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Penn Center For East Asian Studies Newsletter

2007 - 08: Issue no. 23, February 8, 2008
The CEAS Newsletter weekly notifies East Asianists in our region of events and opportunities of interest. Notices appear under six headings:
  1. University of Pennsylvania East Asia Events
  2. Regional East Asia Events
  3. Employment and Internship Opportunities
  4. Fellowship and Award Opportunities
  5. East Asia Study Opportunities and Queries
  6. 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

Thursday, February 14, 4:30PM, College Hall 209, Colonial Subjectivity and the Problem of Desire: The Choson Industrial Exhibition, 1915
Se-Mi Oh, Columbia University
Korean Lecture Series



(I) University of Pennsylvania East Asia Events

Asian American Studies Program
Presents

Q&A Panel with Margaret Cho (Special Guest: Kalpen Modi (Kal Penn)
Moderated by Dr. Heather K. Love, Watkins Assistant Professor in the Humanities

Sunday, February 10, 2008
6-7pm
Logan G17

Doors Open at 5:30pm
Seating is limited.
Penn ID required for admission

__________

Tuesday, February 12, 4:30PM, Logan Hall 402 , China Rising: China 's Military Modernization and its Implication for the US
Dr. Thomas Bickford
Dr. Thomas Bickford is a senior research analyst at the Center for Naval
Analysis Corporation in Alexandria , Virginia . An expert in Chinese military
matters, Dr. Bickford travels frequently to China in order to track and analyze
political and military developments as they affect US-China relations. He is the
author of numerous publications on the Chinese People's Liberation Army.

Cosponsored by The International Relations Program & the Center for East Asian Studies

__________

Tuesday, February 12, 7:00PM, Towne 303 – Twentieth-Century Chinese Film Series

New Woman ( Cai Chusheng)

__________

Wednesday, February 13, 6:00PM, McNeil 167-8 – Giant Monsters of Japan Film Series

Godzilla vs The Smog Monster ( Banno Yoshimitsu, 1971)

__________

Thursday, February 14, 4:30PM, College Hall 209, Colonial Subjectivity and the Problem of Desire: The Choson Industrial Exhibition, 1915
Se-Mi Oh, Columbia University
Korean Lecture Series

__________

Thursday, February 14, 7:00PM, Logan Hall 402 - Japanese Architecture Film Series

Conflagration ( Ichikawa Kon, 1958) – Introduction by Professor Frank L. Chance

Sponsored by the Friends of the Japanese House and Garden and the Center for East Asian Studies

__________

The Chinese Music Society happily invites all to our celebration of the Year of the Rat !

A FREE DINNER and MUSIC PERFORMANCE to welcome the YEAR OF THE RAT 2008 !
Come eat delicious Chinese food, enjoy beautiful music by our guest performers, and get the chance to learn more about and interact with professional musicians from the Philadelphia community!

Event: Year of the Rat

Place: Harrison Heyer Sky Lounge

Date: February 16, 2008

Time: 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm

Please RSVP to our Facebook event "CMS Presents: Year of the Rat" or to PennCMS@gmail.com so that we can estimate how much food to order!
Performances by:

Qin Qian (erhu and monochord)
Kurt Jung (yangqin)
Jong Ho (guzheng)
Philly Asian Music & Dance Association

__________

Tuesday, February 19, 4:30PM, Logan Hall 402 , The Plight of North Korean Women in China

Peter Beck, Executive Director, U.S. Committee for Human Rights in North Korea

Korean Lecture Series

__________

Tuesday, February 19, 7:00PM, Towne 303 – Twentieth-Century Chinese Film Series

A Woman for Two (Ling Zifeng)

__________

Wednesday, February 20, 6:00PM, McNeil 167-8 – Giant Monsters of Japan Film Series

Terror of Mechagodzilla ( Honda Ishiro, 1975)

__________

Thursday, February 21, 4:30PM, College Hall 314 , Chinese-Muslim Memory and Historiography in China

Zvi Ben-Dor Benite, Department of History, New York University

The talk will discuss the problem of memory and history in a community defined by a condition of both displacement and belonging  devises its own versions and variations of common Chinese devices of writing the past.

