Weiao Xing is a cultural and literary historian of the early modern Atlantic world, focusing on English-Indigenous and French-Indigenous encounters from the late 16th to the early 18th centuries. He earned his PhD in History from the University of Cambridge in 2023 and was previously trained in translation studies, historical sociolinguistics, and liberal arts. For his doctoral research, Weiao Xing integrated digitised primary sources with rare books and manuscripts consulted in the UK, France, Canada, and the US. In 2023, Weiao Xing undertook short-term visiting fellowships at the British Library’s Eccles Centre for American Studies, the Huntington Library, and the Massachusetts Historical Society.
Currently, Weiao Xing is a visiting postdoctoral fellow at the Institute of Modern History, University of Tübingen, hosted by Professor Renate Dürr. His ongoing project builds upon his thesis research on languages, translation, and encounters in the 17th-century North Atlantic world, aiming at producing a monograph that illustrates language learning and translingual knowledge production. Meanwhile, he is delving into the history of books and print culture, seeking to comprehend the early modern reception of the French Jesuit Relations and the translation of books on the Americas in Europe. As a historian with strong interdisciplinary interests, Weiao Xing has explored themes including language education in 17th-century Massachusetts, historical narratives in early 18th-century New England, and the dramas and historical accounts in 17th-century Québec. Beyond his academic engagement, Weiao Xing is a practitioner of public history. He has served as an editor for ‘Doing History in Public’, a blog series run by postgraduate historians at the University of Cambridge and has contributed posts to various platforms.