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East Asia Program

Craft and learn: Chinese guardian figures

January 24, 2025

12:00 pm

Johnson Museum of Art

Come learn about Cornell-China art connections and play with clay. You're invited to learn about the museum's connection to China via artwork and scholarship, view guardian figures in the museum, and create your own guardian figure from clay. Much of this time will be hands-on in the art studio. Facilitated by art museum staff: Saraphina Masters (Coordinator of Student Engagement and Public Programs), Wendy Kenigsberg (Assistant for School Programs), and Andrea Murray (Lead Educator and Pre-K–12 Curriculum Development Specialist). Co-organized by the Johnson Museum of Art, the Cornell China Center, and the Einaudi Center for International Studies' East Asia Program. Limited to 18 participants; registration required. Registrants should meet in the museum lobby.

Registration has reached full capacity. Please email chinacenter@cornell.edu to be added to the waitlist.

Additional Information

Program

Einaudi Center for International Studies

East Asia Program

Book Talk: Seeing China’s Belt and Road

February 3, 2025

4:30 pm

Goldwin Smith Hall, 142

East Asia Program Lecture Series presents "Book Talk: Seeing China’s Belt and Road."

Speaker: Rachel Silvey, Professor, Department of Geography & Planning, University of Toronto

Description: Launched in 2013, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is China's signature trillion-dollar global policy. Based on infrastructure development assistance and financing, the BRI quickly set in motion a possible restructuring of the global economy and indeed the world order. In Seeing China's Belt and Road, Edward Schatz and Rachel Silvey assemble leading field researchers to consider the BRI from different "downstream" contexts, ranging from Central and Southeast Asia to Europe and Africa. By uncovering perspectives on the BRI from Chinese authorities, local businesses, state bureaucrats, expatriated migrants, ordinary citizens, and environmental activists, Seeing China's Belt and Road shows the BRI's dynamic, multidimensional character as it manifests in specific sites. A timely analysis of the BRI, this book moves beyond polarized debates about China's rise and offers a grounded assessment of the dynamic complexity of changes to the world order.

About East Asia Program

As Cornell’s hub for research, teaching, and engagement with East Asia, the East Asia Program (EAP) serves as a forum for the interdisciplinary study of historical and contemporary East Asia. The program draws its membership of over 45 core faculty and numerous affiliated faculty, graduate, and undergraduate students from eight of Cornell’s 12 schools and colleges.

Additional Information

Program

Einaudi Center for International Studies

East Asia Program

Southeast Asia Program

Migrations Program

EAP Events Spring 2025

Cherry Blossom
January 9, 2025

Additional events will be updated throughout the semester. 
 

Craft and Learn: Chinese Guardian Figures

Friday, January 24, 2025 | 12:00pm - 1:00pm | Johnson Museum of Art

Facilitated by art museum staff


Cornell Classical Chinese Colloquium: “Biographies of Exemplary Women” in 19th century Vietnam

Friday, January 31, 2025 | 3:30pm - 5:30pm | Rockefeller Hall 374, Asian Studies Lounge

Speaker: Kathlene Baldanza, Penn State University


Book Talk: Seeing China’s Belt and Road

Monday, February 3, 2025 | 4:30pm - 6:00pm | Goldwin Smith Hall 142

Speaker: Rachel Silvey, University of Toronto


The Political Thought of Xi Jinping

Thursday, February 13, 2025 | 3pm - 4pm | Virtual

Speaker: Steve Tsang, University of London


Cornell Classical Chinese Colloquium: “Accidental Status: Reassessing Protection Privilege in Northern Song (960-1127)”

Friday, February 28, 2025 | 3:30pm - 5:30pm | Rockefeller Hall 374, Asian Studies Lounge

Speaker: Eric Lee, Cornell University


Film Screening: Lilting (2014, dir. Hong Khaou)

Wednesday, March 5, 2025 | 6:00pm | Willard Straight Theatre (Cornell Cinema)


Studying China in the Absence of Access: Relearning a Lost Art

Wednesday, March 19, 2025 | 12pm to 1:30pm | Uris Hall, G-08

Speaker: Andrew Mertha, Johns Hopkins University


Cornell Classical Chinese Colloquium: "Sacred Performances and Epigraphic Echoes: Temple Festivals in North China during Late Medieval China"

Friday, March 21, 2025 | 3:30pm - 5:30pm, Rockefeller Hall 374, Asian Studies Lounge

Speaker: Yumeng Zhang, Cornell University


The Rule of Law in Political Conflicts: How Taiwanese Courts Respond to Disobedience in Political Polarization

Monday, March 24, 2025 | 5pm - 6pm | Goldwin Smith Hall 64, Kaufmann Auditorium

Speaker: Jimmy Chia-Shin Hsu, Academia Sinica


Wong Chai Lok Calligraphy Fellowship

Artist's Visit with Wang Tiande

Thursday, April 10, 2025 | 5:15pm | Johnson Museum of Art

Speaker: Wang Tiande 

Read more about the Wong Chai Lok Calligraphy Fellowship here

Calligraphy Demonstration with Wang Tiande

Friday, April 11, 2025 | 2:30pm | Johnson Museum of Art

Artist: Wang Tiande


Walls-as-Media: Between Cheng (Wall-City) and Ping (Wall-Screen)