Humanities Colloquiumn, Co-Sponsored by the Middle East Center

__________

Thursday, February 21, 7:00PM, Logan Hall 402 - Japanese Architecture Film Series

Rikyu ( Teshigahara Hiroshi, 1989) – Introduction by Professor Stephanie Feldman

Sponsored by the Friends of the Japanese House and Garden and the Center for East Asian Studies

__________

Tuesday, February 26, 4:30PM, Huntsman Hall F55 , Title TBA

Robert Feldman , Morgan Stanley Japan Securities Co., Ltd.

CEAS-Lauder Distinguished Lecturer

__________

Wednesday, February 27, 6:00PM, McNeil 167-8 – Giant Monsters of Japan Film Series

Nausicä of the Valley of the Winds ( Miyazaki Hayao, 1994)

__________

Thursday, February 28, 7:00PM, Logan Hall 402 - Japanese Architecture Film Series

Spirited Away ( Miyazaki Hayao, 2001) - – Introduction by Professor Julie Nelson Davis

Sponsored by the Friends of the Japanese House and Garden and the Center for East Asian Studies

__________

Tuesday, March 4, 3:00PM, Silverman 240A ( Law School ), Japan 's Experience with the GATT/WTO Dispute Settlement System

Akio Shimizu, Associate Dean, Waseda Law School

Issues in Contemporary East Asia Lecture Series

__________

Tuesday, March 4, 7:00PM, Towne 303 – Twentieth-Century Chinese Film Series

Lust, Caution (Ang Lee)

__________

Wednesday, March 5, 6:00PM, McNeil 167-8 – Giant Monsters of Japan Film Series

Godzilla 1985 ( Hashimoto Koji, 1984)

__________

Thursday, March 6, 4:30PM, Fisher-Bennett Hall 244 , And History Took a Calligraphic Turn: The Art of Tai Jingnong's Writing

David Der-wei Wang, Edward C.Henderson Professor of Chinese Literatureat Harvard University and Director of CCK Foundation Inter-University Center for Sinological Studies

The lecture will focus on the following aspects of Tai Jingnong's work: the dissemination of modern Chinese writing in visual terms; calligraphy and its geographical implications; and the poetics of “muted” Sinophone articulations.

Humanities Colloquium

__________

Monday, March 17, 4:30PM, Logan Hall 17 , East Asia and the Middle East : What Can We Learn from Comparative Approaches to Global History?

Cemil Aydin, Post-Doctoral Fellow, Princeton University, Near Eastern Studies Department and Assistant Professor of History, University of North Carolina-Charlotte

Humanities Colloquium, Co-Sponsored with the Middle East Center

__________

Tuesday, March 18, 4:30PM, Logan Hall 17 , Myth, Memory and the Mongol Invasions of Japan
Tom Conlan, Associate Professor of History and Asian Studies, Bowdoin
This talk explores the Mongol Invasions of Japan, as well as how myths pertaining to Japanese defense against the Mongols, such as the kamaikaze ("divine winds") arose.

__________

Tuesday, March 18, 7:00PM, Towne 303 – Twentieth-Century Chinese Film Series

A Better Tomorrow ( John Woo)

__________

Wednesday, March 19, 6:00PM, McNeil 167-8 – Giant Monsters of Japan Film Series

Godzilla vs. Mothra ( Okawara Takao, 1992)

__________

Thursday, March 20, 4:30PM, Fisher-Bennett Hall 244 , Japan 's Answer to Harry Potter: The Abeno Seimei Boom

Laura Miller, Professor of Anthropology at Loyola University Chicago

Beginning in 1994, the legendary astrologer and Yin Yang master named Abeno Seimei became the focus of intense cultural interest. Why was a sorcerer who lived during the Heian era (794 1192) suddenly the subject of manga, films, a TV series, novels, anime and numerous books? This presentation will trace the trajectory of shaman/wizard fixation and will link the recent popularity of this historic figure with other trends in popular culture.

