Penn Center For East Asian Studies Newsletter
2007 - 08: Issue no. 13, November 16, 2007
The CEAS Newsletter weekly notifies East Asianists in our region of events and opportunities of interest. Notices appear under six headings:
- University of Pennsylvania East Asia Events
- Regional East Asia Events
- Employment and Internship Opportunities
- Fellowship and Award Opportunities
- East Asia Study Opportunities and Queries
- Conferences and Workshops
If you have notices in these categories that you like posted here, please
send them to nriley@sas.upenn.edu.
* Indicates notices appearing here for the first time.
Featured Event
Wednesday, November 28, 12:00PM, The Forum in Stiteler Hall
The Welfare State or Faith? Explaining Weak Islamist Mobilization in Malaysia
Kikue Hamayotsu, Postdoctoral Fellow, Columbia University
How do Islamists recruit committed activists and what are the conditions for successful recruitment for Islamist movements? This talk attempts to explain outcomes in the interesting case of Malaysia, where Islamist movements have largely been unsuccessful in recruiting committed followers in one of the most important electoral constituencies: the urban middle-class. Drawing on extensive fieldwork, Prof. Hamayotsu shows that the Malaysian State's provision of both secular and religious services significantly affects organizational and ideological conditions for Islamist recruitment, and sets Malaysia apart from many other Islamic societies by moderating forces for Islamic radicalism.
Issues in Contemporary East Asia Lecture Series, Co-sponsored with the Penn Comparative Politics Workshop and the Middle East Center
(I) University of Pennsylvania East Asia Events
The Chinese Music Society proudly presents its fall concert
Music of the Heart,
a musical show featuring popular songs, in original ensemble
arrangements for both traditional Chinese and Western instruments,
from contemporary Chinese artists such as Jay Chou, Leehom Wang,
David Tao, and Michael Wong as part of an original love story.
We invite you to join us for a unique and captivating experience!
Delicious Chinese treats will be served!
Friday, November 16, 2007
7:00 pm
Heyer Sky Lounge, Harrison College House
Saturday, November 17, 2007
2:30 pm
Amado Recital Hall, Irvine Auditorium
$7 at the door, $5 on Locust Walk
or by reservation to PennCMS@gmail.com
before Friday, November 16, 2007
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2007 Wharton Asia Business Conference
Rediscovering Risks and Rewards in Asia
Register now! http://www.whartonglobal.com/asia
Saturday, November 17, 2007
The Ritz-Carlton , Philadelphia
Speakers Include:
Paul DiPaola , Director and Head of China, Bain & Company
Michael Fung , Chairman, JPMorgan Private Bank – Asia
Renato de Guzman , CEO , ING Private Bank – Asia
Kenneth Koo , Chief of Staff to CEO & Co-Head of Asia Pacific M&A, Citigroup
Come speak to recruiters about positions in Asia at our post-conference Career Fair
Participating firms include Bear Stearns, Citigroup, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, Bain & Company, Goldman Sachs , Fidelity, and more…
Register early to have your resume included in the resume book!
Early bird special ends November 1 st 2007
For more details, visit http://www.whartonglobal.com/asia
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Wednesday, November 28, 12:00PM, The Forum in Stiteler Hall , The Welfare State or Faith? Explaining Weak Islamist Mobilization in Malaysia
Kikue Hamayotsu, Postdoctoral Fellow, Columbia University
How do Islamists recruit committed activists and what are the conditions for successful recruitment for Islamist movements? This talk attempts to explain outcomes in the interesting case of Malaysia, where Islamist movements have largely been unsuccessful in recruiting committed followers in one of the most important electoral constituencies: the urban middle-class. Drawing on extensive fieldwork, Prof. Hamayotsu shows that the Malaysian State's provision of both secular and religious services significantly affects organizational and ideological conditions for Islamist recruitment, and sets Malaysia apart from many other Islamic societies by moderating forces for Islamic radicalism.
