Monday, January 13, 2020
The Korean Peninsula Peace Process: Opportunities and Challenges
Lecture: Center for Korean Studies: Institute of East Asian Studies: Other Campus Events | January 13 | 4-5:30 p.m. | Doe Library, Room 180
Speaker: Chung-in Moon, Special Advisor to the ROK President for Foreign Affairs and National Security
Sponsors: Institute of East Asian Studies (IEAS), Center for Korean Studies (CKS), East Asia Foundation
President Moon Jae-in has undertaken an ambitious Korean peace initiative since May 2017. Under this initiative, he successfully transformed the year of acute crisis in 2017 into a new beginning of peace in 2018. However, as the Hanoi summit between President Trump and Chairman Kim Jong Un in late February failed to produce any agreement, his peace initiative is facing major challenges. Whereas... More >
Monday, January 27, 2020
"Imported" Feminism and "Indigenous" Queerness: From Backlash to Transphobic Feminism in Transnational Japanese Context (Lecture)
Lecture: Center for Japanese Studies | January 27 | 5-7 p.m. | Stephens Hall, Geballe Room, 220
Speaker/Performer: Akiko Shimizu, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, University of Tokyo
Sponsor: The Program in Critical Theory
As is often the case with many countries in “the rest,” women’s and/or feminist movements in Japan have often been criticized for uncritically importing and transplanting ideas from “the West” that have no relevance to, and are sometimes even incompatible with, the “local” “indigenous” tradition, culture and society of whatever those critics imagine as “Japan.” Curiously enough, “Japan” has also... More >
Tuesday, January 28, 2020
"Imported" Feminism and "Indigenous" Queerness: From Backlash to Transphobic Feminism in Transnational Japanese Context (Seminar)
Seminar: Center for Japanese Studies | January 28 | 10 a.m.-12 p.m. | 3401 Dwinelle Hall
Speaker/Performer: Akiko Shimizu, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, University of Tokyo
Sponsor: The Program in Critical Theory
As is often the case with many countries in “the rest,” women’s and/or feminist movements in Japan have often been criticized for uncritically importing and transplanting ideas from “the West” that have no relevance to, and are sometimes even incompatible with, the “local” “indigenous” tradition, culture and society of whatever those critics imagine as “Japan.” Curiously enough, “Japan” has also... More >
Thursday, January 30, 2020
What is Kim Jong Un’s Grand Strategy? Opportunities and Constraints in North Korea Today
Colloquium: Center for Korean Studies: Institute of East Asian Studies | January 30 | 4-6 p.m. | Doe Library, Room 180
Speaker/Performer: Chung Min Lee, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
Sponsor: Center for Korean Studies (CKS)
Defying earlier expectations, North Korea’s Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un has consolidated power since his father’s death in December 2011. While it was under Kim Jong Il that North Korea conducted its first nuclear test in 2006, it was Kim Jong Un that accelerated Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons program including the first hydrogen bomb test in 2017. Having achieved this goal, Kim now wants to... More >
Chiasmus in Bodhisattva Literature: Two Examples and Theorizing a Meta-Structure
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | January 30 | 5-6:30 p.m. | 370 Dwinelle Hall
Speaker/Performer: Matthew Orsborn, Visiting Associate Professor, National Taiwan University
Sponsors: Center for Buddhist Studies, Tianzhu Global Network for the Study of Buddhist Cultures
The discovery of chiasmus or ring composition in Western religious and classical literature in the 20th century had a paradigm-changing effect upon our understanding of these texts. Recent application of this theory to two important Indian Buddhist texts, the Aṣṭasāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā and the Vessantara Jātaka, also indicates the presence of such... More >
Friday, January 31, 2020
Social Controls and Social Trust in Chinese History, Past and Present
Panel Discussion | January 31 | 10 a.m.-1:30 p.m. | 3335 Dwinelle Hall
Speakers/Performers: Michael Nylan, Professor of History, UC Berkeley; Trenton Wilson, EALC, UC Berkeley; Thomas Hahn, Heidelberg Ph.D; Joe Esherick, Professor Emeritus of History, University of California, San Diego
Sponsor: Department of History
Michael Nylan and Trenton Wilson will be speaking to early empires in China, Joseph Esherick on late imperial China, and Thomas H. Hahn will highlight topics such as artificial intelligence in modern China.
“Assets of a Bankrupt Country”: Fiscal Effects of the Boxer Indemnity, 1901-1911
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | January 31 | 4-6 p.m. | 180 Doe Library
Speaker: Dong Yan, Postdoctoral Fellow, Center for Chinese Studies, UC Berkeley
Panelist/Discussant: Wen-hsin Yeh, Professor of History, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
The Boxer Indemnity has long marked the nadir in the history of nineteenth century Chinese relations with Western powers, but buried beneath nationalist narratives of humiliation was the indemnity’s origin as public debt, one that the Chinese repaid over three decades. Assessing the fiscal and financial impact of the indemnity in the first ten years of debt service (1901-1911), the talk looks at... More >
Monday, February 3, 2020
The Art of War - A New Translation by Michael Nylan
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | February 3 | 4-6 p.m. | 180 Doe Library
Speaker: Michael Nylan, Professor of History, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
Michael Nylan intends to use this talk to consider the state of the China field as regards translations of the Classics and masterworks. She is presently editor of the University of Washington "Classics of Chinese Thought" translation series, which is currently publishing the third of the already finished nine scheduled books. She is also the recent translator of Yang Xiong's Exemplary Figures... More >
Wednesday, February 5, 2020
Matrix On Point: The Fate of the Forests
Panel Discussion: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | February 5 | 12-1:30 p.m. | 820 Barrows Hall
Panelist/Discussants: Nancy Peluso, Henry J. Vaux Distinguished Professor of Forest Policy, Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management; Christopher Lesser, Graduate Student, Institute of International Studies; Stephanie Postar, Post-Doctoral Researcher, UC Berkeley Department of Geography
Sponsor: Social Science Matrix
The destruction of the world's forests has had massive environmental impacts, contributing to unprecedented losses in biodiversity around the world. The recent, catastrophic fires in the Amazon rainforest, the so-called lungs of our planet, were started by developers seeking to profit from the cultivation of crops, mining, logging, and grazing on the land and drive away the indigenous peoples who... More >
Thursday, February 6, 2020
UC Berkeley PD Showcase for Educators
Conference/Symposium: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | February 6 | 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m. | Berkeley Way West
Sponsor: Professional Development for Educators
On Friday, March 6, 2020, administrators and teacher-leaders are invited to attend a one-day showcase of the many professional development programs for educators here at UC Berkeley. Come explore professional learning options for educators across disciplines and in different stages of their careers.
About UC Berkeley Professional Development Providers:
University of California- Berkeley... More >
Attendance restrictions: This event is open to educators, including administrators and teacher-leaders.
Registration required
Registration info: Registration opens November 1.
by February 28.
South Korea’s Nuclear-Energy Entanglements and the Political Temporality of Ecological Democracy
Colloquium: Center for Korean Studies | February 6 | 4-6 p.m. | Doe Library, Room 180
Speaker/Performer: Nan Kim, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Sponsor: Center for Korean Studies (CKS)
Compared to all other countries with large nuclear-energy programs, South Korea maintains by far the most densely concentrated cluster of nuclear reactors in the world, but only in recent years have civic groups obtained official data to confirm this. Given that South Korea’s significant reliance on nuclear energy is itself a legacy of military dictatorship in the 1960s and 1970s, what does the... More >
Syariah Markets: The Econography of Islam and Capitalism in Southeast Asia
Lecture: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | February 6 | 4-5:30 p.m. | Dwinelle Hall, 341, DSSEAS Library, Level F/G
Speaker: Daromir Rudnyckyj, Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of Victoria
Sponsor: Center for Southeast Asia Studies
This talk proposes the notion of econography: a methodological approach developed through empirical research in the region that attempts to provide analytical and practical purchase on the articulation of Islam and capitalism in Southeast Asia. Econography is a response to recent critiques that have questioned “ethnos” as the object of anthropological inquiry.
Monday, March 2, 2020
Lives and Deaths of Eastern Europe’s Map Men after 1919
Lecture: Tang Center for Silk Road Studies | March 2 | 5-6:30 p.m. | 180 Doe Library
Speaker: Steven Seegel, Professor of Russian, East European, and Eurasian History, University of Northern Colorado
Sponsors: Institute of Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies (ISEEES), Tang Center for Silk Road Studies, Institute of East Asian Studies (IEAS)
More than just colorful clickbait or pragmatic city grids, maps are often deeply emotional tales: of transnational projects gone wrong, budding relationships that failed, and countries that vanished. Map Men takes a detailed look at the deep emotions, textures of friendship, and multigenerational sagas behind the historical dramas of a long continuum of world war and revolution in East... More >
Thursday, March 5, 2020
CANCELED - Reimagining the Practice of Citizenship: The Visuals of the Unruly Youth in Thailand
Lecture: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | March 5 | 4-5:30 p.m. | 180 Doe Library | Canceled
Speaker: Penchan Phoborisut, Assistant Professor of Communication, CSU Fullerton
Sponsor: Center for Southeast Asia Studies
Thailand, once a thriving democracy, is now dominated by the military. However, while old conservative groups hold on, young Thais are speaking their minds. This talk examines the visual communication that intersects the younger generation of Thais who reimagine ways to express their political opinions and define the relationship they would like to have with politicians and the state.
