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Past Events: California
The Center for Chinese Studies at UCLA presents a talk with Guangming Li.
The Stanford University Center for East Asian Studies presents a screening of Datong: The Great Society
A talk presented by Dr. Andrew Kipnis of Australian National University, this paper examines the growth of one mid-sized Chinese city as a case in which intimate linkages between the rural/socialist past and the urban/capitalist present remain socially important.
This talk will explore the influence modern Japanese poetry exerted on Zhou Zuoren, one of the most significant Chinese writers, critics, and translators of the first part of the twentieth century, as well as its impact on modern Chinese culture as mediated through Zhou
The Stanford University Center for East Asian Studies presents a lecture on first-hand observations of the Gaxiandong Cave and research on the archaeological significance of the cave and the movement of the Xianbei into China.
The Stanford University Center for East Asian Studies presents a discussion of a historical political document, the Sacred Edict, and explores how and when the imperial institution became visible to the Chinese people.
The UC Berkeley Institute of East Asian Studies presents a colloquium on the growth of NGOs in China and discusses findings that form a baseline for understanding China's NGOs and point out new research questions that have yet to be addressed in the civil society literature.
Chinese independent documentaries have gained wide respect for their archiving of alternative social realities that are still regularly excluded from representation in official media. The speaker will explore a line of "personal documentary" and its exercise of a subjectively-driven intervention in historical thinking through the moving image.
UC Berkeley's Institute for East Asian Studies presents a talk by Yoshihide Soeya of Keio University on realities associated with the rise of China and its effect on Japan and South Korea.
The study engages the interface between the visual and the auditory in late Mao China.