Issues in Contemporary East Asia Lecture Series
Co-sponsored with the Penn Comparative Politics Workshop and the Middle East Center
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Wednesday, November 28, 7:00PM, Fisher-Bennett Hall 231
Screening of: Miyazaki , Princess Mononoke (Mononokehime ), 1997
Japanese Cinema Series
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*Wednesday, November 28, 7:00PM, Logan Hall 402
The Ancient Asian Harp Reborn, An Illustrated Lecture and Musical Demonstration
Professor Emeritus Bo Lawergren with Tomoko Sugawara, Harpist and Kugo Player
The angular harp, with an L-shaped body, arose in Mesopotamia around 2000 BCE and, following the Silk Road, reached China and eventually Korea and Japan. Artists in all the cultures it penetrated loved to depict its beautiful shape and their local musicians playing it. Around the year 1000 CE, however, the European harp of irregular triangular shape emerged, and by 1600 the angular harp vanished. Recently, musical archeologists have reconstructed the angular harp (called the kugo in Japan and konghou in China). The lecture will include a kugo performance of resurrected ancient tunes from T’ang China and Nara Japan as well as modern pieces composed for the kugo.
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Wednesday, December 5, 7:00PM, Fisher-Bennett Hall 231
Screening of: Kitano, Fire-works (Hana-bi) , 1997
Japanese Cinema Series
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Saturday, December 8, 10:00 am to 2:00 pm
Penn Museum Family Workshop : Chinese Paper Cutting: Craft and Culture
Paper cut creations—a fun and festive way to adorn homes, windows, and gates—have a long history in China . Artist and craft teacher Yu Yang introduces families to this handicraft tradition at this workshop where participants learn about and create decorations, including paper flowers, animals and fanciful ornaments, just in time for holiday gift giving! $10 per person ($5 per member) includes craft experience, recommended for ages 7 and above, and admission donation to the Museum.
Pre-registration recommended. Drop-ins welcome while supplies last. Information: 215/898-4016.
Please visit http://www.museum.upenn.edu/new/events/calitem.php?which=1435 for more details and to register for this event.
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Japanese Cinema Series
Fisher-Bennett Hall, Room 231
Wednesdays, 7 p.m.
9/12 Kurosawa, Rashômon , 1950
9/19 Mizoguchi, The Life of Oharu (Saikaku ichidai onna) , 1952
9/26 Mizoguchi, Ugetsu (Ugetsu monogatari) , 1953
10/3 Ozu, Late Spring (Banshun) , 1949
10/10 Ozu, Tokyo Story ( Tokyo monogatari) , 1953
10/24 Kurosawa, Stray Dog (Nora inu) , 1949
10/31 Kurosawa, To Live (Ikiru) , 1952
11/7 Kurosawa, Seven Samurai (Shichinin no samurai), 1954
11/14 Itami, Tampopo , 1985
11/28 Miyazaki , Princess Mononoke (Mononokehime), 1997
12/5 Kitano, Fire-works (Hana-bi) , 1997
Offered in conjunction with Art History 210 and Film 223: Postwar Japanese Cinema and Visual Culture
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A Harmonious Information Society? Social Stratification, ICT & Media in China
A one-day symposium to be held on January 25, 2008 generously supported and hosted by the Center for Global Communication Studies at the Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania.
Economic development and ‘informatization' in China have gone hand in hand. While the growth of the economy over the years has been and still is at an incredible rate, the adoption rate of information technology, such as that of mobile phones and the internet, has been just as, if not even more impressive. However, with recent discussions about the construction of a ‘harmonious society' appearing on the political agenda, the focus has started to shift from economic growth to the problem of achieving more overall societal balance. This shift in official discourse acknowledges the need to address social problems, including the tensions between state and market forces, a growing gap between the rich and the poor and widening disparities between the urban and rural population. While there has been research on social stratification in China, little attention so far has been paid to the role information technologies and the media play in this process.
First, what are the social consequences of an increasing informatization of the Chinese society? Who are the main users of new technologies and what are they using them for? And what happens to those who are left out, who do not have the access, or the education to develop the skills and literacy necessary to work with digital media? A deeper underlying question perhaps is, where did these technologies come from and why were they so generously supported? What roles do economic and political considerations play in shaping the diffusion of technology that can be adopted for either repressive or emancipatory purposes?
Second, what is the role of the media in addressing social inequality? In the light of an increasing stratified society, how do the media, both the traditional and the new media, represent competing voices and interests and how do they communicate these disagreements to the public? How do members of the public make sense or fail to make sense of these media representations?
On Friday January 25, 2008, we will bring together an impressive group of scholars for a one-day symposium to address these contentious questions. Our panels include renowned scholars coming from a wide range of disciplines, such as, communication, political science, anthropology, sociology, cultural studies and China studies. Participation among all those attending will be enthusiastically encouraged.
