MarjorieBurge

  • Assistant Professor of Japanese
  • Undergraduate Faculty Advisor (Japanese)
  • Honors Council Representative
  • ASIAN LANGUAGES AND CIVILIZATIONS
Photo of Marjorie Burge
Address

泭313

Office Hours

Wednesdays 12:30-1:30pm泭

Affiliated Faculty are not employees of the Center for Asian Studies. Please contact this faculty member at their home department.


Profile

Marjorie Burge received a BA in Asian Studies and Japanese from the George Washington 勛圖厙, and an MA and PhD from the Department of East Asian Languages.& Cultures at UC Berkeley. From 2018-2019, she was a Postdoctoral Researcher at the 勛圖厙 of Chicago. Her PhD dissertation, Inscriptive Life and Sinographic Literary Culture in Early Historic Korea and Japan, examines inscribed wood slips known as泭mokkan泭excavated from sites in southern Korea and Japan in order to shed light on the nature of written culture in early historic Paekche (ca. third century-660CE), Silla (ca. third century-935CE) and Japan. The dissertation also attempts to answer questions related to the role of allochthons (Korean migrants) at the Japanese court in the development of written culture. Marjorie is currently working on revising her dissertation for publication as a book titled泭Unearthing the Written Cultures of Early Korea and Japan. In addition to this book project, Marjorie is currently working on two smaller projects, one on the late-ninth century泭waka-kanshi泭collection泭Shinsen 紼硃紳y莽堯贖, and another on the literary culture of the court at the mi capital (667-672).

Selected Publications

  • Visions of the Eastland: Reading the Azuma uta of 紼硃紳y莽堯贖. Japanese Language and Literature 58.2 (2024): 79-113.
  • Wooden Inscriptions and the Culture of Writing in Sabi Paekche. Asian Perspectives 58.1 (Spring 2019): 47-73.

Translations:

  • Lee SeungJae, Developing a Terminology for Pre-hangeul Korean Transcription. Scripta 8 (October 2016): 25-71.
  • Kin Bunky, Literary Sinitic and East Asia: A Cultural Sphere of Vernacular Reading, 2021 (co-translator)

Research Interests

Pre-modern Japanese literature and culture, Pre-modern Korean literature and culture, early inscriptions, vernacular writing systems, vernacular literature, archaeology of proto/early historic Japan and Korea, waka poetry, Silla hyangga, 紼硃紳y莽堯贖, elegiac verse, womens diary literature