On September 29, 2024, the USC U.S.-China Institute hosted a workshop at the Huntington’s Chinese garden, offering K-12 educators hands-on insights into using the garden as a teaching tool. With expert presentations, a guided tour, and new resources, the event explored how Chinese gardens' rich history and cultural significance can be integrated into classrooms. Interested in learning more? Click below for details on the workshop and upcoming programs for educators.
Taiwan Studies: New Directions and Connections
The Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies will host a workshop for Taiwan studies.
When:
April 7, 2017 1:30pm to April 8, 2017 5:30pm
Where
Organizer: Professor David Der-wei Wang, Edward C. Henderson Professor of Chinese Literature, Harvard University
Sponsors: Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation, Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies
Discussants: David der-wei Wang, Michelle Yeh, Michael Berry, Mei Chia-ling
FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1PM – 5PM
Panel One: (Post-)Colonial Identities and Sentimentalities, 1934-1949, 1pm – 3pm
- Dingru Huang: Mapping a Mapping a Mapping a Strange Home: Strange Home: Strange Home: Weng Nao, the K?enji Neighborhood of Tokyo, and Taiwanese literature in the 1930s
- Chun -yu Lu: Lovable Foe: Sentimentalizing Morality in Wartime Taiwan, 1937-1945
- Dominic Meng-Hsuan Yang: Trauma and Diaspora of 1949: History, Memory, and Literature in Taiwan’s Mainlander Studies
Panel Two: Reinvention and Remembrance, 1950s-1970s, 3:30pm – 5pm
- Yang Fu-min: When “Wen” becomes Knowledge: Bing-ing Hsieh’s “How I Write”
- Cheng-chieh Chang: Remembering Taiwan’s Activism in 1960s-70s
- Lo Yichen: Of the Civil Law Family: The Troubling Concept for Legal Transplantation in Taiwan
SATURDAY APRIL 8, 10AM – 5:30PM
Panel Three: Politics and Poetics, 1979-1980s, 10am – 11:30am
- Kevin Luo: Revisiting Authoritarianism and Democratization in Taiwan: Analyzing Legislative Priorities and Texts, 1979-1987
- Chung Chih-wei: “Harbor Songs” between Men: The Perverse Lyricism in 1980s’ Taiwanese Nationalists
- Po-hsi Chen: An Isle of Socialism Unwritten: The Pro-Unification Leftist Literary Historiography in Taiwan
Panel Four: Contesting Voices and Networks, 1990s-2016, 1pm – 3pm
- Kyle Shernuk: Sinophone Tidalectics, or the Transculturation of Identity in the Age of Globalization
- Lily Wong: Affective Labor and the Sinophone Lens in “The Fourth Portrait”
- Dalton Lin: Can-Kicking in International Disputes: Parallel Self-Interest, Behind-the-Scene Diplomacy, and Lessons for Rapprochement Attempts
- Jaw-Nian Huang: Between State and Market: Institutional Origins of Media Self-censorship in Taiwan, 1949-2016
Roundtable, 3:30pm – 5:30pm
Cost:
Free
Phone Number:
(617) 495-0711
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