca. 1004). For further details, please refer to the "Research" section.

As a contributor to the Database of Medieval Chinese Texts (DMCT), I am responsible for the collection and input of variant characters (yitizi 異體字) and the creation of XML-based, TEI-compliant editions of sections of the Zutang ji and related Dunhuang 敦煌 manuscripts, such as the Quanzhou Qianfo xinzhu zhuzushi song 泉州千佛新著諸祖師頌 (Or.8210/S.1635) and the Shengzhou ji (Or.8210/S.4478).

My research interests include pre-modern Chan/Zen literature, Chinese Buddhism from the late Tang to the early Northern Song, Dunhuang manuscripts, pre-modern Chinese manuscript and print culture, Chinese writing (e.g., variant characters), and Digital Humanities methodologies for East Asian studies (e.g., TEI scholarly digital editions of pre-modern Chinese sources, Historical Social Network Analysis).

Links:
Curriculum Vitae
Ghent University Research Portal & Database of Medieval Chinese Texts
Google Scholar
Orchid ID
Academia.edu