Penchan Phoborisut
Building the post 1949 State in China and Taiwan: Bureaucratic, Campaign, and Performative Modalities
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | March 5 | 4-6 p.m. | Institute of East Asian Studies (Golden Bear Center, 1995 University Ave., 5th floor), IEAS Conference Room
Speaker: Julia C. Strauss, Professor of Chinese Politics, University of London
Panelist/Discussant: Brooks Jessup, Visiting Lecturer, Department of History, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
By the late 1950s, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and Republic of China (ROC) stood as exemplars of success for both “revolutionary” and “conservative” variants of the modern state. However, in 1949 these two regimes had an overlooked yet substantial amount in common in structure and state building agendas. Both were highly militarized Leninist single party states that needed to... More >
Silk, gold, and glass: Upper Mustang and Nepal and the Silk Roads after 400 CE
Lecture: Center for Buddhist Studies: Tang Center for Silk Road Studies | March 5 | 5-7 p.m. | 315 Wheeler Hall
Speaker: Mark Aldenderfer, Distinguished Professor and John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Endowed Chair, UC Merced
Sponsors: Tang Center for Silk Road Studies, Himalayan studies at UC Berkeley, Institute for South Asia Studies, Center for Buddhist Studies
The high Himalayan valley of Upper Mustang today appears isolated and remote. But more than 1600 years ago, the settlements of Upper Mustang participated in an extensive trade network that ultimately connected them to the fabled Silk Road. Not only did exotic objects find their way in to the region, but new ideas and religious practices appeared in mortuary rites and rituals and which reflect a... More >
Friday, March 6, 2020
Workshop on Tannishō Commentarial Materials
Workshop: Center for Japanese Studies | March 6 – 7, 2020 every day | 3-10 p.m. | Jodo Shinshu Center | Note change in date and time
Location: 2140 Durant Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94704
Sponsors: Center for Japanese Studies (CJS), Center for Buddhist Studies, Otani University, Ryukoku University, BCA Center for Buddhist Education, Institute of Buddhist Studies, Shinshu Center of America
The Centers for Japanese Studies and Buddhist Studies at the University of California, Berkeley, together with Ōtani University and Ryūkoku University in Kyoto announce a workshop under the supervision of Mark Blum that will focus on critically examining premodern and modern hermeneutics of the Tannishō, a core text of the Shin sect of Buddhism, and arguably the most well-read... More >
Mapping the Weird: Using GIS Tools to Explore Late Ming zhiguai(and vice versa)
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | March 6 | 4-6 p.m. | 180 Doe Library
Speaker: Rania Huntington, Associate Professor and Chair, East Asian Languages and Literature, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Panelist/Discussant: Sophie Volpp, Chair, Center for Chinese Studies; Associate Professor, East Asian Languages and Cultures, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
One of the distinctive features of the zhiguai genre is that no matter how bizarre the events described, the settings are usually recognizable mundane places. With the increasing accessibility and sophistication of Geographic Information Systems software, mapping the geographic information provided in the tales offers a promising approach to reading long, varied collections on a scale larger than... More >
Saturday, March 7, 2020
Workshop on Tannishō Commentarial Materials
Workshop: Center for Japanese Studies | March 6 – 7, 2020 every day | 3-10 p.m. | Jodo Shinshu Center | Note change in date and time
Location: 2140 Durant Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94704
Sponsors: Center for Japanese Studies (CJS), Center for Buddhist Studies, Otani University, Ryukoku University, BCA Center for Buddhist Education, Institute of Buddhist Studies, Shinshu Center of America
The Centers for Japanese Studies and Buddhist Studies at the University of California, Berkeley, together with Ōtani University and Ryūkoku University in Kyoto announce a workshop under the supervision of Mark Blum that will focus on critically examining premodern and modern hermeneutics of the Tannishō, a core text of the Shin sect of Buddhism, and arguably the most well-read... More >
Monday, March 9, 2020
ARCHITECTURE LECTURE: MAKI ONISHI AND YUKI HYAKUDA
Lecture: Center for Japanese Studies | March 9 | 6:30-8 p.m. | 112 Wurster Hall
Sponsor: College of Environmental Design
MON, MAR 9, 6:30pm. Join us for a talk with the Directors and Co-Founders of onishimaki+hyakudayuki architects. Co-sponsored by the Center for Japanese Studies. Open to all!
Tuesday, March 10, 2020
Cancelled - Chinese Film Classics and Hollywood Resonances
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | March 10 | 4-6 p.m. | 3335 Dwinelle Hall | Canceled
Speaker: Christopher Rea, Professor of Chinese, University of British Columbia
Panelist/Discussant: Andrew Jones, Professor and Louis B. Agassiz Chair in Chinese, UC Berkeley
Sponsors: Li Ka-Shing Foundation Program in Modern Chinese History at Berkeley, Department of East Asian Languages & Cultures
This talk will examine several examples of how Hollywood films influenced Chinese films between the 1920s and the 1940s. Historians are well aware that Chinese cinema culture of the Republican era had extensive international links, in production, distribution, and exhibition. They have identified stylistic similarities, shared genre conventions (the musical, the social melodrama, the horror film,... More >
Thursday, March 12, 2020
CANCELLED - Desecration and Destruction: Stalin’s Repression of Buddhism in Buryatia
Lecture: Center for Buddhist Studies: Institute of East Asian Studies: Mongolia Initiative: Tang Center for Silk Road Studies | March 12 | 5 p.m. | 180 Doe Library | Canceled
Speaker: Melissa Chakars, History, Saint Joseph’s University
Moderator: Brian Baumann, East Asian Languages and Cultures, UC Berkeley
Sponsors: Institute of East Asian Studies (IEAS), UC Berkeley Mongolia Initiative, Center for Buddhist Studies, Institute of Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies (ISEEES)
Buryatia, a largely Buddhist autonomous republic of Mongolian people in Soviet Siberia, fell victim to Stalinist repression in the 1930s. Under Stalin’s anti-religious policies, officials worked to thoroughly destroy Buddhist institutions and eliminate all Buryat lamas. Although Buddhism has experienced a great resurgence in Buryatia since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, many questions... More >
Friday, March 13, 2020
CANCELED - Foundations for Buddhist Chaplaincy: Dialogues and Developments in Japan and North America connecting Teachings and Effective Service
Conference/Symposium: Center for Japanese Studies | March 13 – 15, 2020 every day | Jodo Shinshu Center (IBS) | Canceled
Location: 2140 Durant Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94704
Sponsors: Center for Japanese Studies (CJS), Institute of Buddhist Studies, BDK America
Buddhist chaplaincy is developing rapidly in both North America and Japan. This international conference seeks to develop connections and conversations and discuss specific challenges and successes Buddhist chaplains experience on both sides of the Pacific.
The practice of Buddhist chaplaincy is sustained and guided by the Buddhist teachings or Buddhadharma. At this conference, we are... More >
Saturday, March 14, 2020
CANCELED - Foundations for Buddhist Chaplaincy: Dialogues and Developments in Japan and North America connecting Teachings and Effective Service
Conference/Symposium: Center for Japanese Studies | March 13 – 15, 2020 every day | Jodo Shinshu Center (IBS) | Canceled
Location: 2140 Durant Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94704
Sponsors: Center for Japanese Studies (CJS), Institute of Buddhist Studies, BDK America
Buddhist chaplaincy is developing rapidly in both North America and Japan. This international conference seeks to develop connections and conversations and discuss specific challenges and successes Buddhist chaplains experience on both sides of the Pacific.
The practice of Buddhist chaplaincy is sustained and guided by the Buddhist teachings or Buddhadharma. At this conference, we are... More >
[Cancelled] Japanese American Women Alumnae: 30th Annual Scholarship Awards Luncheon
Special Event: Center for Japanese Studies | March 14 | 10:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. | Berkeley Country Club
Location: 7901 Cutting Blvd., El Cerrito, CA
Speaker/Performer: Dr. Satsuki Ina
Sponsors: Cal Alumni Association, Japanese American Women Alumnae of UC Berkeley
Please join us as we honor the legacy of Japanese American women at Cal.
We will recognize our undergraduate and graduate scholarship recipients -- Olivia Canak, Juliette Franzman, Nicole Inaba, Areyon Jolivette, Maya Lemmon-Kishi, and Gemma Vanover – and our Outstanding Alumna of the year, Betty Furuta. Our keynote speaker, Dr. Satsuki Ina, will speak on her ground-breaking research.
Tickets required: $45 Adult, $15 Students
Sunday, March 15, 2020
CANCELED - Foundations for Buddhist Chaplaincy: Dialogues and Developments in Japan and North America connecting Teachings and Effective Service
Conference/Symposium: Center for Japanese Studies | March 13 – 15, 2020 every day | Jodo Shinshu Center (IBS) | Canceled
Location: 2140 Durant Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94704
Sponsors: Center for Japanese Studies (CJS), Institute of Buddhist Studies, BDK America
Buddhist chaplaincy is developing rapidly in both North America and Japan. This international conference seeks to develop connections and conversations and discuss specific challenges and successes Buddhist chaplains experience on both sides of the Pacific.
The practice of Buddhist chaplaincy is sustained and guided by the Buddhist teachings or Buddhadharma. At this conference, we are... More >
Wednesday, March 18, 2020
EVENT CANCELED - Nomadic Identity: he Development of a Multiethnic Empire in Mongolia
Lecture: Mongolia Initiative: Tang Center for Silk Road Studies | March 18 | 5-7 p.m. | 180 Doe Library
Speaker: Christine Lee, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, California State University, Los Angeles
Sponsors: Tang Center for Silk Road Studies, Mongolia Initiative
The nomadic states in Mongolia developed their own definitions of ethnicity and citizenship independently from the settled populations of China. Here, nomads and agriculturalists have lived in the same communities for thousands of years. While the ruling nobility was one specific ethnicity, there was not a clear hierarchy of ethnicities. Mongolia has experienced the migration and incorporation of... More >
Thursday, March 19, 2020
EVENT CANCELED: Patrick Flores | When Commitments Confuse: Writing and Curating (Around) Art History
Lecture: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | March 19 | 5-7 p.m. | Stephens Hall, 10 (ISAS Conf. Room) | Canceled
Speaker: Patrick D. Flores, Professor of Art Studies at the Department of Art Studies at the University of the Philippines; Curator of the Vargas Museum in Manila
Moderator: Atreyee Gupta, Assistant Professor of Global Modern Art and South and Southeast Asian Art, History of Art Department
Sponsors: Institute for South Asia Studies, Sarah Kailath Chair of India Studies, South Asia Art Initiative, Department of History of Art, Center for Southeast Asia Studies, The Filipino & Philippine Studies Working Group at the Townsend Center for the Humanities, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
A talk by the eminent Manila-based academic, curator, and art historian, Patrick D. Flores.