Issues in Contemporary East Asia lecture Series

__________

Tuesday, March 25, 5:30PM, Meyerson Hall B3 , Veneration and Imagery of Buddhist "Saints" in Japan from 1700-Present

Patricia J. Graham

This talk explores the reasons for the enduring popularity in the Japanese Buddhist pantheon of Buddhist "saints" -- monks known as Rakan (Luohan in Chinese; and Arhat in Sanskrit) and laity known as the Buddha's 10 Great Disciples (Shaka Judai deshi). Both groups were devout, unconventional personages who gained enlightenment after hearing the teachings of the Buddha in India . Their popularity as personal saviors continues to the present and has inspired the creation of numerous idiosyncratic images by artists working within and apart from formal Buddhist organizations. Their widespread appeal is emblematic of their transcendence beyond Buddhism to universal symbols of individualism and integrity.

Humanities Colloquium

__________

Tuesday, March 25, 7:00PM, Towne 303 – Twentieth-Century Chinese Film Series

Rouge ( Stanley Kwan)

__________

Wednesday, March 26, 6:00PM, McNeil 167-8 – Giant Monsters of Japan Film Series

Godzilla vs. Destroyah ( Okawara Takao, 1995)

__________

Tuesday, April 1, 5:30PM, Meyerson Hall, Upper Gallery, Constructing Culture: Three Japanese Architects Struggle with Shinto

Dana Buntrock, UC Berkeley

While most contemporary Japanese architects treat religion as a quaint cultural influence that can be freely abstracted and adopted, in this talk I discuss how three prominent designers took on religion in their work, with varied and interesting results.

The first, Dr. Terunobu FUJIMORI, is better known among historians as a celebrated author and architectural historian. In addition, he is also an amateur architect who has received Japan 's highest architectural award. Raised in a remote area strongly influenced by Suwa Shrine, Fujimori reflects a genuine embrace of Shinto as it once existed, rooted in the mountains and living things of the land. His architecture, as one example, is often clothed not merely in natural materials, but even in living plants. But while Fujimori embraces Shinto, most urbane architects do not. The other two sites I discuss are within the precincts of Konpira (Kotohira) Shrine on Shikoku Island and at the Izumo Grand Shrine. Fumihiko Maki, architect at Izumo, deployed symbolic features, from trees used in sacred landscapes and ancient myths carved into stone – but also challenges the role of Shinto today, by, for example, offering an observation platform intended to allow visitors to look down on Japan's second most important shrine. Ryoji Suzuki, the architect at Konpira, embraced the religious roots of the site – but these are far from easy issues. Konpira was originally an esoteric Buddhist site, shedding this identity in the tumultuous years of the late nineteenth century. Today, Buddhist and Shinto architecture is woven throughout the site; Suzuki reinforced this effect.

These architects and their work reflect only some of the ways that Shinto is seen in Japan today, but they nonetheless reveal its uneasy place in contemporary society.

Issues in Contemporary East Asia Lecture Series, Co-Sponsored by the Department of Architecture

__________

Tuesday, April 1, 7:00PM, Towne 303 – Twentieth-Century Chinese Film Series

Fists of Fury ( Luo Wei)

__________

Wednesday, April 2, 6:00PM, McNeil 167-8 – Giant Monsters of Japan Film Series

Pokemon 2000 The Movie ( Yuyama Kunihiko, 1999)

__________

Tuesday, April 8, 7:00PM, Towne 303 – Twentieth-Century Chinese Film Series

King of Children (Chen Kaige)

__________

Wednesday, April 9, 6:00PM, McNeil 167-8 – Giant Monsters of Japan Film Series

Godzilla Millenium ( Okawara Takao, 1999)

__________

Tuesday, April 15, 7:00PM, Towne 303 – Twentieth-Century Chinese Film Series

Raise the Red Lantern ( Zhang Yimou)

__________

Wednesday, April 16, 6:00PM, McNeil 167-8 – Giant Monsters of Japan Film Series

Godzilla, Mothra, King Ghidorah: All Monsters Attack (Kaneko Shusuke, 2001)

__________

Thursday, April 17, 4:30PM, Fisher-Bennett Hall 244 , Prostitution in Postwar Japan , 1945-1960.