For more information about the symposium, please contact Lokman Tsui <ltsui@asc.upenn.edu>
(II) Regional East Asia Events Princeton University Buddhist Studies Workshop 2007-2008
Imperial Funerals in Medieval Japan (Lecture in Japanese).
Monday, November 26, 2007, 4:30 pm, 1879 Hall, Room 137
UEJIMA Susumu ( Kyoto Prefectural University)
Imaginary Geographies: Buddhism and the Japanese World Map
Monday, February 4, 2008, 4:30 pm, 1879 Hall, Room 137
Max Moerman ( Barnard College)
Art History, Buddhist Studies, Tibet: New Perspectives from the Tibet Site Seminar
March 7-9, 2008, Friday-Sunday, McCormick 101
Friday, 4:30 pm: Keynote address by Deborah Klimburg-Salter (University of Vienna).
Saturday and Sunday: Papers by graduate-student participants in the 2007 Tibet Site Seminar, with responses from Janet Gyatso (Harvard Divinity School), Marylin Rhie (Smith College), and Gene E. Smith (Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center).
Co-sponsored by the Tang Center for East Asian Art and the Center for the Study of Religion.
The conference is free but registration is required: http://www.princeton.edu/TibetSem/program-conference.htm .
Bringing Together Intuition and Law:
Linguistic Relevance and Moral Creativity in Theravada Buddhist Ethics
Tuesday, March 25, 2008, 4:30 pm, 1879 Hall, Room 137
Charles Hallisey ( Harvard University)
War Magic in Tibetan Buddhism
Thursday, April 17, 2008, 4:30 pm, 1879 Hall, Room 137
Bryan Cuevas, ( Florida State University and the Institute for Advanced Study)
Questions? Please send e-mail to bbermel@princeton.edu.
The Buddhist Studies Workshop is generously supported by the Provost, the Center for the Study of Religion, and the Department of Religion.
Additional co-sponsors include:
The Program in East Asian Studies
The P.Y. and Kinmay W. Tang Center for East Asian Art
The Princeton University Library
The Council on the Humanities
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The Fall 2007 schedule of Oriental Club of Philadelphia is as follows:
October 18, Frank J. Hoffman, "Process Concepts of Text, Practice, and No Self
in Buddhism"
November 8, Paula Sabloff, "Mongolian Herders Talk about
Democracy"
December 6, Annette Yoshiko Reed, "Beyond the Land of Nod:
Images of India and China in Syriac Literature"
All meetings are on Thursdays
at 6 p.m. Dinners follow at area restaurants as announced. The dinner meeting
of the October 18 event will be in Han-Wool Restaurant. The Spring schedule
will be announced when available. The annual banquet speaker for 2008 will be
Gernot Bohme.
Members should RSVP to fhoffman@sas.upenn.edu about dinner before next week
Tuesday at noon.
Those with a career interest in Asia, including faculty, staff, and graduate
students, are welcome as guests. First time visitors without a member to
introduce them may be guests of the club president.
Sincerely,
Frank Hoffman
OC President (2007-08)
(III) Employment and Internship Opportunities
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
Departments of East Asian Studies and Comparative Literature
ARTS AND SCIENCE
New York University
The Departments of East Asian Studies and Comparative Literature at New York University invite applications for a joint, tenure-track position at the assistant professor level in modern Japanese and comparative literature. Appointment will begin September 1, 2008, subject to budgetary and administrative approval. We are especially interested in candidates whose teaching and research interests encompass areas such as narrative and textual analysis, comparative social theory, and global cultural dynamics. Applicants should be able to work in several linguistic traditions. Candidate should have Ph.D. in hand by the time of appointment.
Please send application letter, curriculum vitae, and 3 letters of reference to:
Japanese/Comparative Literature Search Committee
Department of East Asian Studies
New York University
715 Broadway, 3rd Floor
New York , NY 10003
The search committee will begin reviewing applications on November 16, 2007 , and will continue until the position is filled.
NYU is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer.
(IV) Fellowship and Award Opportunities
The National Bureau of Asian Research (NBR) is pleased to announce the Next Generation Leadership in Asian Affairs Fellowship for 2008-2009, a year-long program that focuses on bridging the gap between scholarship and policymaking. The fellowship is open to recent master's degree recipients and professional degree holders (e.g., MA, MBA, LLM, JD, etc.) and will be based at NBR's headquarters in Seattle. Fellows will collaborate with leading scholars to conduct independent research and share research findings with the policymaking community in Washington, D.C.