Monday, March 30, 2020
***CANCELED*** Solidarity or Realpolitik: Documentary Performance of Ethnic Relations in China
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | March 30 | 4-6 p.m. | 180 Doe Library | Canceled
Speaker: Ying Qian, Assistant Professor, Dept. of East Asian Languages & Cultures, Columbia University
Panelist/Discussant: Weihong Bao, Associate Professor, EALC, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
In view of the rapidly developing situation on campus in response to the COVID-19, we have decided to cancel this lecture. Thank you for the understanding.
Global Views on COVID 19: Responses and Perspectives in China, Taiwan and Italy
Workshop | March 30 | 4:30-5:30 p.m. | Register to join this webinar
Featured Speakers: Huaying Bao, East Asia Voices Initiative Fellow, George Washington University, Associate Director, International Exchange and Cooperation Office, Beijing Foreign Studies University, China; Dr. Eve Chiu, East Asia Voices Initiative Fellow, George Washington University, CEO, The Foundation for Excellent Journalism Award, Taiwan; Dr. Qingyun Li, East Asia Voices Initiative Fellow, George Washington University, Associate Research Professor, Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, China; Dr. Giulio Pugliese, East Asia Voices Initiative Fellow, George Washington University, Lecturer, King’s College London, United Kingdom
Sponsors: Office of Resources for International and Area Studies at UC Berkeley (ORIAS), East Asia National Resource Center at GW
In addition to the Herculean task of moving all your instruction online, we know educators are also fielding questions from students about COVID 19. What can we expect in the coming weeks as the COVID 19 pandemic unfolds? How might we address the broad social, economic, and political consequences of the pandemic?
The webinar series Global Views on COVID 19 will help you answer these questions... More >
Tuesday, March 31, 2020
***CANCELED*** New roads, old stories: An anthropology of infrastructure and travel in the age of the BRI
Lecture: Center for Chinese Studies: Institute of East Asian Studies | March 31 | 5-7 p.m. | 180 Doe Library
Speaker/Performer: Agnieszka Joniak-Lüthi, University of Zurich
Sponsors: Institute of East Asian Studies (IEAS), Center for Chinese Studies (CCS), Institute of Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies (ISEEES), Central Asia Working Group
A traveler through western China in the late 1990s (and earlier) was aware that things would not be smooth. The roads outside of the main tourist corridors were in many cases basic gravel or dirt tracks, timetables were flexible or non-existent, and many places in ethnic minority areas were closed to foreign travelers by a Chinese government unwilling to open up to the gaze of foreigners. Back... More >
Wednesday, April 1, 2020
***CANCELED*** The Anti-Social Contract: Injurious Talk and Dangerous Exchanges in Northern Mongolia
Lecture: Institute of East Asian Studies: Mongolia Initiative | April 1 | 5-7 p.m. | 180 Doe Library
Speaker/Performer: Lars Højer, University of Copenhagen
Sponsors: Institute of East Asian Studies (IEAS), Mongolia Initiative
Based on a recently published monograph, the talk will introduce a remote district of villagers and nomadic pastoralists in the northernmost part of Mongolia in the aftermath of the breakdown of the socialist state. While the collapse of state socialism in Mongolia often implied a chaotic lack of social cohesion, the talk will focus on an everyday universe where uncertainty and suspicion are as... More >
Thursday, April 2, 2020
***CANCELED***From Paternal to Fraternal Domination: Global “Big Brothers” and Infrastructural Imperialism
Lecture | April 2 | 5-7 p.m. | 370 Dwinelle Hall
Speaker/Performer: Rebecca Bryant, Utrecht University
Sponsors: Institute of East Asian Studies (IEAS), Central Asia Working Group
In early European imperialism, trade and resource exploitation financed lavish building projects in metropolitan centers and fueled further colonial expansion. Today, rising economic powers with global ambitions rely on building the infrastructure of other states to drive reconstruction in their own capitals and to create “soft power” empires. This lecture will turn an ethnographic lens on... More >
Tuesday, April 7, 2020
Global Views on COVID 19: Lessons from the 1918 Flu Pandemic in India and Indonesia
Workshop: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | April 7 | 4-5 p.m. | Online via Zoom
Speaker/Performer: Siddharth Chandra, Michigan State University
Sponsor: ORIAS (Office of Resources for International and Area Studies
In addition to the Herculean task of moving all your instruction online, we know educators are also fielding questions from students about COVID 19. What can we expect in the coming weeks as the COVID 19 pandemic unfolds? How might we address the broad social, economic, and political consequences of the pandemic? How can teachers draw connections between topics in their courses and this current... More >
Thursday, April 9, 2020
EVENT CANCELED: Anne Blackburn | The Promise of Precedent: Rāmādhipati at Bago
Lecture | April 9 | 5-7 p.m. | Stephens Hall, 10 (ISAS Conf. Room) | Canceled
Speaker: Anne Blackburn, Professor of Buddhist Studies and South Asian Studies at Cornell University
Moderator: Penny Edwards, Associate Professor, Department of South & Southeast Asian Studies, UC Berkeley
Sponsors: Institute for South Asia Studies, Center for Buddhist Studies, The Ruby Lord Fund for Theravada Studies at the Department of South and Southeast Asian Studies
A talk by historian of South and Southeast Asian Buddhism, and Professor of Buddhist Studies and South Asian Studies at Cornell University, Anne Blackburn.
Friday, April 10, 2020
CANCELED - Daigoji Temple and Shingon Contributions to Japan’s Religious Culture
Conference/Symposium: Center for Japanese Studies | April 10 | 1-5 p.m. | 220 Stephens Hall | Canceled
Speakers: Yasurō Abe, Professor, Global COE Program, Nagoya University; Mika Abe, Research Fellow, Graduate School of Letters, Nagoya University; Matthew McMullen, Research Fellow, Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture; Aaron P. Proffitt, Assistant Professor, Department of East Asian Studies, University at Albany, SUNY; Eric Haruki Swanson, Assistant Professor, Department of Theological Studies, Loyola Marymount University
Panelist/Discussants: Mark Blum, Professor, East Asian Languages and Culture, UC Berkeley; Richard Payne, Professor, Institute of Buddhist Studies
Sponsors: Center for Japanese Studies (CJS), Institute of Buddhist Studies
Recent work has established the importance of Daigoji as a site that has preserved medieval religious culture, both in its impressive architectural structures and as a literal "treasure house" of art, ritual implements, and manuscripts. Beyond this recognition of Daigoji as a monument to Japan’s cultural and religious heritage, however, still relatively little work has been done in explaining how... More >
Monday, April 13, 2020
***CANCELED*** China’s Belt and Road as Rorschach Test: Perspectives on China’s Global Ambitions
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | April 13 | 4-6 p.m. | 180 Doe Library | Canceled
Speaker: Mary Kay Magistad, Director of Audio Journalism Department, Graduate School of Journalism, UC Berkeley
Panelist/Discussant: Juliet Lu, PhD Candidate, Department of Environmental Science, Energy & Management, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
China’s leaders’ plan to build a ‘community of common destiny’ around the world, through building roads, railways, ports, dams, 5G infrastructure and more, is being read in different ways in different parts of the world. Some 120 of the world’s nations – about 60 percent – have signed on to participate in some way in the “Belt and Road,” or New Silk Road. Some welcome China’s investment as a... More >
Tuesday, April 14, 2020
Assessing and Improving Skills in College: China, India, Russia, and the United States
Lecture: Center for Chinese Studies | April 14 | 4-5 p.m. | Barrows Hall, Social Science Matrix Conference Room
Speaker/Performer: Prashant Loyalka
Sponsors: Institute of East Asian Studies, Institute for South Asia Studies
Using nationally representative data on STEM undergraduates collected from China, India and Russia (which train about half of the world's STEM undergraduates) and the United States, Assistant Professor Prashant Loyalka shares his study’s findings that assess and compare levels and gains in academic and higher order thinking skills among college students in multiple countries, and examines which... More >
Wednesday, April 15, 2020
TALK CANCELLED: Chinese Economic Size Overtaking Japan (2008-2014) and the United States (from 2014 to 2030?)
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies: Center for Japanese Studies: Institute of East Asian Studies | April 15 | 4-5:30 p.m. | 180 Doe Library | Canceled
Speaker: Ezra Vogel, Henry Ford II Professor of the Social Sciences Emeritus, Harvard University
Sponsors: Institute of East Asian Studies (IEAS), Center for Chinese Studies (CCS), Center for Japanese Studies (CJS)
Before 1895, in the bilateral relationship between Japan and China, China was in the top position. From 1895-2008, Japan was in the top position. Between 2008-2014 as the size of the Chinese economy surpassed that of Japan, it had profound implications for the nature of their relationship. From 2014 until 2030, as the size of the Chinese economy surpasses that of the United States, it is having... More >
EVENT CANCELED - Buddhist Contributions to Contemporary Moral Reflection: Selflessness and Moral Responsiveness (2020 Chao Lecture)
Lecture | April 15 | 5-6:30 p.m. | 370 Dwinelle Hall
Speaker/Performer: Jay Garfield, Smith College
Sponsor: Center for Buddhist Studies
We expect our partners in dialogue to share our broad concerns but to bring distinctive insights to the conversation. Without a shared purpose there is no motivation for dialogue; without differences in perspective, there is no value in dialogue. When the topic is ethics, we will find that the Western and Buddhist traditions are excellent dialogical partners. Scholars of each community and... More >
Friday, April 17, 2020
CANCELED - Myth-making in Verse: Banquet Poetry and the Creation of a Japanese Origin Story
Colloquium: Center for Japanese Studies | April 17 | 4-6 p.m. | 370 Dwinelle Hall | Canceled
Speaker: Matthieu Felt, University of Florida
Panelist/Discussant: Bonnie McClure, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Japanese Studies (CJS)
At the conclusion of court-sponsored readings of the historical chronicle Nihon shoki, Japanese aristocrats celebrated at banquets where they drank wine and composed poetry about the legendary gods and sovereigns from the text. However, their compositions often differed in tone and content from the original text. In this talk, I identify the thematic and rhetorical strategies of these variations... More >
Saturday, April 18, 2020
EVENT CANCELED - Buddhism, Physics, and Philosophy Redux
Workshop | April 18 | 9:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m. | Jodo Shinshu Center
Location: 2140 Durant Avenue, Berkeley
Sponsors: Center for Buddhist Studies, Tianzhu Global Network for the Study of Buddhist Cultures, Glorisun Global Buddhist Network, Bukkyo Dendo Kyokai
NOTE: THIS WORKSHOP IS HELD OVER THREE CONSECUTIVE DAYS, APRIL 17-19.