Holly Sanders, Villanova

This talk will draw on Dr. Sanders dissertation: "Prostitution in Postwar Japan: Debt and Labor," which explores the changing legal and social landscape of prostitute labor during the early postwar years. It locates prostitution within the family economy as an important source of credit for women and their dependents.

Humanities Colloquium

__________

Tuesday, April 22, 7:00PM, Towne 303 – Twentieth-Century Chinese Film Series

A Chinese Odyssey (Stephen Chow)

__________

Wednesday, April 23, 6:00PM, McNeil 167-8 – Giant Monsters of Japan Film Series

Godzilla: Final Wars ( Kitamura Ryohei, 2004)

__________

Wednesday, April 30, 4:30PM, Logan Hall 402 , Multiculturalism and Education in South Korea

Youngdal Cho, Dean, College of Education , Seoul National University

Korean Lecture Series



(II) Regional East Asia Events

*The Institute for Corean-American Studies Presents:

ICAS Winter Symposium 2008 www.icasinc.org
Humanity, Peace and Security
The Korean Peninsula Issues

February 13, 2008  Wednesday   1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
< a specific venue to be given only to the registered >
The Capitol Hill, Washington DC 20515              
gistration
Moderator:  Sang Joo Kim     ( ICAS Senior Fellow & Executive Vice President)

Speakers

Stephen W Bosworth ( ICAS Distinguished Fellow; Dean, The Fletcher School, Tufts University)
The Korean Peninsula Issues:  A State of the Affairs and Outlook 

Robert P Casey Jr  (United States Senator; Foreign Relations Committee)
US Foreign Policy toward North Korea: Achieving Nuclear Disarmament

Zongze Ruan   (Minister Counselor, Political Department, Embassy of China)
China's Role for World Peace and Prosperity: Challenges and Outlook

(needs confirmation)
Japan's Security milieu

(needs confirmation)                                       
The US- Korea FTA: Challenges and Outlook


Reception to follow .
NB: Programme subject to change                                

Discussants

Tong Kim                   ( ICAS Fellow)
Don Kirk                    ( ICAS Fellow)

__________

*Wilson Center Event on "Darker" Side of Japanese Society

Every society has its problems, and Japan is no exception--especially one that endured an almost decade-long economic crisis in the 1990s.  On Feb. 20, we will examine various aspects of Japanese society that are not often discussed in Washington, ranging from the link between organized crime and politics to various problems of youth and early adulthood, including the "hikikomori" phenomenon whereby certain youngsters in their 20s lock themselves in their rooms, and refuse to come out.  If you are interested in these societal issues, please join us in two weeks as the Asia Program of the Wilson Center presents:

Rents in the Social Fabric: The "Darker" Side of Japanese Society
Wednesday, February 20, 2008     3:30 - 5:30 p.m.     6th Floor Auditorium
Speakers Eikdo Maruki Siniawer , Williams College; David Ambaras , North Carolina State University; Mary Brinton , Harvard University; and Michael Zielenziger , UC- Berkeley

Media organizations are requested to contact the Asia Program in advance at 202/691-4020 or asia@wilsoncenter.org. Otherwise, RSVPs are NOT necessary.  Please allow for routine security procedures when you arrive at the Center. A photo ID is required for entry. The Center is located in the southeast wing of the Ronald Reagan Building, 1300 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, D.C. The closest Metro station is Federal Triangle on the blue and orange lines. For detailed directions, please visit the Center's website , www.wilsoncenter.org/directions.