Thursday, April 17, 2025 | 4:45pm - 6:15pm | Goldwin Smith Hall 64, Kaufmann Auditorium

Speaker: Jinying Li, Brown University


Cornell Classical Chinese Colloquium: “The Politics of Book Burning: Sources on Zhou Lianggong’s 1671 Fire”

Friday, April 18, 2025 | 3:30pm - 5:30pm | Rockefeller Hall 374, Asian Studies Lounge

Speaker: Thomas P. Kelly, Harvard University


Japan's “New Pre-War”: On the Repetition of a Capitalist Form

Wednesday, April 23, 2025 | 12:00pm - 1:30pm | Uris Hall, G-08

Speaker: Ken Kawashima, University of Toronto


Among Women across Worlds: North Korea in the Global Cold War

Tuesday, April 29, 2025 | 4:45pm - 6:15pm | Goldwin Smith Hall 64, Kaufmann Auditorium

Speaker: Suzy Kim, Rutgers University


Cornell Botanic Gardens Tour of Chinese and Asian Plants

Thursday, May 8, 2025 | 12:00pm to 1:00pm | Brian C. Nevin Welcome Center

Guided by Cornell Botanic Gardens Staff


Upcoming in Summer 2025:

32nd Japanese/Korean Linguistics Conference

June 13 - 15, 2025 | Ithaca, NY

Organized by the Center for Korean Studies at Binghamton University and the Department of Linguistics at Cornell University


 

Additional Information

The Rule of Law in Political Conflicts: How Taiwanese Courts Respond to Disobedience in Political Polarization

March 24, 2025

5:00 pm

Goldwin Smith Hall, 64

East Asia Program Lecture Series presents "The Rule of Law in Political Conflicts: How Taiwanese Courts Respond to Disobedience in Political Polarization."

In a severely polarized polity, political actors are sometimes driven to take extra-legal actions to secure their political goals. Such actions, often self-proclaimed as “civil disobedience”, pose serious challenge to the rule of law. How should the courts respond? What does the rule of law mean in such circumstances? Taiwan’s experience in the past two decades offer precious lessons.

Taiwan experienced a surge of social and civic movements since 2008, which culminated in the Sunflower Movement in 2014. It resulted in a series of judicial decisions showcasing the courts’ dynamic interactions with the civil society. Based upon comprehensive study of judicial decisions in Taiwan for over a decade, Hsu identifies evolving patterns of judicial response to disobedience. He argues that the rule of law plays an important role in maintaining fair political competition and facilitating political reconciliation.

Jimmy Chia-Shin Hsu is Research Professor at the Institute of Law, Academia Sinica, Taiwan. He received LL.B. from National Taiwan University, LL.M. and J.S.D. from the University of Chicago Law School. He was Harvard Yenching Scholar 2016-2017. His research includes legal philosophy, comparative constitutional law, civil disobedience, and transitional justice. He has published widely in international journals and books. He is the President of IVR (International Association for the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy) Taiwan Section. He recently published edited volumes such as Human Dignity in Asia: Dialogue between Law and Culture (Cambridge University Press, 2022) and The Ethics of Historical Memory: From Transitional Justice to Overcoming the Past (National Taiwan University Press, 2024, in Chinese). He is currently working on comparative judicial responses to civil disobedience, theories of human dignity in East Asian contexts, and post-transition justice and ethics of historical memory.

About the East Asia Program

As Cornell’s hub for research, teaching, and engagement with East Asia, the East Asia Program (EAP) is a forum for the interdisciplinary study of historical and contemporary East Asia. Part of the Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies, the program draws its membership of over 45 core faculty and numerous affiliated faculty, graduate, and undergraduate students from across Cornell's colleges and schools.

Additional Information

Program

Einaudi Center for International Studies

East Asia Program

The Political Thought of Xi Jinping

February 13, 2025

3:00 pm

East Asia Program Lecture Series presents "The Political Thought of Xi Jinping."

Speaker: Steve Tsang, University of London

Description: This talk offers a comprehensive examination of the official dogma shaping today's China. Professor Steve Tsang, Director of SOAS China Institute at the University of London, will delve into Xi Jinping's personal words and writings, unraveling his ambitious plan to achieve the "China Dream of national rejuvenation". Discover how Xi Jinping's transformative leadership has profound global implications and learn about the evolution and significance of his ideology. This session provides an essential understanding of the ideological revolution under Xi Jinping and its impact on China's future trajectory.

Registration required: https://cornell.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_duULB4NUShunou6Nb3anZw#/reg…

About East Asia Program

As Cornell’s hub for research, teaching, and engagement with East Asia, the East Asia Program (EAP) serves as a forum for the interdisciplinary study of historical and contemporary East Asia. The program draws its membership of over 45 core faculty and numerous affiliated faculty, graduate, and undergraduate students from eight of Cornell’s 12 schools and colleges.