The philosophical problems that emerged with the advent of quantum mechanics in the early 20th century are still very much with us. Issues like the measurement problem, entanglement and nonlocality, wave-particle complementarity, and so on, force us to ask:
Sunday, April 19, 2020
EVENT CANCELED - Buddhism, Physics, and Philosophy Redux
Workshop | April 19 | 9:30 a.m.-1 p.m. | Jodo Shinshu Center
Location: 2140 Durant Avenue, Berkeley
Sponsors: Center for Buddhist Studies, Tianzhu Global Network for the Study of Buddhist Cultures, Glorisun Global Buddhist Network, Bukkyo Dendo Kyokai
NOTE: THIS WORKSHOP IS HELD OVER THREE CONSECUTIVE DAYS, APRIL 17-19.
The philosophical problems that emerged with the advent of quantum mechanics in the early 20th century are still very much with us. Issues like the measurement problem, entanglement and nonlocality, wave-particle complementarity, and so on, force us to ask:
Monday, April 20, 2020
***CANCELED*** The Right to the City: Indigenous Settlers in Taipei, Taiwan
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | April 20 | 4-6 p.m. | UC Berkeley Extension (Golden Bear Center), IEAS Conference Room | Canceled
Speaker: Jin-Yung Wu, Visiting Scholar at UC Berkeley, National Taiwan University
Panelist/Discussant: You-tien Hsing, Professor, Department of Geography, UC Berkeley
Sponsors: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS), Center of Global Metropolitan Studies
In this talk Professor Jin-Yung Wu will review a 12 years-long project that has transformed an illegal squatter settlement built by indigenous Amis people from east coast Taiwan into a legal and permanent housing complex in the metropolitan center of Taipei where the housing price had skyrocketed beyond the reach of most young urban middle class in the last two decades. Wearing the hats of urban... More >
Wednesday, April 22, 2020
EVENT CANCELED - Facheng, Gö Chödrup, and the Three Monks Wu: The Multiple Mistaken Identities of a Sino-Tibetan Translator in Dunhuang
Lecture: Center for Buddhist Studies: Tang Center for Silk Road Studies | April 22 | 5-7 p.m. | 180 Doe Library
Speaker/Performer: Meghan Howard, UC Berkeley
Sponsors: Center for Buddhist Studies, Tang Center for Silk Road Studies
Inscriptions and manuscripts from the Mogao Caves (Dunhuang, China) preserve a wealth of evidence on the lives of individuals who lived in this Silk Road oasis at the end of the first millennium of the Common Era. However, deciphering these sources is not always a straightforward business. One of the best attested figures in Dunhuang is a ninth-century monk known by the Chinese name Facheng... More >
Friday, April 24, 2020
POSTPONED TO FALL | Ethnic and Community Identity in Southeast Asia
Conference/Symposium: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | April 24 – 25, 2020 every day | 9 a.m.-6 p.m. | Young Research Library | Canceled
Location: UCLA, Los Angeles, CA
Sponsors: Center for Southeast Asia Studies, Center for Southeast Asian Studies, UCLA
This joint conference has been postponed to the fall. A new date will be announced later this spring.
Saturday, April 25, 2020
POSTPONED TO FALL | Ethnic and Community Identity in Southeast Asia
Conference/Symposium: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | April 24 – 25, 2020 every day | 9 a.m.-6 p.m. | Young Research Library | Canceled
Location: UCLA, Los Angeles, CA
Sponsors: Center for Southeast Asia Studies, Center for Southeast Asian Studies, UCLA
This joint conference has been postponed to the fall. A new date will be announced later this spring.
Thursday, April 30, 2020
Canceled - The Primacy of Practice
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | April 30 | 5-6:30 p.m. | 370 Dwinelle Hall
Speaker/Performer: Kwong-loi Shun, Philosophy, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Buddhist Studies
Co-sponsored by the Center for Buddhist Studies and the Department of Philosophy
Chinese ethical traditions are characterized by a mode of ethical reflection that is driven primarily by a concern to make a direct ethical difference to our lives, rather than to understand our ethical lives as an object of study. We will discuss some distinctive features of this mode of reflection that stand in... More >
Friday, May 1, 2020
China Tomorrow: Democracy or Dictatorship? (Online)
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | May 1 | 4-6 p.m. | Online
Speaker: Jean-Pierre Cabestan, Professor of Political Science, Hong Kong Baptist University
Sponsors: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS), Institute of East Asian Studies, UC Berkeley
About the Book
Arguing against conventional wisdom, this important book makes a compelling case for the continuing strength of China’s one-party system. Many analysts have predicted that China’s unprecedented economic development and middle-class expansion would lead to a... More >
Registration required
Registration info: Please register before 3pm, Friday May 1. Registration opens April 19.
by May 1.
Friday, May 8, 2020
[VIRTUAL EVENT] Patrick Flores | When Commitments Confuse: Writing and Curating (Around) the Nature of Art History
Lecture: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | May 8 | 6 p.m. | Zoom Event
Speaker: Patrick D. Flores, Professor of Art Studies at the Department of Art Studies at the University of the Philippines; Curator of the Vargas Museum in Manila
Moderators: Atreyee Gupta, Assistant Professor of Global Modern Art and South and Southeast Asian Art, History of Art Department; Sugata Ray, Associate Professor, History of Art Department, UC Berkeley
Sponsors: Institute for South Asia Studies, Sarah Kailath Chair of India Studies, South Asia Art Initiative, Department of History of Art, Center for Southeast Asia Studies, The Filipino & Philippine Studies Working Group at the Townsend Center for the Humanities, Southeast of Now: Directions in Contemporary and Modern Art in Asia
A virtual talk by the eminent Manila-based academic, curator, and art historian, Patrick D. Flores.
Registration required
Registration info: Registration opens April 29.
by May 6.
Wednesday, May 27, 2020
[VIRTUAL EVENT] Vulnerable Populations and COVID-19: Bangladesh During a Global Pandemic
Panel Discussion: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | May 27 | 8 a.m. | Zoom Event
Speakers: Sanchita Saxena, Director, Subir and Malini Chowdhury Center for Bangladesh Studies, University of California, Berkeley; Sabina Rashid, Dean and Professor, BRAC James P Grant School of Public Health, BRAC University, Bangladesh; Ali Riaz, Distinguished Professor of Political Science at Illinois State University and Nonresident Senior Fellow of Atlantic Council; Naomi Hossain, Sr Professorial Lecturer, School of International Service, American University; Mabrur Ahmed, Founder/Director, Restless Beings, UK; Rahima Begum, Founder/Co-Director, Restless Beings, UK
Sponsors: Institute for South Asia Studies, The Subir & Malini Chowdhury Center for Bangladesh Studies, Political Conflict, Gender, People's Rights Initiative, Center for Southeast Asia Studies, Master of Development Practice
A virtual event on the impact of the coronavirus in Bangladesh.
Registration required
Registration info: Registration opens May 2.
by May 26.
Friday, May 29, 2020
People Power: Summer Institute for Community College Educators
Workshop: Institute of East Asian Studies: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | May 29 – June 6, 2020 every Sunday, Friday & Saturday with exceptions | 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m. | online
Sponsor: ORIAS (Office of Resources for International and Area Studies)
How do we interpret narratives about mass movements in the past? And how does that understanding across the distance of time compare to the actual, complex experience of participating in such a movement?
Attendance restrictions: This event is for community college teachers and AP-level high school teachers.
Registration required: FREE
Registration info: Registration opens February 19.
or or by emailing Shane carter at orias@berkeley.edu by May 28.
After a theater show by artists at protests in Basra, Iraq, November 2019 by Mohammad Al Sadeq
Saturday, May 30, 2020
People Power: Summer Institute for Community College Educators
Workshop: Institute of East Asian Studies: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | May 29 – June 6, 2020 every Sunday, Friday & Saturday with exceptions | 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m. | online
Sponsor: ORIAS (Office of Resources for International and Area Studies)
How do we interpret narratives about mass movements in the past? And how does that understanding across the distance of time compare to the actual, complex experience of participating in such a movement?
Attendance restrictions: This event is for community college teachers and AP-level high school teachers.
Registration required: FREE
Registration info: Registration opens February 19.
or or by emailing Shane carter at orias@berkeley.edu by May 28.
Friday, June 5, 2020
People Power: Summer Institute for Community College Educators
Workshop: Institute of East Asian Studies: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | May 29 – June 6, 2020 every Sunday, Friday & Saturday with exceptions | 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m. | online
Sponsor: ORIAS (Office of Resources for International and Area Studies)
How do we interpret narratives about mass movements in the past? And how does that understanding across the distance of time compare to the actual, complex experience of participating in such a movement?
Attendance restrictions: This event is for community college teachers and AP-level high school teachers.
Registration required: FREE
Registration info: Registration opens February 19.
or or by emailing Shane carter at orias@berkeley.edu by May 28.
After a theater show by artists at protests in Basra, Iraq, November 2019 by Mohammad Al Sadeq
Saturday, June 6, 2020
People Power: Summer Institute for Community College Educators
Workshop: Institute of East Asian Studies: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | May 29 – June 6, 2020 every Sunday, Friday & Saturday with exceptions | 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m. | online
Sponsor: ORIAS (Office of Resources for International and Area Studies)
How do we interpret narratives about mass movements in the past? And how does that understanding across the distance of time compare to the actual, complex experience of participating in such a movement?
Attendance restrictions: This event is for community college teachers and AP-level high school teachers.
Registration required: FREE
Registration info: Registration opens February 19.
or or by emailing Shane carter at orias@berkeley.edu by May 28.