__________

Japan Group II- Winter Spring Schedule

Sunday, March 2 , The Private Collection of Darrel C. Karl in Potmac, MD. 20th century Japanese prints, paintings and drawings by Hasui, Yoshida Toraji, Goyo, Lum among many others. Lunch in Potmac Md at Lucky Garden Restaurant. $60 members, $65 non  members
Sunday, April 13 NYC The MET and Asia Society  at the MET "Korean Screens" at  Asia Soc. "Design for Pleasure: World of Edo Japan in Prints and Paintings" Members $55 Non-members $60 Transportation for both of the above trips 8:15AM at Pathmark, City Line, 8:30AM at 19th and JFK Blvd.
Sunday, May 18th PMA Japanese Galleries: A Cornucopia, Recent Acquistions in Japanese Art. 3 PM  Dinner at Kujuku Restaurant at 5 PM 
If you are interested in any of these events, please call Shirley Luber for more details, 215-545-4975

__________

Princeton University
Buddhist Studies Workshop 2008

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 lecture 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 E. Gene Smith ( Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center ).

Co-sponsored by the P.Y. and Kinmay W. 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 Divinity School )

Filling the Missing Link: Simha Bhiksu and Zongmi's Construction of an Indian Transmission Line for Chan Buddhism

Friday, April 11, 4:30 pm, 1879 Hall, Room 137

Peter Gregory ( Smith College )

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)

Patronage and Pure Land Paintings in Korea , 13 th -14 th Centuries

Monday, April 28, 4:30 pm, 202 Jones Hall

Youngsook Pak ( School of Oriental and African Studies and Yale University )

Co-sponsored by the P.Y. and Kinmay W.Tang Center for East Asian Art and the Program in East Asian Studies.

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 of specific events 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

__________

P. Y. and Kinmay W. Tang Center for East Asian Art @ Princeton Spring Events:

Graduate Student Symposium in East Asian Art
“The Art of  Opposition”
Keynote speaker: Richard Kraus, University of Oregon
Saturday, 16 February 2008
8:30 am to 5:30 pm, 101 McCormick Hall
For more information, please visit http://tang.princeton.edu/aoo/

Art History, Buddhist Studies, Tibet: New Perspectives from the Tibet Site Seminar
International symposium
Friday to Monday, 7–10 March 2008
Organized by the Buddhist Studies Workshop and co-sponsored by
the Tang Center for East Asian Art
For more information, please visit http://www.princeton.edu/TibetSem/program-conference.htm

Lecture
Thursday, 10 April 2008
Annette Juliano, Rutgers University
Intersections: Defining the Cultural Dynamic of North China in the 6thCentury
4:30 pm, 106 McCormick Hall

Lecture & Recital
Tuesday, 15 April 2008
Bo Lawergren and Tomoko Sugawara
Tang Harp and Recital
4:30 pm, 101 McCormick Hall
Co-sponsored by the East Asian Studies Program and the Music Department

Lecture
Tuesday, 22 April 2008
Joel Earle, Japan Society
From Form to Picture: Japanese Sword Fittings in an Age of Peace
4:30 pm, 106 McCormick Hall

Conference
Art and Archaeology of the Erligang Civilization
Saturday and Sunday, 26–27 April 2008
101 McCormick Hall
8:30 am to 5:30 pm
For more information, please visit http://tang.princeton.edu/erl/



(III) Employment and Internship Opportunities

The Ohio State University is now accepting applications for a program coordinator (working title: Assistant Director) for the Institute for Chinese Studies (ICS), one of the constituent units of the East Asian Studies Center. Would you please disseminate this announcement to your listservs?