Additional Information

Program

Einaudi Center for International Studies

East Asia Program

Cornell Classical Chinese Colloquium: “Biographies of Exemplary Women” in 19th century Vietnam

January 31, 2025

3:30 pm

Rockefeller Hall, 374 (Asian Studies Lounge)

Speaker: Kathlene Baldanza, Associate Professor of History and Asian Studies, Penn State University

Description: In China, Korea, and Vietnam, the genre of “biographies of exemplary women” (列女傳) served both to celebrate individual women for their virtue and to promote widow chastity more broadly. The dozen or so biographies of women collected in Đại Nam hành nghĩa liệt nữ truyện (大南行義列女傳) are quite similar on the surface to Chinese and Korean examples. A closer reading shows elements that are perhaps unique to Vietnam, and certainly reflect the political situation during the Minh Mạng reign period (1820-1839), when many of these biographies were collected.

About Cornell Classical Chinese Colloquium

The group meets monthly during the semester to explore a variety of classical Chinese texts and styles. Other premodern texts linked to classical Chinese in Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese have also been explored. Presentations include works from the earliest times to the 20th century. Workshop sessions are led by local, national, and international scholars. Participants with any level of classical Chinese experience are welcome to attend.

At each session, a presenter guides the group in a reading of a classical Chinese text. Attendees discuss historical, literary, linguistic, and other aspects of the text, working together to resolve difficulties in comprehension and translation.

No preparation is required; all texts will be distributed at the meeting.Refreshments will be served.

Additional Information

Program

Einaudi Center for International Studies

East Asia Program

Southeast Asia Program

The Names of Water: China’s Nanyang Project and Other Vernacular Imaginaries of the Southern Seas

May 1, 2025

6:00 pm

Gatty Lecture Series

Join us for a talk by Dr. Rachel Leow from University of Cambridge. Dr. Leow is an Associate Professor in Modern East Asian History at Faculty of History, University of Cambridge.

This Gatty Lecture will take place on Zoom, but will only be open to current Cornell students, faculty, and staff. Please register using your Cornell email address. It will be held at 6pm Eastern Time, not the usual 12:15pm. For questions, contact seapgatty@cornell.edu.

About the Talk

Southeast Asia and the maritime worlds which surround it have always been a zone of dense inter- and intra-Asian mobilities, among which the entangled histories of diasporic, settling, embedded and indigenous Chinese communities across the region have been especially significant. Its waters have been known by many names, testifying to its complex nature as a space of overlapping diasporas, empires and flows. Yet the historiographies of this region reflect its fragmentation. Histories of one nation-state seem to exist in parallel to each other, or in a national vacuum; even when studying the region's many transnational migrants and diasporas, different flows are rarely brought into dialogue; beyond European encounter, entanglements between migrant and indigenous groups—and the complex hierarchies of race, gender and culture between them—remain underexplored; linguistic silos remain formidable. This lecture critically examines the historical construction of “Southeast Asia” as a bounded geographic and disciplinary category, and offers the Southern Seas as a capacious alternative. It explores a range of competing names of water, and the vernacular political and intellectual projects they represent — from Chinese and Japanese oceanic, colonial and neo-imperial projects to Chinese migrant creole imaginaries and Malay revolutionary socialist visions — and in doing so, reveals a complex intellectual and political seascape that challenges contemporary national and regional boundaries, and pushes migrant histories beyond commerce, capital and commodities into the realm of ideas. In asking how might we do justice to the expansive migratory histories trapped within the siloed geographies of the Southern Seas, it calls for a rethinking of what it means to study ‘Chinese diaspora’ in Southeast Asia.

About the Speaker

Rachel Leow is Associate Professor of Modern East Asian History at the University of Cambridge, and a Fellow of Murray Edwards College. Her first book, Taming Babel: Language in the Making of Malaysia, explored the ethnolinguistic constructions of Chineseness and Malayness over the colonial-postcolonial transition in Malaysia; it was published in 2016 and won the 2018 Association for Asian Studies Harry J. Benda Prize. Her recent work explores transregional and transnational connections between China and Southeast Asia, and her research has been published in academic venues, including Twentieth-Century China, Itinerario, the Journal of World History, Modern Asian History, as well as in literary venues such as the LA Review of Books China Channel and the Mekong Review, and in film. With her collaborator Professor Emma Teng, she is currently co-editing the Oxford Handbook of Asian Migration and Diaspora, c. 1300s-2000s, and her next monograph, tentatively titled Southern Seas: Chinese encounters on diaspora's horizons, is under joint contract with University of California Press and Penguin Allen Lane.

Additional Information

Program

Einaudi Center for International Studies

Southeast Asia Program

East Asia Program

Information Session: Latin American Studies Undergraduate Minor

January 28, 2025

5:00 pm

The undergraduate minor in Latin American Studies spans across disciplines and allows you to explore the history, culture, government, politics, economy and languages of Latin America and the Caribbean. Qualifying courses can be found in many of the colleges.

Register here. Can’t attend? Contact lacs@cornell.edu.

Additional Information

Program

Einaudi Center for International Studies

East Asia Program

Southeast Asia Program

Latin American and Caribbean Studies

Institute for African Development

Institute for European Studies

Migrations Program

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