Thursday, June 11, 2020
Migration and Xenophobia across the Pacific in the Time of COVID-19: Current Problems in Their Historical Context
Panel Discussion: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | June 11 | 4-5:30 p.m. | Zoom
Panelist/Discussants: Mae Ngai, Columbia University; Nayan Shah, University of Southern California; Lok Siu, University of California, Berkeley; Yasuko Takezawa, Kyoto University
Moderators: Albert Manke, Pacific Regional Office of the German Historical Institute Washington; Yufei Zhou, German Institute for Japanese Studies, Tokyo)
Sponsors: Institute of European Studies, Pacific Regional Office of the German Historical Institute Washington, Department of Ethnic Studies, Institute of East Asian Studies (IEAS), Center for Chinese Studies (CCS), Max Weber Stiftung, Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF), Asian American and Asian Diaspora Studies
Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, we have witnessed a significant increase in reports of anti-Asian harassment and assaults, particularly in the United States, Canada, and Europe. Moreover, Japan, Singapore, and other Asian states in the region have witnessed a rise in anti-Mainland Chinese sentiments. In this panel discussion, leading historians and anthropologists will address current... More >
RSVP required
RSVP info:
by June 11.
Monday, June 22, 2020
Propaganda: Summer Institute for k-12 Educators
Workshop: Institute of East Asian Studies: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | June 22 – 26, 2020 every day | 10-11:30 a.m. | online
Sponsor: ORIAS (Office of Resources for International and Area Studies)
What are the features, uses, and histories of propaganda? What techniques have governments and political movements used to construct and convey messages? How is propaganda related to the construction of national (or other) identities? Is propaganda entirely culture-specific, or are there universal features of this mode of communication?
Attendance restrictions: This event is for k-12 teachers.
Registration required: free for k-12 educators
Registration info: Registration opens February 9.
or or by emailing Shane carter at orias@berkeley.edu by June 21.
Tuesday, June 23, 2020
Propaganda: Summer Institute for k-12 Educators
Workshop: Institute of East Asian Studies: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | June 22 – 26, 2020 every day | 10-11:30 a.m. | online
Sponsor: ORIAS (Office of Resources for International and Area Studies)
What are the features, uses, and histories of propaganda? What techniques have governments and political movements used to construct and convey messages? How is propaganda related to the construction of national (or other) identities? Is propaganda entirely culture-specific, or are there universal features of this mode of communication?
Attendance restrictions: This event is for k-12 teachers.
Registration required: free for k-12 educators
Registration info: Registration opens February 9.
or or by emailing Shane carter at orias@berkeley.edu by June 21.
Wednesday, June 24, 2020
Propaganda: Summer Institute for k-12 Educators
Workshop: Institute of East Asian Studies: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | June 22 – 26, 2020 every day | 10-11:30 a.m. | online
Sponsor: ORIAS (Office of Resources for International and Area Studies)
What are the features, uses, and histories of propaganda? What techniques have governments and political movements used to construct and convey messages? How is propaganda related to the construction of national (or other) identities? Is propaganda entirely culture-specific, or are there universal features of this mode of communication?
Attendance restrictions: This event is for k-12 teachers.
Registration required: free for k-12 educators
Registration info: Registration opens February 9.
or or by emailing Shane carter at orias@berkeley.edu by June 21.
Thursday, June 25, 2020
Propaganda: Summer Institute for k-12 Educators
Workshop: Institute of East Asian Studies: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | June 22 – 26, 2020 every day | 10-11:30 a.m. | online
Sponsor: ORIAS (Office of Resources for International and Area Studies)
What are the features, uses, and histories of propaganda? What techniques have governments and political movements used to construct and convey messages? How is propaganda related to the construction of national (or other) identities? Is propaganda entirely culture-specific, or are there universal features of this mode of communication?
Attendance restrictions: This event is for k-12 teachers.
Registration required: free for k-12 educators
Registration info: Registration opens February 9.
or or by emailing Shane carter at orias@berkeley.edu by June 21.
Friday, June 26, 2020
Propaganda: Summer Institute for k-12 Educators
Workshop: Institute of East Asian Studies: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | June 22 – 26, 2020 every day | 10-11:30 a.m. | online
Sponsor: ORIAS (Office of Resources for International and Area Studies)
What are the features, uses, and histories of propaganda? What techniques have governments and political movements used to construct and convey messages? How is propaganda related to the construction of national (or other) identities? Is propaganda entirely culture-specific, or are there universal features of this mode of communication?
Attendance restrictions: This event is for k-12 teachers.
Registration required: free for k-12 educators
Registration info: Registration opens February 9.
or or by emailing Shane carter at orias@berkeley.edu by June 21.
Friday, July 10, 2020
Center for Chinese Studies Visiting Scholar Program Info-Meeting: Learn about the CCS Visiting Scholar Program with research scholar appointments available for international and domestic faculty, students, and more!
Information Session: Center for Chinese Studies | July 10 | 5-6 p.m. | Online
Speakers: Skye VanValkenburgh, Visiting Scholar Program Administrator, Center for Chinese Studies; Jianye He, Chinese Studies Special Collection Librarian, C.V. Starr East Asian Library
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
RSVP to learn more about the Center for Chinese Studies Visiting Scholar Program, visiting scholar classifications, the application process, tips for applying, and the special Chinese Studies library collection as well as other Berkeley library resources.
Registration required
Registration info: before 4pm PST.
by July 10.
Monday, July 27, 2020
Trade and Exchange In Asia
Workshop: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | July 27 – 31, 2020 every day | 10 a.m.-12 p.m. | Asian Art Museum via zoom
Sponsor: UC Berkeley History-Social Science Project
How does the movement of people, ideas, and material goods change societies? In this webinar, a collaboration between the Asian Art Museum and the UC Berkeley History and Social Science Project, you’ll learn from museum curators and educators and join in lively discussions with fellow teachers on using art objects in your online teaching. UCBHSSP facilitators will lead two sessions, presenting... More >
Registration: $25-35
Registration info:
Tuesday, July 28, 2020
Trade and Exchange In Asia
Workshop: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | July 27 – 31, 2020 every day | 10 a.m.-12 p.m. | Asian Art Museum via zoom
Sponsor: UC Berkeley History-Social Science Project
How does the movement of people, ideas, and material goods change societies? In this webinar, a collaboration between the Asian Art Museum and the UC Berkeley History and Social Science Project, you’ll learn from museum curators and educators and join in lively discussions with fellow teachers on using art objects in your online teaching. UCBHSSP facilitators will lead two sessions, presenting... More >
Registration: $25-35
Registration info:
Wednesday, July 29, 2020
Trade and Exchange In Asia
Workshop: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | July 27 – 31, 2020 every day | 10 a.m.-12 p.m. | Asian Art Museum via zoom
Sponsor: UC Berkeley History-Social Science Project
How does the movement of people, ideas, and material goods change societies? In this webinar, a collaboration between the Asian Art Museum and the UC Berkeley History and Social Science Project, you’ll learn from museum curators and educators and join in lively discussions with fellow teachers on using art objects in your online teaching. UCBHSSP facilitators will lead two sessions, presenting... More >
Registration: $25-35
Registration info:
Thursday, July 30, 2020
Trade and Exchange In Asia
Workshop: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | July 27 – 31, 2020 every day | 10 a.m.-12 p.m. | Asian Art Museum via zoom
Sponsor: UC Berkeley History-Social Science Project
How does the movement of people, ideas, and material goods change societies? In this webinar, a collaboration between the Asian Art Museum and the UC Berkeley History and Social Science Project, you’ll learn from museum curators and educators and join in lively discussions with fellow teachers on using art objects in your online teaching. UCBHSSP facilitators will lead two sessions, presenting... More >
Registration: $25-35
Registration info:
Friday, July 31, 2020
Trade and Exchange In Asia
Workshop: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | July 27 – 31, 2020 every day | 10 a.m.-12 p.m. | Asian Art Museum via zoom
Sponsor: UC Berkeley History-Social Science Project
How does the movement of people, ideas, and material goods change societies? In this webinar, a collaboration between the Asian Art Museum and the UC Berkeley History and Social Science Project, you’ll learn from museum curators and educators and join in lively discussions with fellow teachers on using art objects in your online teaching. UCBHSSP facilitators will lead two sessions, presenting... More >
Friday, September 4, 2020
Museological Warfare: Cine-Exhibition of Class Struggle in Mao's China
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | September 4 | 5-6:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Speaker: Belinda Qian He, CCS Postdoctoral Fellow, UC Berkeley
Panelist/Discussant: Weihong Bao, Associate Professor, East Asian Languages and Cultures, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
Belinda Q. He's talk examines the little studied exhibition-cinema dynamics in a Mao-era cultural movement that celebrated the mass historiographies based on supposedly crowdsourced archiving, collecting, curating, writing, and storytelling. Situated in the context of the Socialist Education Movement, it provides a case study of the intersection between a local class struggle exhibition and the... More >
Registration required
Registration info: Please register before 4pm, Friday September 4.
Wednesday, September 9, 2020
Webinar Series - Aging in Asia: Ethical and Policy Issues in Healthy Aging and End of Life Care Across the Asia-Pacific Region
Conference/Symposium: Center for Chinese Studies: Center for Korean Studies: Center for Japanese Studies: Institute of East Asian Studies: Mongolia Initiative | September 9 – 23, 2020 every Wednesday | 6-8 p.m. | Online - webinar
Sponsors: Institute of East Asian Studies (IEAS), Public Health, School of, National Taiwan University Institute of Health Behaviors and Community Sciences, UC Berkeley Mongolia Initiative, Center for Chinese Studies (CCS), Center for Japanese Studies (CJS), Center for Korean Studies (CKS), Health Research for Action, Department of Ethnic Studies
REGISTER HERE: https://tinyurl.com/Aging-In-Asia
With aging populations and dwindling birth rates in many developed countries. healthy aging and end of life care are becoming an increasing challenge. A multidisciplinary approach by scholars from Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, Mongolia, and ... More >
Registration required
Registration info:
Thursday, September 10, 2020
Online event: Landlocked Cosmopolitan Locks-Down: Mongolia's COVID-19 Response
Colloquium: Institute of East Asian Studies: Mongolia Initiative | September 10 | 2-3:15 p.m. | Online Event (via Zoom)
Speaker: Marissa Smith, Central Asia Working Group, UC Berkeley Institute of East Asian Studies
Sponsors: Institute of East Asian Studies (IEAS), George Washington University East Asia National Resource Center, Mongolia Initiative
Mongolia has been hailed for its COVID-19 response. Though the country lies between Russia and China, its first recorded case was that of a French national employed by France's state uranium and nuclear company Orano. At the same time, given continuing border closures and stoppages of international flights, Mongolians abroad have had great difficulty repatriating into the summer. Campaign... More >
RSVP required
RSVP info: Event will be held at 2pm (PDT) / 5pm (EDT). The event is free and will be held on WebEX. Please RSVP in order to receive the meeting information.