The Next Generation Leadership program, which is in its third year, is breaking new ground by mentoring and immersing young Asia specialists from a wide variety of fields and interests to bridge the gap between the best scholarly research and the pressing needs of U.S. foreign policy toward a rapidly changing Asia. Each fellow will receive a fellowship award, as well as a stipend for relocation expenses.
Application Deadline
January 14, 2008
Eligibility
The fellowship is open to recent master's degree recipients and professional degree holders (e.g. MA, MBA, LLM, JD, etc.)
Location
Seattle, Washington
The application deadline is January 14, 2008. Fellowships begin June 2, 2008 and conclude May 30, 2009. For further information and application materials please visit http://www.nbr.org/NextGeneration.
Please forward and post the full-text announcement available at http://nbr.org/nextgeneration/announcement.pdf. Thank you for sharing this with your colleagues and students.
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The National Security Education Program provides a range of unique funding opportunities for U.S. students to become more proficient in the cultures and languages of world regions critical to U.S. interests, including Africa, Asia, Central & Eastern Europe, Eurasia, Latin America & the Caribbean, and the Middle East .
THE NSEP SERVICE REQUIREMENT: National Security Education Program award recipients represent a vital pool of highly motivated individuals who wish to work in the federal national security arena. All NSEP award recipients make a commitment to working in the federal government for a minimum of one year.
~BOREN SCHOLARSHIPS FOR UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS
PROGRAM INFORMATION: Boren Scholarships provide funding for undergraduates to
participate in study abroad programs outside of Western Europe , Canada , Australia , and New Zealand . Applicants are encouraged to work with their study abroad offices and NSEP campus representatives to select an appropriate program.
ELIGIBILITY: All Boren Scholarship applicants must be U.S. citizens, enrolled as undergraduates in U.S. institutions and planning to study less commonly taught languages abroad. Scholars must complete their NSEP-funded programs before graduation.
LENGTH OF STUDY: Boren Scholarships are available for full academic year or semester programs. Funding for summer language immersion programs of eight weeks or longer is available to freshmen and sophomores, or science and engineering majors. To promote cultural and linguistic immersion, longer periods of study are recommended, and preference will be given to applicants pursuing study abroad for a full academic year.
~BOREN FELLOWSHIPS FOR GRADUATE STUDENTS
PROGRAM INFORMATION: Boren Fellowships are intended to provide or add to the international component of U.S. graduate students' education. Boren fellowships provide support for overseas study, domestic study, or a combination of both. Boren Fellowship applicants design their own programs, and most successful applicants include a significant overseas component. Domestic study is limited to language or area studies that enhance a degree program.
ELIGIBILITY: All Boren Fellowship applicants U.S. citizens, enrolled as Graduate students in U.S. graduate institutions and planning to study less commonly taught languages and world regions.
For more details and information on other programs, visit www.iie.org/nsep
(V) East Asia Study Opportunities and Queries
*New Program in Teacher Education:
Mandarin Chinese Language and Culture
This year, Penn GSE will be launching a new master's program for those interested in teaching Mandarin Chinese.
This 10-month, full-time program is designed for students who have a solid undergraduate background in Chinese languages, culture, history, and literature, and who want to prepare to teach these in public secondary schools.
The teacher preparation program in Mandarin Chinese Language and Culture is being offered in conjunction with Penn's Center for East Asian Studies and the East Asian Languages and Civilization program. This collaboration has been both crucial and unique to the design of the program, as historically, schools of education and departments of Chinese studies have seen their missions and roles as academically separate.
The program leads both to the M.S.Ed. degree and to faculty recommendation for certification from the Pennsylvania Department of Education in secondary education: Mandarin Chinese Language and Culture.
The program is currently accepting and reviewing applications and will admit students to matriculate in the cohort beginning on July 14, 2008. This cohort of students can expect to graduate in May 2009. Program faculty and staff are looking forward to welcoming all interested applicants to an open house, to be held on Tuesday, December 4 , from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. at Houston Hall, Bodek Lounge, 3600 Spruce Street .
For further information on the Open House, please check this website:
http://www.gse.upenn.edu/admissions_financial/events
For further information on the new teacher preparation program in
Mandarin Chinese Language and Culture, please check this website:
http://www.gse.upenn.edu/degrees_programs/eld_secondary.php
For questions, contact Maureen Cotterill at MaureenC@gse.upenn.edu
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*Research Opportunities in Nanjing
The Institute for International Research at the Hopkins-Nanjing Center is a joint research initiative of Johns Hopkins University and Nanjing University and located in Nanjing, China.
