Bed Time: Knowing the World Through Objects

A First-Year Ampersand Program

Design, build, and travel as you explore intimacy, domesticity, and politics through the physical and digital world of an Antique Chinese Wedding Bed.

Where do modern people spend almost a third of our life? Our beds! In addition to facilitating sleep and relaxation and its association with marriage and sexuality, the bed also is the centerpiece and likely the most expensive item of furniture item in our bedroom. Across cultures, from medieval Europe to imperial China, beds served as tokens of status that marked families’ success and material wealth in increasingly commercialized and stratified societies. In the modern era, beds have drawn scrutiny from sociologists, sexologists, and social critics interested in questions of gender, family, and sexuality. A historical bed might also capture other meanings: its pathways through production, circulation, and consumption might illuminate global trading networks in lumber, labor, and finished commodities. It might reveal (or allow us to imagine) the transmission of craft knowledge, family formation, wealth accumulation (or dissipation), and social mobility. With these possibilities in mind, our team will investigate and restore an antique Chinese wedding bed. Our work will combine digital tools with humanistic research methods to facilitate a cultural history that engage questions of intimacy, nuptials, curation and conservation, and global trade and cultural exchanges.

How to Sign Up

The sign-up process with priority review for first-year programs and seminars begins on Thursday, May 16, 2024, at 4 p.m. (CT). To participate in priority review, please submit your application in the first 24 hours after applications open or by Friday, May 17, 2024, at 4 p.m. (CT). The link to the application form will be available on the First-Year Programs homepage during that time. You will need your WUSTL Key to apply. For each of the Ampersand Programs you wish to rank in your top four choices, you will need to complete a separate statement of interest (no more than 500 words) answering a program specific question. For Bed Time: Knowing the World Through Objects the 2024 application question is: In 250-500 words, what sparks your interest in studying objects, such as a bed? What are you excited to know more about?

First-Year Programs homepage

Meet our Instructors

Zhao Ma

​Associate Professor of Modern Chinese History and Culture

​Zhao Ma teaches courses on 20th-century Chinese history, city and women, crime and punishment, material culture, historical landscape, socialist culture, and the history of US-China relations. His current book project examines rumor-mongering in Beijing during the Korean War period.

Program Outline

Fall Semester

Knowing Through Objects:  The World of an Antique Chinese Wedding Bed

In the first semester we will learn about beds in a cross-cultural context and also about how beds and other domestic artifacts are curated in museums and art collections. We will visit many museums in St. Louis, as well as a trip to Kansas City to visit the Nelson Atkins Museum. The final project for the class will be a curatorial project. The entire course we will partner with graduate students who are also learning about object history.

Spring Semester

Knowing The Object: The Making and Remaking of an Antique Chinese Wedding Bed

The second semester of this program will delve deeper into the Antique Chinese Wedding Bed. Where was it made? Under what conditions? With what materials? How has it traveled? How can it be made and remade again? You will also have the opportunity to do a deep research project of object history. Centering our learning on an object and spinning out to see what else we can learn. The course will again partner with the graduate students for workshops and travel.

Finally, the course culminates in a trip to China in May where we will visit Shanghai and Ningbo. Our travels will take us to historical homes and vernacular buildings in late imperial China outside of Shanghai, the Broadway Apartments on the Bund in Shanghai, the socialist worker’s village and museum in Shanghai, the Ningbo Municipal Museum, and the Museum of Ningbo style furniture.

This program includes travel. Want to learn more about Ampersand Travel? Find all the details including general timeline and financial aid information HERE.