The "Chinese Virus": a History of Epidemics, Violence, and Anti-Asian Racism (Virtual CRG Thursday Forum)
Panel Discussion: Center for Chinese Studies | September 10 | 4-5 p.m. | Online - Zoom Webinar
Sponsors: Center for Race and Gender, Center for Chinese Studies, Berkeley Interdisciplinary Migration Initiative, Asian American and Asian Diaspora Studies
The coronavirus pandemic has been accompanied by an epidemic of anti-Asian violence, fueled by a president who has labelled COVID-19 "kung flu" and "the Chinese virus." This panel will feature Beth Lew-Williams, Associate Professor of History at Princeton University and the author of The Chinese Must Go: Violence, Exclusion and the Making of the Alien in America (Harvard University Press, 2018),... More >
Registration required
Registration info: Must register to receive a personalized link to join the Zoom webinar.
Friday, September 11, 2020
Berkeley Conversations: Race, The Power of an Illusion: The Difference Between Us (Part 1)
Film - Documentary | September 11 | 2-4 p.m. | Virtual, Berkeley Conversations
Panelist/Discussants: Darlene Francis, UC Berkeley; Evelynn Hammonds, Harvard University; Leslea Hlusko, UC Berkeley; john a. powell, Othering & Belonging Institute
Moderator: Osagie Obasogie, UC Berkeley
Sponsors: Othering & Belonging Institute, Public Health, School of, Center for Research on Social Change
This event will consist of a one-hour screening of the award-winning docuseries Race, The Power of an Illusion: The Difference Between Us (Part 1), followed by a one-hour live-streamed panel discussion on the biological versus social determinants of race. The first event in this three-part series organized by the Othering & Belonging Institute will consider: What do we mean when we say "race"?
Registration recommended
Registration info:
Circuit Listening: Chinese Popular Music in the Global 1960s
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | September 11 | 5-6:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Speaker: Andrew F. Jones, Louis B. Agassiz Professor in Chinese, UC Berkeley
Panelist/Discussant: Jie Li, John L. Loeb Associate Professor of the Humanities, Harvard University
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
This event will feature the noted scholar of Chinese literature and media culture, Professor Jie Li of Harvard University, in conversation with Andrew F. Jones about his latest book, Circuit Listening: Chinese Popular Music in the Global 1960s, a multifaceted history of Chinese-language popular music and media at midcentury. In examining the Cold War-era circuits — both technological and... More >
Registration required
Registration info: Please register before 4pm, Friday September 11.
Film Screening: Turning 18 by Director Chao-ti Ho
Film - Feature: Center for Chinese Studies | September 11 | 6:30-8:30 p.m. | Online - via Vimeo
Sponsors: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS), Taiwan Academy in Los Angeles, UCHRI
Two aboriginal girls growing up in broken homes. When they meet on the cusp of turning 18, their lives start to change. Tender but unflinching, Turning 18 is an attentive examination of girlhood and sharp commentary on the issue of rural poverty in Taiwan, racism faced by the indigenous community, and the LGBTQ rights, all wrapped in a tale of coming of age.
RSVP required
RSVP info: Please note that the Vimeo link and password will be sent to you 24 hours prior to the event start time. RSVP by emailing ccs@berkeley.edu
Wednesday, September 16, 2020
Webinar Series - Aging in Asia: Ethical and Policy Issues in Healthy Aging and End of Life Care Across the Asia-Pacific Region
Conference/Symposium: Center for Chinese Studies: Center for Korean Studies: Center for Japanese Studies: Institute of East Asian Studies: Mongolia Initiative | September 9 – 23, 2020 every Wednesday | 6-8 p.m. | Online - webinar
Sponsors: Institute of East Asian Studies (IEAS), Public Health, School of, National Taiwan University Institute of Health Behaviors and Community Sciences, UC Berkeley Mongolia Initiative, Center for Chinese Studies (CCS), Center for Japanese Studies (CJS), Center for Korean Studies (CKS), Health Research for Action, Department of Ethnic Studies
REGISTER HERE: https://tinyurl.com/Aging-In-Asia
With aging populations and dwindling birth rates in many developed countries. healthy aging and end of life care are becoming an increasing challenge. A multidisciplinary approach by scholars from Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, Mongolia, and ... More >
Registration required
Registration info:
Friday, September 18, 2020
Film Discussion: Turning 18: A Director's Perspective
Workshop: Center for Chinese Studies | September 18 | 6-7:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom Webinar
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
Director Chao-ti Ho will be sharing with us about documentary making and her perspective as a female filmmaker.
This is a closed workshop, and by invitation only.
RSVP required
Wednesday, September 23, 2020
Webinar Series - Aging in Asia: Ethical and Policy Issues in Healthy Aging and End of Life Care Across the Asia-Pacific Region
Conference/Symposium: Center for Chinese Studies: Center for Korean Studies: Center for Japanese Studies: Institute of East Asian Studies: Mongolia Initiative | September 9 – 23, 2020 every Wednesday | 6-8 p.m. | Online - webinar
Sponsors: Institute of East Asian Studies (IEAS), Public Health, School of, National Taiwan University Institute of Health Behaviors and Community Sciences, UC Berkeley Mongolia Initiative, Center for Chinese Studies (CCS), Center for Japanese Studies (CJS), Center for Korean Studies (CKS), Health Research for Action, Department of Ethnic Studies
REGISTER HERE: https://tinyurl.com/Aging-In-Asia
With aging populations and dwindling birth rates in many developed countries. healthy aging and end of life care are becoming an increasing challenge. A multidisciplinary approach by scholars from Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, Mongolia, and ... More >
Registration required
Registration info:
Friday, September 25, 2020
Music Studies Colloquium: SEM preview
Colloquium: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | September 25 | 4:30 p.m. | Admission for all attendees with berkeley.edu email address | Canceled
Sponsor: Department of Music
Jon Wu (UC Berkeley)
"Voice and Silence in an Urban Canadian Context"
Parkorn Wangpaiboonkit (UC Berkeley)
"New Figures in the Menagerie of Colonial Listening: Voice, Subjectivity, and the Howling European in Nineteenth-Century Siam"
Nour El Rayes (UC Berkeley)
"The Cost of Admission: Production, Performance, Circulation in Beirut's Alternative Music World"
Staging Personhood: Costuming in Early Qing Drama
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | September 25 | 5-6:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Speaker: Guojun Wang, Assistant Professor of Asian Studies, Vanderbilt University
Panelist/Discussant: Ling Hon Lam, Associate Professor, East Asian Languages and Cultures, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
In this talk, Guojun Wang discusses his recent book Staging Personhood: Costuming in Early Qing Drama (Columbia UP, 2020). After toppling the Ming dynasty, the Qing conquerors forced Han Chinese males to adopt Manchu hairstyle and clothing. Yet China’s new rulers permitted the use of traditional Chinese attire in performances, making theater one of the only areas of life where Han garments could... More >
Thursday, October 1, 2020
Matrix On Point: The Struggle for Hong Kong
Panel Discussion: Center for Chinese Studies | October 1 | 5-6:30 p.m. | Virtual Event
Panelist/Discussants: Ching Kwan Lee, Professor of Sociology, UCLA; Alex Chow, PhD Student, UC Berkeley Geography; Jeffrey Wasserstrom, Chancellor's Professor of History, UC Irvine
Moderator: Thomas Gold, Professor of the Graduate School, UC Berkeley
Sponsors: Social Science Matrix, Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
This Matrix on Point, co-sponsored by the Center for Chinese Studies, considers both the history and future of Hong Kong’s democracy movement. Panelists include Ching Kwan Lee, UCLA; Alex Chow, UC Berkeley; and Jeffrey Wasserstrom, UC Irvine. Thomas Gold, UC Berkeley, will moderate.
Registration required
Registration info:
Friday, October 2, 2020
Anxious China: Inner Revolution and Politics of Psychotherapy
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | October 2 | 5-6:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Speaker: Li Zhang, Professor of Anthropology, UC Davis
Panelist/Discussant: Yan Long, Assistant Professor, Sociology Dept., UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
The breathless pace of China’s economic reform has brought about deep ruptures in socioeconomic structures and people’s inner landscape. Faced with increasing market-driven competition and profound social changes, more and more middle-class urbanites are turning to Western-style psychological counseling to grapple with their mental distress. This talk is an overview and open discussion of Zhang’s... More >
Registration required
Registration info: Please register before 4pm, Friday October 2.
Wednesday, October 7, 2020
[VIRTUAL] Reimagining the Practice of Citizenship: The Visuals of the Unruly Youth in Thailand
Lecture: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | October 7 | 4-5:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Speaker: Penchan Phoborisut, Assistant Professor of Communications, CSU Fullerton
Moderator: Daena Funahashi, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, UC Berkeley
Sponsors: Center for Southeast Asia Studies, UCLA Center for Southeast Asian Studies
With countless protests since 2004 and coup d’états in 2006 and 2014, Thailand, once a thriving democracy, is now dominated by the military. However, while the old conservative groups hold on, young Thais are speaking their minds. They resist being ruled by the despotic regime, making visible their acts of resistance while inventing new forms of protest in the realm of cultural practices.
Attendance restrictions: Anyone who will require an accommodation for effective communication in order to fully participate in this event should contact cseas@berkeley.edu with as much advance notice as possible and at least 7 days in advance of the event.