The program coordinator will develop academic, academic enrichment, and outreach programs in Chinese Studies for OSU faculty and students and for related constituencies in the State of Ohio, in the U.S. and abroad. To that end, the coordinator will (1) identify external funding sources and conduct research to prepare grant applications to support public academic programs; (2) assist in the development and implementation of academic programs (course development, speaker series, conferences, academic prizes, undergraduate research initiatives, etc.); (3) develop relationships with local, national, and international organizations to create, implement and/or conduct academic enrichment and cultural programs in Central Ohio; (4) help develop study abroad courses, exchange programs (faculty and students), and research opportunities across all disciplines with universities, institutes and organizations in the Chinese-speaking world (People's Republic of China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore) in cooperation with the Office of International Affairs; (5) develop and maintain bilingual publicity and fundraising materials and electronic sites regarding Chinese studies for academic and other constituencies (K-12, government, business, media, general public); (6) act as a liaison for ICS committees, OSU alumni, and the OSU administration; (7) provide Chinese-language research, administrative, and other support for China-related initiatives on the OSU campus; (8) work with staff at the East Asian Studies Center (EASC), Institute for Chinese Studies (ICS), Institute for Japanese Studies (IJS), and Korean Studies Initiative (KSI) to curate the EASC video library and carry out other joint programs; (9) work with Ohio colleges and other Midwestern universities to carry out China-related programming; (10) coordinate Chinese-specific outreach to the Ohio K-12, business and government sectors and to the general public; and (11) carry out other duties as assigned by the ICS Faculty Director and EASC Assistant Director.

Required qualifications include a b achelor's degree or an equivalent combination of education and experience; experience in program planning and administration; excellent interpersonal, communication, research, organizational, and project management skills; proficiency with office and design software; proficiency in oral and written Mandarin Chinese and knowledge of/interest in East Asia; and excellent English writing skills.  

Desired qualifications include a master's degree or an equivalent combination of education and experience; work experience in a Title VI National Resource Center and/or Asia-oriented non-profit organization; prior experience with grant writing and publicity; willingness to travel; ability to work independently as well as in cooperation with others.  

Interested and qualified applicants should apply online at:
https://www.jobsatosu.com (requisition # 3368750)

The application deadline is February 10, 2008.



(IV) Fellowship and Award Opportunities

 



(V) East Asia Study Opportunities and Queries

 



(VI) Conferences and Workshops

*CALL FOR PAPERS

The Greater Philadelphia Asian Studies Colloquium of

The Greater Philadelphia Human Studies Consortium*

announces the

3 nd ANNUAL ASIAN STUDIES UNDERGRADUATE
RESEARCH CONFERENCE

DATE: SAT., APRIL 12, 2008, 8:30 AM – 4:00 PM

(registration and refreshments at 8:30 AM)

PLACE: west chester university

(west chester, PA)

(no charge; lunch included for presenters and guests)

Keynote Address:

PROF. Stephen bokenkamp ( Arizona state university)

”The world's worst grandma: lawsuits from beyond the grave in medieval Daoism”

Papers are invited in all fields pertaining to:


SOUTH ASIA

SOUTHEAST ASIA

EAST ASIA

NORTHEAST ASIA

CENTRAL ASIA

ASIAN-AMERICANS

Deadline for submissions : February 29, 2008

Proposals should consist of a maximum 2 page abstract of the paper and a letter of endorsement from a faculty adviser.

NOTE:

Because space is limited, papers will be reviewed for selection by the program committee.

Submit papers to:

Prof. Frank J. Hoffman

Department of Philosophy

West Chester University

West Chester , PA 19383

or:hoffman@wcupa.edu

(e-mail submissions are encouraged, but please

put “GPASC Conference” as the subject heading)

Faculty at member institutions* are urged to promote this opportunity among their students. Questions? Call (610) 436-2361

*The Greater Philadelphia Human Studies Consortium consists of 13 colleges and universities in the Philadelphia region: the University of Pennsylvania , Temple University , the University of Delaware , Drexel University , Villanova University , St. Joseph 's University, LaSalle University , West Chester University , Swarthmore College , Haverford College , Bryn Mawr College , Ursinus College , and Rosemont College



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