This competition is open to professors, associate professors and assistant professors, as well as established scholars holding non-faculty appointments. PhD students whose dissertation research requires work in Nanjing may also apply. While no financial support is available, fellows will have an affiliation with the Center and be a part of the HNC community.
The Institute's research program addresses a variety of topics related to political, economic, social, environmental, and health issues, especially as they relate to contemporary China. Comparative analyses and inter-disciplinary projects are particularly encouraged, promoting the development and enhancement of various academic disciplines in China. Work carried out jointly by international and Chinese scholars will bring new methodological approaches to Chinese scholars and provide important access to China for international scholars.
Resources:
The Hopkins-Nanjing Center Library
- The only uncensored, open-stacks library in China with both English and Chinese collections
- 75,000 monographs
- 400 journals and periodicals
- Web and CD-based resources
The Sheridan Libraries at Johns Hopkins University
- Access to electronic resources
The Nanjing University Library
- Access to electronic resources
Committee for Scholarly Access appointed by Nanjing University
- Will facilitate access to library collections and archival material, such as those available at the Second Historical Archive in Nanjing, the Nanjing Municipal Library, and the Jiangsu Provincial Library
Environment:
Scholars will benefit from the intellectual stimulation of the other scholars and fellows in residence, as well as the faculty and students at the Center. In addition, many visitors - including scholars, government officials, and business leaders - visit the Center during the academic year. Various formal and informal mechanisms such as colloquia, dinners, and workshops/conferences will bring scholars and fellows together on a regular basis. Life at the Center includes: access to graduate student research assistants, administrative support from the Hopkins-Nanjing Center staff, and living and working accommodations conducive to scholarly work.
Questions? Please see www.nanjing.jhu.edu Research and request for proposals.
Email us at nanjing@jhu.edu or call 202-663-5802.
Proposal Deadline extended to: 2/1/2008
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CC International is recruiting 160 volunteers to participate in the Olympic Game Time Volunteer Program. Volunteers will be completing projects in Beijing during the 2008 Olympic Games.
• Follow this link for a complete PROGRAM DESCRIPTION
http://www.communitycollaborations.org/chinagames.html
Applications must be submitted by December 1, 2007
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NSF IGERT at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
“Biodiversity Conservation and Sustainable Development in Southwest China”
A Graduate Traineeship Program Supported by the National Science Foundation
Exceptional students interested in interdisciplinary and international environmental study are invited to apply for an NSF IGERT PhD Traineeship at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. These traineeships have a generous stipend, tuition waver, and health benefits.
Meeting the major challenges of biodiversity conservation and sustainable development requires understanding the interactions of biological, physical, social, and economic forces. IGERT trainees will address these issues by pursuing a PhD in one of over a dozen departments and participating in IGERT seminars, workshops, language training, and field research in the Himalayas of Yunnan, China - a "biodiversity hotspot." For more information and application instructions, please visit www.swchina.wisc.edu. The application deadline for this program is February 1, 2008.
NOTE: UW-Madison is also home to a second IGERT program, Certificate on Humans and the Global Environment (CHANGE), focused on issues of vulnerability and sustainability of the global environment. The application deadline for this program is January 2, 2008. For more information, please visit http://www.sage.wisc.edu/igert.
(VI) Conferences and Workshops *Age of Comparison?
NYU Graduate Student Conference
Hosted by the departments of Comparative Literature,
East Asian Studies, and Middle Eastern and Islamic
Studies
March 27-29, 2008
Call for Papers
The common ground of literary and area studies lies in
our joint focus on questions of comparison. At the
root of our academic activity is the characterization
of similarity and difference, be it cultural,
political, linguistic or aesthetic. Issues of
comparability are visible in shared anxieties
regarding the origins and directions of our
disciplines. In our overlapping pursuit of
self-definition we depend on each other for
collaboration and provocation.
In analyzing texts and cultures, our approaches can be
seen as complementary or discordant. What is lost when
Area Studies leaves literary and theoretical work to
Comparative Literature? Conversely, is the political
urgency and historical rigor of Area Studies lost in
Comparative Literature? With our conference we aim to
foster productive dialogue among disciplines by
together exploring problems of comparison and
comparability, both philosophical and methodological.
In theory and practice, we are all led to compare, to
define ourselves in terms of the Other (or to strive
against such definition). What motivates and
conditions this desire? How does it play out in our
work?