Registration required
Registration info:
Penchan Phoborisut
Thursday, October 8, 2020
[Zoom Talk] Fantasies of Modernity: South Korean Television and Latin America
Lecture: Center for Korean Studies | October 8 | 4-5 p.m. | Online via Zoom
Speaker/Performer: Benjamin Han, Tulane University
Sponsors: Center for Korean Studies (CKS), Center for Latin American Studies
Since 1905, the everyday interactions of the Korean diaspora with Latin Americans have shaped the representation of Korea in Latin America. In 1905, a ship carrying approximately 1,033 Korean laborers left the port of Incheon for Mexico, making its arrival in Yucatán. Koreans have then (re)migrated and dispersed across different parts of Latin America,... More >
Registration required
Registration info:
San Francisco World History Reading Group: How to Hide an Empire by Daniel Immerwahr
Meeting: Institute of East Asian Studies: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | October 8 | 5-7 p.m. | Zoom
Sponsor: ORIAS (Office of Resources for International and Area Studies)
Teachers in ORIAS World History Reading Groups read one book each month within a global studies theme. Participants meet monthly to eat and spend two hours in collegial conversation. It is a relaxing, intellectually rich atmosphere for both new and experienced teachers.
Attendance restrictions: This event is for k-14 teachers.
Registration required
Registration info:
or or by emailing Shane Carter at orias@berkeley.edu
Friday, October 9, 2020
Understanding and Combating COVID-19
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | October 9 | 5-6:30 p.m. | Online-Zoom webinar
Speaker: Fenyong Liu, Public Health, UC Berkeley
Panelist/Discussant: Amy Garlin, Public Health, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
Being on the faculty for more than 25 years, Dr. Fenyong Liu is currently Professor of Infectious Diseases in the School of Public Health at UC Berkeley. For over 30 years, Dr. Liu has been collaborating with scientists around the world to study various human viruses and combat the infections associated with these viruses.
The 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is caused by a new human... More >
Registration required
Registration info: Please register before 4pm, Friday October 9.
East Bay World History Reading Group: Caste by Isabel Wilkerson
Meeting: Institute of East Asian Studies: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | October 9 | 5-7 p.m. | Zoom
Sponsor: ORIAS (Office of Resources for International and Area Studies)
Teachers in ORIAS World History Reading Groups read one book each month within a global studies theme. Participants meet monthly to eat and spend two hours in collegial conversation. It is a relaxing, intellectually rich atmosphere for both new and experienced teachers.
Attendance restrictions: This event is for k-14 teachers.
Registration required
Registration info:
or or by emailing Shane Carter at orias@berkeley.edu
Wednesday, October 14, 2020
[Online] The Philippine State Management of Domestic Worker Migration
Lecture: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | October 14 | 4-5:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Speaker: Rhacel Salazar Parrenas, Professor of Sociology and Gender Studies, University of Southern California
Moderator: Nancy Lee Peluso, Chair, Center for Southeast Asia Studies, UC Berkeley
Sponsors: Center for Southeast Asia Studies, Department of Ethnic Studies
This lecture examines the Philippine state’s management of domestic worker migration with a focus on migration to Arab States.
Registration required
Registration info:
by October 14.
Rhacel Salazar Parrenas
Friday, October 16, 2020
[Online] Poison Cure? : Arts. Trauma. Healing
Lecture: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | October 16 | 1-2 p.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Speaker: Boreth Ly, Associate Professor of History of Art and Visual Culture, UC Santa Cruz
Moderator: Penny Edwards, Associate Professor of South & Southeast Asian Studies, UC Berkeley
Sponsors: Center for Southeast Asia Studies, UCLA Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Department of South & Southeast Asian Studies
Prof. Boreth Ly will discuss his recent book Traces of Trauma: Cambodian Visual Culture and National Identity in the Aftermath of Genocide (University of Hawaii Press, 2019) in conversation with Prof. Penny Edwards.
Attendance restrictions: Anyone who will require an accommodation in order to fully participate in this event should contact cseas@berkeley.edu at least 7 days in advance of the event.
Registration required
Registration info:
by October 16.
The Rise of the Brain: Envisioning Human Potential and Difference in 1980s China
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | October 16 | 5-6:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Speaker: Ying Qian, Assistant Professor in Chinese Cinema and Media, Columbia University
Panelist/Discussant: Weihong Bao, Associate Professor in Chinese Program and Film Studies, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
With the re-opening of universities, rehabilitation of intellectuals and educated cadres, and a state-led policy shift from class politics towards modernization, the late 1970s and 1980s has been remembered as a time when the long-held distrust in intellectuals since 1949 gave way to a society-wide reverence for science, technology and learning as the driving force for modernization. The... More >
Registration required
Registration info: Please register before 4pm, Friday October 16.
Saturday, October 17, 2020
COVID-19 and Anti-Asian Violence, presented by Professor Lok Siu Saturday, October 17 at 2:30 p.m. PDT
Lecture: Center for Chinese Studies | October 17 | 2:30-3:30 p.m. | Zoom
Sponsor: Cal Alumni Association
Professor Lok Siu is a cultural anthropologist and professor of ethnic studies at UC Berkeley. Her areas of expertise include Asian diasporas in the Americas, transnational migration, belonging and cultural citizenship, performance, and food. Her award-winning books include Memories of a Future Home: Diasporic Citizenship of Chinese in Panama and Asian Diasporas: New Formations, New Conceptions.... More >
Thursday, October 22, 2020
[Zoom Talk] Seeds of Control: Japan's Empire of Forestry in Colonial Korea
Lecture: Center for Korean Studies | October 22 | 4-5 p.m. | Online via Zoom
Speaker/Performer: David Fedman, University of California, Irvine
Sponsor: Center for Korean Studies (CKS)
This talk will briefly introduce some of the key arguments and interventions that animate Seeds of Control, one of the first English-language studies of the environmental impacts and legacies of Japan's occupation of Korea. By outlining some of the central themes of the book, the author hopes to stimulate a broader conversation about forest governance and... More >
Registration required
Registration info:
Friday, October 23, 2020
Making “Southwestern China” in the Late Qing and Republic: Economic Change, Provincial State-building, and Native Chieftains in Yunnan, Guizhou and Guangxi, ca. 1873-1937
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | October 23 | 5-6:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Speaker: Kenneth Pomeranz, Professor of Modern Chinese History, The University of Chicago
Panelist/Discussant: Wen-hsin Yeh, Richard H. and Laurie C. Morrison Chair Professor, Department of History, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
When China was convulsed by ethnic civil wars in the mid-19th century, the southwest was no exception: both the Panthay Rebellion in Yunnan (1856-73) and the Guizhou Rebellion of 1854-73 strained Qing resources to the limit, and ended with massacres that seemed likely to produce at best a rather sullen peace. A decade later parts of Yunnan and Guangxi also suffered invasion by French and/or... More >
Registration required
Registration info: Please register before 4pm, Friday October 23.
Wednesday, October 28, 2020
[Online] Duterte's Phallus: On the Aesthetics of Authoritarian Vulgarity
Lecture: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | October 28 | 4-5:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Speaker: Vicente Rafael, Professor of History, University of Washington
Moderator: Lisandro Claudio, Assistant Professor of South & Southeast Asian Studies, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Southeast Asia Studies
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte is known for his irreverence and bawdy humor that constitute important elements of his governing style. His stories reveal a reliance on invective and an obsession with obscenity. What results is an “intimate tyranny,” much of it centered on the tales of his phallus as it encounters the world. This talk is an attempt to explicate this intimate tyranny.
Attendance restrictions: Anyone who will require an accommodation in order to fully participate in this event should contact cseas@berkeley.edu at least 7 days in advance of the event.
Registration required
Registration info:
by October 28.
Vicente Rafael
Thursday, October 29, 2020
Purin Phanichphant: Right Place, Right Action, Right Time
Lecture: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | October 29 | 12-1 p.m. | Zoom Lecture
Speaker/Performer: Purin Phanichphant
Sponsor: Arts + Design
Please register for the event by using the following link: https://berkeley.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_3z59foYfTHCl0y-_bbf7cg
Purin Phanichphant, Artist, Designer, Lecturer, Master of Design, UC Berkeley
Purin Phanichphant @purin.co is an artist and designer based in the Bay Area. His interactive designs and artworks push emerging technologies to their most peaceful and contemplative... More >
Purin Phanichphant Headshot
Will China’s Belt and Road Initiative Increase Tropical Deforestation?: Zoom Seminar
Seminar: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | October 29 | 3:30-4:30 p.m. | Mulford Hall, Zoom Seminar
Speaker: Xingli Giam, Asst. Professor, University of Tennessee
Sponsor: Dept. of Environmental Science, Policy, and Mgmt. (ESPM)
Join Zoom Meeting
https://berkeley.zoom.us/j/99175402006?pwd=aTdmL09rbitmRENsUkVySFFEeWorZz09
Meeting ID: 991 7540 2006
Passcode: 290
Friday, October 30, 2020
Chinese Grammatology: Script Revolution and Literary Modernity, 1916–1958
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | October 30 | 5-6:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Speaker: Yurou Zhong, Associate Professor, East Asian Studies, University of Toronto
Panelist/Discussant: Andrew Jones, Professor, East Asia Languages and Cultures, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
Chinese characters are a national treasure. It is therefore inconceivable that, a mere century ago, the Chinese faith in its own script wavered, crumbled, and imploded, launching a script revolution that aimed to eliminate Chinese characters and implement a Chinese alphabet. This book talk takes seriously the series of puzzles triggered by the script revolution: Why did it happen? How did it... More >
Registration required
Registration info: Please register before 4pm, Friday October 30.
Wednesday, November 4, 2020
Post-Imperial Oceanics
Conference/Symposium: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | November 4 – 5, 2020 every day | 9-11 a.m. | Zoom Event
Sponsors: Institute for South Asia Studies, Department of Geography, Oceanic Humanities in the Global South, WiSER, University of the Witwatersrand
A 2-day virtual conference that brings together a set of thinkers engaged with fragmented, layered and linked oceanic imperial processes, to think with the creative tensions between sociocultural processes across oceanic surfaces, and the mysteries of the submarine.
Registration required
Registration info: Registration opens September 1.
by November 3.
Thursday, November 5, 2020
Post-Imperial Oceanics
Conference/Symposium: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | November 4 – 5, 2020 every day | 9-11 a.m. | Zoom Event
Sponsors: Institute for South Asia Studies, Department of Geography, Oceanic Humanities in the Global South, WiSER, University of the Witwatersrand
A 2-day virtual conference that brings together a set of thinkers engaged with fragmented, layered and linked oceanic imperial processes, to think with the creative tensions between sociocultural processes across oceanic surfaces, and the mysteries of the submarine.
