CSEAS awarded Foreign Languages and Area Studies (FLAS) fellowships for Summer 2021 to UC Berkeley graduate students Sean Cronan (History), Christian Gilberti (South & Southeast Asian Studies), Kirt Mausert (Anthropology), and Oren Samet-Marram (Political Science) to study Burmese. CSEAS also awarded FLAS fellowships to UC Santa Cruz graduate students Wayne Huang (Anthropology) to study Indonesian and Philip Conklin (History of Consciousness) to study Filipino.
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May 14, 2021
May 11, 2021
May 11, 2021 | 5-5:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom Webinar
Speaker: Gregory Levine, Professor, Department of History of Art, UC Berkeley
May 5, 2021
If a war breaks out over Taiwan, Biden may be forced into a decision no American president since 1979 has wanted to make...[read more]
April 26, 2021
April 26 | 4-4:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom Webinar
Speaker: Carl Gellert, Lecturer, Seattle Central College
April 14, 2021
April 14, 2021 | 5-5:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom Webinar
Speaker: Jihye Kim, Visiting Graduate Student Researcher, Osaka University
April 8, 2021
CSEAS is a founding member of the recently-established Graduate Education and Training in Southeast Asian Studies (GETSEA) consortium. The consortium was awarded a grant by the Henry Luce Foundation through its Luce Initiative on Southeast Asia (LuceSEA) with the mission of enhancing graduate education in Southeast Asian Studies across North America.
March 31, 2021
2021 Khyentse Lecture
Webcast, February 26, 2021
March 30, 2021
March 30, 2021 | 5-5:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom Webinar
Speaker: Marjorie Burge, Assistant Professor of Japanese, Asian Languages and Civilizations, University of Colorado Boulder
March 23, 2021
Founded in 1970, the South/Southeast Library (S/SEAL) is a dedicated reading room in Doe Library, UC Berkeley’s main research library. The library combines research and writing space, reference materials, and specialist consultation on site. It is a campus hub for multidisciplinary research and teaching in South and Southeast Asian studies, covering nineteen countries and over twenty indigenous languages.
March 21, 2021
February 19, 2021
March 9, 2021
CSEAS core faculty Prof. Penny Edwards (South & Southeast Asian Studies) has received the Carol D. Soc Distinguished Graduate Student Mentoring Award for Late Career Faculty. The campus-wide award recognizes faculty for outstanding mentorship of graduate students at UC Berkeley. Prof. Edwards will be recognized at a virtual award ceremony this spring.
March 3, 2021
March 2, 2021
Using approaches from sociology, political science, history, and literary and cultural studies, the contributors offer innovative and nuanced analyses of a wide range of topics from refugee displacement to street politics, from anti-communism and democracy to militarization. The collection begins with the national division in 1945 and devastating civil war and concludes with the May 18 Democratic Uprising in 1980.
For more information, and to order, go to:
CSEAS hosted the online symposium Scholar-Activism and the Myanmar Resistance on March 9. During this event, scholar-activists analyzed and strategized for resistance to Myanmar’s military coup. The event included two panels [online] and a virtual exhibit [posted to the CSEAS YouTube channel].
Panel 1: Insights from Comparative Contexts
Thanks to the generous support from the Center of Chinese Studies, I spent almost every summer in the past few years working in the Shanghai library and making friends with local scholars and librarians. This tradition was disrupted by the coronavirus pandemic. I was stuck in Berkeley and exiled from library stacks.
I was living in Taiwan with my wife and daughter on a one-year Fulbright grant when the pandemic hit. We soon realized that we were incredibly, undeservedly fortunate to be living in one of the precious few places on the planet that was successfully controlling the virus’s spread.
Support from the Center for Chinese Studies has been crucial to my research on textual scholarship and poetic culture in late eighteenth-century China, as I explore how the classical literary tradition was being radically reconstituted and restaged on the eve of the Opium Wars.
In a radically interconnected world, my research focuses on how educational desires have turned towards the global. More specifically, I situate my research in rapidly urbanizing spaces in China, where urban development and the growth of international schools have gone hand in hand.
February 28, 2021
[Aspects of Japanese Studies] Archaeology and Landscape in Japan's Kofun Period: Examining the Past to Protect the Future
February 17, 2021
Colloquium
Speaker:
Anna Nielsen, UC Berkeley Student
February 24, 2021
February 24, 2021 | 5-5:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom Webinar
Speaker: Andrew Leong, Assistant Professor, Dept. of English, UC Berkeley
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