Tom Hare
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (July 2008) |
Thomas Blenman Hare (born 1952) is the William Sauter LaPorte '28 Professor in Regional Studies and the Chair of the Department of Comparative Literature at Princeton University.[1]
Originally trained as a Japanologist and spending much of his career at Stanford University,[2] Hare has broken new ground by applying post-structuralist analysis of semiotics and discourse of the body to ancient Egyptian language and culture in his book ReMembering Osiris: Number, Gender, and the Word in Ancient Egyptian Representational Systems[3] (1999, Stanford), and, most recently, brought speech-act theory and performance studies to bear on Japanese Noh drama in his translation and commentary on Zeami's Performance Notes (2008, Columbia). He has also written on Kūkai and Kamo no Chōmei.[4]
References[]
- ^ "Thomas Hare | Comparative Literature". complit.princeton.edu. Retrieved 2020-06-15.
- ^ Minnesota State University - Tom Hare (relatively old biography)
- ^ Google Books - ReMembering Osiris
- ^ Princeton East Asian Studies - Tom Hare
- American Egyptologists
- American Japanologists
- Japanese–English translators
- American translators
- 1952 births
- Living people
- Princeton University faculty
- Stanford University faculty
- Egyptologist stubs
- American archaeologist stubs
- American translator stubs