Registration required
Registration info: Registration opens September 1.
by November 3.
Friday, November 6, 2020
2020 Toshihide Numata Book Award Presentation and Symposium
Conference/Symposium | November 6 | 12-3:30 p.m. | Webinar
Sponsors: Center for Buddhist Studies, BDK America
The Toshihide Numata Book Award in Buddhism is presented on an annual basis to an outstanding book or books in the area of Buddhist studies. Administered by the Center for Buddhist Studies at the University of California, Berkeley, the selection is made by an external committee that is appointed annually. This year’s event celebrates the presentation of the 2020 award to Roger R. Jackson (John W.... More >
Registration required
Registration info:
Early Modern Forms of Chinese Algorithmic Play: Database, Interface, and Iconography in Shuihuzhuan/Suikoden
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | November 6 | 5-6:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Speaker: Paize Keulemans, Associate Professor of East Asian Studies, Princeton University
Panelist/Discussant: Sophie Volpp, CCS Faculty Chair; Associate Professor, EALC, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
The Ming-dynasty vernacular novel “Outlaws of the Marsh” (Chinese: Shuihuzhuan; Japanese: Suikoden) famously tells the tale of 108 heroes who band together to fight official corruption from their hide-out in the marshes of Mount Liang. In the classic, 16th-century novel these characters are firmly embedded in a narrative that poses the initial assembly and final disbanding of this group of... More >
Registration required
Registration info: Please register before 4pm, Friday November 6.
Friday, November 13, 2020
[Virtual] 2 Poets, 37 Nats, and a Walk With History
Reading - Literary: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | November 13 | 12-1 p.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Featured Performers: Maw Shein Win, poet; ko ko thett, poet
Panelist/Discussant: Qiao Dai, Ph.D. candidate, South & Southeast Asian Studies, UC Berkeley
Moderator: Penny Edwards, Associate Professor of South & Southeast Asian Studies, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Southeast Asia Studies
This online event highlighting modern Burmese poetry will include a special focus on works from Maw Shein Win's new poetry collection Storage Unit for the Spirit House, recently published by Omnidawn. Note: Some poems will be read first in Burmese, followed by the English translation.
Attendance restrictions: Anyone who will require an accommodation in order to fully participate in this event should contact cseas@berkeley.edu at least 7 days in advance of the event.
Registration required
Registration info:
by November 13.
China’s Arctic Silk Road
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | November 13 | 5-6:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Speaker: Mary Kay Magistad, Creator & host, "On China's New Silk Road" podcast
Panelist/Discussant: Juliet Lu, Postdoctoral Fellow, Cornell University
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
Climate change is a global crisis; China’s leaders also see it as an opportunity. There’s a new Arctic trade route, new access to rare earths in once-frozen ground, and perhaps a chance to get a toehold in Greenland, as it pushes for full independence from Denmark. Ironically, other aspects of China’s New Silk Road – a global building out of roads, railways, ports, coal-fired power stations,... More >
Registration required
Registration info: Please register before 4pm, Friday November 13.
Tuesday, November 17, 2020
Uprisings: Current Global Events Discussion Group
Workshop: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | November 17 | 4-5 p.m. | online via Zoom
Sponsor: Office of Resources for International and Area Studies (ORIAS)
Uprisings is a discussion group for k-14 teachers focused on the exploration of popular uprisings in different regions around the world. Each month will focus on a different movement in a specific region. Participants are provided with preparatory materials to inform the discussion.
Registration required: Free
Registration info:
or or by emailing Shane Carter at orias@berkeley.edu
Wednesday, November 18, 2020
[Zoom Talk] Imperatives of Care: Women and Medicine in Colonial Korea
Lecture: Center for Korean Studies | November 18 | 4-5 p.m. | Online via Zoom
Speaker/Performer: Sonja Kim, Binghamton University
Sponsor: Center for Korean Studies (CKS)
In 1899, a woman’s application to the newly established Taehan Korean government’s medical school was denied. By 1945, women’s professional health work had become a permanent part of Korea’s landscape... More >
Registration required
Registration info:
Thursday, November 19, 2020
[Virtual] Mining Subjectivities: Territory, Governmentality, and Gold in Indonesia
Lecture: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | November 19 | 4-5:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Speaker: Matthew Libassi, Ph.D. candidate, Environmental Science, Policy & Management, UC Berkeley
Moderator: Nancy Lee Peluso, Chair, Center for Southeast Asia Studies
Sponsor: Center for Southeast Asia Studies
This talk will discuss new research about a gold mining region in West Java, Indonesia where an industrial mining company and informal, small-scale miners have competed over the same mineral reserves for more than 25 years.
Attendance restrictions: Anyone who will require an accommodation in order to fully participate in this event should contact cseas@berkeley.edu at least 5 days in advance of the event.
Registration required
Registration info:
Matthew Libassi
Friday, November 20, 2020
Sunflowers and Umbrellas: Social Movements, Expressive Practices and Political Culture in Taiwan and Hong Kong
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | November 20 | 5-6:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Speaker: Thomas Gold, Sociology, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
Co-Editors Thomas Gold (UC Berkeley) and Edmund Cheng (City University of Hong Kong), Ming-sho Ho (National Taiwan University), Ma Ngok (Chinese University of Hong Kong), Wai-man Lam (Open University of Hong Kong), Lev Nachman (UC Irvine), Ian Rowe (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore), Brian Hioe (New Bloom Magazine) engage in conversation with authors of chapters from this volume based... More >
Registration required
Registration info: Please register before 4pm, Friday November 20.
Monday, November 30, 2020
Nuclear (In)Security: The Korean Peninsula and U.S. Foreign Policy
Panel Discussion: Center for Korean Studies | November 30 | 10-11:30 a.m. | Virtual Event
Panelist/Discussants: Jeffrey Lewis, Monterey Institute of International Studies; Harold Smith, Nuclear Engineering, UC Berkeley; Jinyoung Park, Consulate of the Republic of Korea in San Francisco
Moderator: Daniel Sargent, Dr., Institute of International Studies UC Berkeley
Sponsors: Institute of International Studies, Institute of East Asian Studies
Panel discussion on the North Korean nuclear program and the options available to the international community and the incoming U.S. administration.
Registration required
Registration info:
Wednesday, December 2, 2020
[Online] FLAS Information Session
Information Session: Center for Chinese Studies: Center for Korean Studies: Center for Japanese Studies: Center for Buddhist Studies: Institute of East Asian Studies: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | December 2 | 10-11 a.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Sponsors: Institute of East Asian Studies (IEAS), Center for African Studies, Institute of European Studies, Center for Latin American Studies, Center for Middle Eastern Studies, Institute for South Asia Studies, Center for Southeast Asia Studies
This information session will discuss the application process for the Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) fellowships. FLAS fellowships provide funding to students to encourage the study of less commonly taught foreign languages in combination with area and international studies. These fellowships are funded by grants from the U.S. Department of Education. Applicants must be U.S. citizens or... More >
Registration required
Registration info:
Thursday, December 3, 2020
[Zoom Talk] Book Talk: One Left by Kim Soom
Colloquium: Center for Korean Studies | December 3 | 4 p.m. | Online via Zoom
Speakers: Bruce Fulton, Professor, University of British Columbia; Ju-Chan Fulton, Translator
Sponsor: Center for Korean Studies (CKS)
During the Pacific War, more than 200,000 Korean girls were forced into sexual servitude for Japanese soldiers. They lived in horrific conditions in “comfort stations” across Japanese-occupied territories. Barely 10 percent survived to return to Korea, where they lived as social outcasts. Since then, self-declared comfort women have come forward only to have their testimonies and calls for... More >
RSVP required
RSVP info:
Friday, December 4, 2020
'Fieldwork' Practicalities: Conducting Surveys in the time of COVID
Panel Discussion: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | December 4 | 2-3 p.m. | Online Zoom Meeting
Panelist/Discussants: Clara Bicahlo, Doctoral Student, Political Science; Stephanie Bonds, Doctoral Student, Economics; Allison Grossman, Doctoral Student, Political Science; Bhumi Purohit, Doctoral Student, Political Science
Sponsor: Center for African Studies
The practicalities of fieldwork are always challenging and even more so in the time of the global COVID-19 pandemic. In this panel discussion, Berkeley doctoral students will discuss their experiences doing surveys recently in various regions of the world. They will discuss what worked, what did not, and what issues remain.
Hong Kong under the National Security Law
Colloquium: Center for Chinese Studies | December 4 | 5-6:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom Webinar
Speaker: Austin Ramzy, China Correspondent, The New York Times
Sponsor: Center for Chinese Studies (CCS)
Hong Kong is in the midst of its most dramatic transition since the former British colony returned to Chinese rule in 1997. After a year of large and sometimes violent protests, China imposed a national security law on the semi-autonomous city in late June. Under the sweeping legislation, China’s security agencies can now operate openly in Hong Kong, and critics, including those abroad, can face... More >
Registration required
Registration info: Please register before 4pm, Friday December 4.
Thursday, December 17, 2020
[Online] Viral Sovereignty: Security and Mistrust in the Indonesian H5N1 Influenza Outbreak
Lecture: Center for Southeast Asia Studies | December 17 | 4-5:30 p.m. | Online - Zoom webinar
Speaker: Celia Lowe, Professor of Anthropology and International Studies, University of Washington
Moderator: Nancy Lee Peluso, Chair, Center for Southeast Asia Studies, UC Berkeley
Sponsor: Center for Southeast Asia Studies
In the mid-2000s, Indonesia became ‘ground zero’ for an outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza, the H5N1 strain, which global health experts feared would cause a devastating pandemic. When asked to participate in global health measures, Indonesia’s minister of health argued that the country had ‘viral sovereignty’ and refused to share samples with the World Health Organization’s Global... More >
Attendance restrictions: If you require an accommodation for effective communication in order to fully participate in this event, please contact cseas@berkeley.edu with as much advance notice as possible and at least 7 days in advance of the event.