To these ends, papers should address the following or
related questions and themes:
* How has comparison figured in texts at different
times and in different places?
* Does comparative thinking threaten an understanding
of the particular?
* How has translation helped us to think comparison?
* Comparison and universal genre: do cross-cultural
deep literary structures exist?
* Comparison as a political activity
* Comparison and nationality: between communication
and conflict
* Gender as a comparative issue
* Is there a way to think comparatively without a
conception of the “normal”?
* Area Studies: Do we compare?
* What does it mean when literary scholars borrow
tools from the natural and social sciences?
* What role does comparison play in postcolonial
literature? In “minor” literature?
* How do critical judgments play into comparative
thinking?
* How do models of cosmopolitanism and creolization
affect the practice and theory of comparison?
Papers should be 20 minutes long. Please send
abstracts (300 words) with full name, paper title, and
institution to NYU.comparison@gmail.com by January
10th, 2008.
http://www.ageofcomparison.net
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CALL FOR PAPERS
Eighth Annual East Asian Studies Graduate Conference at the University of Toronto
Saturday, March 15, 2008
MEDITATIONS AND CRITIQUE: PERSPECTIVES ON EAST ASIA
What insights can we gain by thinking of East Asian societies as always already mediated by language, disciplines, discourse, symbolic systems and representations? Our conference seeks to challenge participants to critically consider how various mediations are embedded in social existence and how we accommodate for them in our research on China, Korea, and Japan.
The interdisciplinary conference welcomes research from graduate students in all fields of East Asian Studies, including but not limited to history, sociology, anthropology, economy, art, literature, and philosophy. We invite papers that critically engage topics relevant to the issue of mediations in the East Asian context, such as (but not limited to) the role of media in constituting and defining a society; mediation of identities through technology and media; constructions of the other; history of mediations and mediations of history; historical development of media and its implications; and questions of ontology, epistemology, and phenomenology as they relate to the issues of mediations in East Asia.
We invite all those interested in presenting papers to submit an abstract (300 words maximum) and brief biographical information by December 21, 2007. We encourage submissions from both individuals and panels of three (panelists should send individual abstracts and a panel abstract). Please indicate whether you would like your completed paper to be considered for publication in the *East Asian Studies Forum,* a journal published by graduate students of the East Asian Studies department of the University of Toronto.
Selected participants should submit completed papers by February 4, 2008. Those who wish their papers to be considered for publication should submit a publication-ready copy (about 3,500 words). During the conference, participants will be given 15 minutes to present their work, so actual presentation papers should be about 1,500-2,250 words long.
For more information, consult the conference Web site at http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/easgsc/Site/Home.html . Please email your submissions and questions to conference coordinators at: eas.conference.2008@gmail.com .
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Dunhuang Art and Society: On-site Seminar (June 29-July 12, 2008)
With the strong support of the Dunhuang Research Academy, China, the Silkroad Foundation is organizing its fourth seminar on Dunhuang art and society, to be held at the Mogao Caves, Dunhuang, Gansu Province, China, from June 29-July 12, 2008. A trip to visit Buddhist art sites in east Xinjiang, including Balikun, Hami, Turfan, Jimsar, and Urmuqi, will follow (July 13-20). The invited speakers include Roderick Whitfield, Mimi Yiengpruksawan, Neil Schmid and Ning Qiang from the US side and Wang Huimin, Liu Yongzheng, Zhao Shengliang and Zhang Yuanlin from the China side. Seminar participants will examine the paintings and sculptures in the Mogao and Yulin caves with the experts listed above and interact with local scholars formally and informally. In addition to visits to the Buddhist caves, this interdisciplinary seminar will provide on-site lectures/discussions examining a wide range of issues relating to Chinese art, religion, politics, and society.
Registration: Please visit the Silkroad Foundation website http://www.silkroadfoundation.org <http://www.silkroadfoundation.org/> for online registration. The application should be submitted to the Silkroad Foundation by 12/20. The full nonrefundable payment is due by 2/15/2008 once you are accepted to the program. Maximum of thirty participants will be accepted. For more information, please contact the Silkroad Foundation via email dhseminar08@silkroadfoundation.org
Center for East Asian Studies
University of Pennsylvania
642 Williams Hall
255 S. 36th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6305
Tel: 215-573-4203; Fax: 215-573-2561
E-mail: ceas@ccat.sas.upenn.edu |
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