Join us for a free one-day workshop for educators at the Japanese American National Museum, hosted by the USC U.S.-China Institute and the National Consortium for Teaching about Asia. This workshop will include a guided tour of the beloved exhibition Common Ground: The Heart of Community, slated to close permanently in January 2025. Following the tour, learn strategies for engaging students in the primary source artifacts, images, and documents found in JANM’s vast collection and discover classroom-ready resources to support teaching and learning about the Japanese American experience.
Cold War and East Asian Cultural Politics: Chinese Perspectives
The Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies at Harvard University presents a workshop on the Cold War.
Where
Organized by Xiaojue Wang, Assistant Professor, Modern Chinese Literature and Culture, University of Pennsylvania; An Wang Postdoctoral Fellow
The formation of the global Cold War order generated not only geopolitical bifurcation, but also a new way of knowledge production, through which power worked to create allegiance and alienation, intimacy and hostility, divisions and distinctions. In many East Asian societies, modern Chinese literature and culture as well as the paradigm of Chinese studies were reconfigured conforming or resisting the leveling and polarizing forces of Cold War ideology. This process often produced and implicated new formations of ethnic and national identities, literature and cultural politics, reorientations of cultural tradition, and modernization of imaginations in these societies. The field of modern Chinese literature and culture has been marked by a tendency of compulsively rewriting its own disciplinary narratives, which has hitherto taken tradition/modernity, East/West as its discursive basis. By repositioning Chinese literary studies in the framework of Cold War East Asia, the workshop’s purpose is not only to add an inter-Asia, cross-regional comparative dimension, but also to bring diverse imageries of modernity in the larger East Asian area into dialogues.
For full workshop schedule and more information, click here.
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Please join us for the Grad Mixer! Hosted by USC Annenberg Office of International Affairs, Enjoy food, drink and conversation with fellow students across USC Annenberg. Graduate students from any field are welcome to join, so it is a great opportunity to meet fellow students with IR/foreign policy-related research topics and interests.
RSVP link: https://forms.gle/1zer188RE9dCS6Ho6
Events
Hosted by USC Annenberg Office of International Affairs, enjoy food, drink and conversation with fellow international students.
Join us for an in-person conversation on Thursday, November 7th at 4pm with author David M. Lampton as he discusses his new book, Living U.S.-China Relations: From Cold War to Cold War. The book examines the history of U.S.-China relations across eight U.S. presidential administrations.