East Asia Program
Xuanhe Catalogue of Paintings: An Annotated Translation with an Introduction
Xuanhe Catalogue of Paintings is the first complete translation of the well-known document produced at the court of Emperor Huizong (r. 1100-1125). Dated to 1120, the Catalogue is divided into ten categories of subject matter. Under “Daoist and Buddhist Subjects,” “Figural Subjects,” “Architecture,” “Barbarian Tribes,” “Dragons and Fish,” “Landscape,” “Domestic and Wild Animals,” “Flowers and Birds,” “Ink Bamboo” and “Vegetables and Fruit” are biographies of 231 painters, ranging from famous early masters, such as Wu Daozi (ca.
Book
Additional Information
Program
Type
- Book
- Cornell East Asia Series
Publication Details
Publication Year: 2019
Publication Number: 193
ISBN: 978-1-939161-03-1
The Wasteland
Translator: Britten Dean
The Wasteland explores the psychology of the modern Japanese woman and her urge to realize an inner self of latent sexuality, long suppressed in Japan’s male-dominated society. Nobe Michiko, the novel’s narcissistic protagonist, leaves ruined lives in her wake as she pursues her lustful goals.
Book
45.00
Additional Information
Program
Type
- Book
- Cornell East Asia Series
Publication Details
Publication Year: 2019
Publication Number: 200
ISBN: 9781939161109
The Novel in Transition: Gender and Literature in Early Colonial Korea
Jooyeon Rhee provides an innovative and compelling analysis of gendered representations of nation and modernity in early twentieth-century Korean novels. By investigating the transformation of the novel genre in relation to transnational literary forces and print capitalism, this book illuminates the ways in which gender became an important epistemological ground on which writers and translators constructed their imaginations of Korean society and history under colonial rule.
Book
65.00
Additional Information
Program
Type
- Book
- Cornell East Asia Series
Publication Details
Publication Year: 2019
Publication Number: 196
ISBN: 978-1-939161-06-2
Pioneers of Modern Japanese Poetry: Muro Saisei, Kaneko Mitsuharu, Miyoshi Tatsuji, Nagase Kiyoko
Editor and Translator: Takako Lento
Book
45.00
Additional Information
Program
Type
- Book
- Cornell East Asia Series
Publication Details
Publication Year: 2019
Publication Number: 1999
ISBN: 978-1-939161-09-3
East Asia Conversations Podcast: China's Environmental Transformation
Robin McNeal in conversation with John Zinda
China's enormous economic, industrial, and environmental transformation over the past few decades is the theme spring 2020 CCCI lecture series.
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East Asia Conversation Podcast: Governing the 'Airpocalypse'
Insights from China's War on Smog
Anna L. Ahlers, Max-Planck-Institute for the History of Science, Berlin, explores her research process and background air pollution in China.
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East Asia Conversations Podcast: China's Mushrooming Matsutake Mushroom Biz
Michael Hathaway and CCCI faculty host John Zinda
John Zinda speaks with Michael Hathaway about the transformative Matsutake mushroom trade in southwest China.
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Tong Yang-Tze calligraphy and dance collaboration
Cornell's Local Grown Dance concert excerpt of "Atelier 320: upending"
Taiwan's foremost Chinese calligrapher, Tong Yang-Tze's art is incorporated in a visually hypnotic dance titled, Atelier 320: upending. Choreographed by dance instructor, Jumay Chu with her student dancers and music by Chris Miller, the performance was on March 7, 2020 at the Schwartz Performing Arts Center, Kiplinger Theater as part of the annual Locally Grown Dance concert.
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Tristan Ivory
Assistant Professor, International and Comparative Labor
Tristan Ivory's research is principally concerned with sub-Saharan African geographic, social, and economic mobility. As a 2020–21 Global Public Voices fellow, he collaborated with Guilherme Kenjy Chihaya Da Silva (Umeå University, Sweden).
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Asian Studies Study, Research, and Service Travel Grants
Details
The Department of Asian Studies provides funding for travel and living expenses for the study, service, or research, in an Asian country.
Students receiving grants are responsible for managing all aspects of their trip including:
- Making their own travel itinerary.
- Arranging travel and accommodations.
- Managing their own budgets.
At the end of the travel recipients must provide documentation of travel and submit a 3-5-page report summarizing the language and cultural experiences.
Eligibility
Applicants may be from any college or major; their proposed project must relate to their area of study.
Applicants should have a strong cumulative GPA, a well-articulated project, and submit an appropriate budget.
Priority will be given to students who:
- have completed 2 years of language work in the relevant language prior to the intended travel;
- have no prior travel experience in the area of travel;
- and are Asian Studies majors or minors.
Awardees must be enrolled at Cornell in the semester following travel.
How to Apply
Applicants must also complete an application form, and provide the following:
- a 1500-word proposal about the plan of study or service or research (consisting of the title of the project, project summary, project detail, a detailed project timeline, and a detailed budget);
- a list of the current Academic Year Fall and Spring courses;
- two letters of academic recommendation, one from a language teacher (preferably of a language relevant to proposal) emailed to asianstudiesdus@cornell.edu*,
- letter of recommendation from host institution if you are doing a service project emailed to asianstudiesdus@cornell.edu*.
To apply for a travel grant, or to ask for more information, contact Erin Kotmel, undergraduate coordinator for the Department of Asian Studies. You can also find more information in the travel grant frequently asked questions.
Additional Information
Funding Type
- Travel Grant
Role
- Student