----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Wednesday, November 28, 2012 1:26 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: ANN New Journal Singaporean Journal of Buddhist Studies.
> H-ASIA
> November 27, 2012
>
>
> New Journal: Singaporean Journal of Buddhist Studies.
> *******************************************************************
> From: H-Net Announcements <announce@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU>
>
> Location: Singapore
> Date Submitted: 2012-11-25
> Announcement ID: 199021
> Dear Members,
>
> The Buddhist College of Singapore has just launched a new
> peer-reviewed Chinese & English journal of Buddhist Studies, the
> Singaporean Journal of Buddhist Studies.
> http://www.bcs.edu.sg/index.php/bcs_en/journal/ The first issue is to
> be published in a year or so, after that it will be published twice a
> year.
>
> It accepts unpublished research papers on all aspects of Buddhist
> Studies.
>
> Interested scholars can send their work to chuancheng@bcs.edu.sg
>
> Thank you.
>
> Email: chuancheng@bcs.edu.sg
>
>
>
> H-Net reproduces announcements that have been submitted to
> us as a free service to the academic community. If you are
> interested in an announcement listed here, please contact
> the organizers or patrons directly. Though we strive to
> provide accurate information, H-Net (and H-ASIA)cannot
> accept responsibility for the text of announcements
> appearing in this service.
>
> Send comments and questions to H-Net Webstaff:
> <webstaff@mail.h-net.msu.edu>.
>
> H-Net Humanities and Social Sciences Online
> Humanities & Social Sciences Online
> Hosted by Matrix at Michigan State University
> Copyright (c) 1995-2012
> *********************************************************************
>
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: <http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/>
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
Fw: H-ASIA: Anne van Biema Fellowship deadline
----- Original Message -----
From: "Monika Lehner" <monika.lehner@UNIVIE.AC.AT>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Tuesday, November 27, 2012 11:50 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: Anne van Biema Fellowship deadline
> H-ASIA
> November 27, 2012
>
> Anne van Biema Fellowship deadline
> *************************************************************
> From: "Micklewright, Nancy" <MicklewrightN@si.edu>
>
> Dear Colleagues,
>
> I am writing with a reminder that the deadline for applications for the
> 2013-2014 Anne van Biema Fellowship at the Freer|Sackler Gallery,
> Smithsonian, is December 15th 2012.
>
> This is a great research opportunity for a scholar at any level whose work
> focuses on the Japanese visual arts.
>
> For more information and application instructions, please visit the
> website: http://www.asia.si.edu/research/vanBiemaFellowship.asp.
>
> Best regards,
> Nancy Micklewright
>
>
> Nancy Micklewright
> Head, Scholarly Programs and Publications
> Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery
> Smithsonian Institution
> micklewrightn@si.edu<mailto:micklewrightn@si.edu>
> 202.633.0401
>
> PO Box 37012, MRC 707
> Washington DC 20013-7012
>
> Package and courier deliveries
> 1050 Independence Ave.
> Washington, DC 20560
>
> *************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/
From: "Monika Lehner" <monika.lehner@UNIVIE.AC.AT>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Tuesday, November 27, 2012 11:50 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: Anne van Biema Fellowship deadline
> H-ASIA
> November 27, 2012
>
> Anne van Biema Fellowship deadline
> *************************************************************
> From: "Micklewright, Nancy" <MicklewrightN@si.edu>
>
> Dear Colleagues,
>
> I am writing with a reminder that the deadline for applications for the
> 2013-2014 Anne van Biema Fellowship at the Freer|Sackler Gallery,
> Smithsonian, is December 15th 2012.
>
> This is a great research opportunity for a scholar at any level whose work
> focuses on the Japanese visual arts.
>
> For more information and application instructions, please visit the
> website: http://www.asia.si.edu/research/vanBiemaFellowship.asp.
>
> Best regards,
> Nancy Micklewright
>
>
> Nancy Micklewright
> Head, Scholarly Programs and Publications
> Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery
> Smithsonian Institution
> micklewrightn@si.edu<mailto:micklewrightn@si.edu>
> 202.633.0401
>
> PO Box 37012, MRC 707
> Washington DC 20013-7012
>
> Package and courier deliveries
> 1050 Independence Ave.
> Washington, DC 20560
>
> *************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/
Fw: H-ASIA: CFP Orienting Orwell: Asian & Global Perspectgives on George Orwell, special issue of _Concentric: Literary & Cultural Studies_
----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Wednesday, November 28, 2012 1:49 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP Orienting Orwell: Asian & Global Perspectgives on
George Orwell, special issue of _Concentric: Literary & Cultural Studies_
> H-ASIA
> November 27, 2012
>
> Call for Papers - Orienting Orwell: Asian and Global Perspectives on
> George Orwell (journal special issue _Concentric: Literary and Cultural
> Studies_
> *******************************************************************
> From: H-Net Announcements <announce@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU>
>
> Call for Papers - Orienting Orwell: Asian and Global Perspectives on
> George Orwell (journal special issue)
>
> Location: Taiwan
> Call for Papers Date: 2013-08-15
> Date Submitted: 2012-11-26
> Announcement ID: 199028
> Concentric: Literary and Cultural Studies Vol. 40 No. 1 | March 2014 Guest
> Editors: John Rodden & Henk Vynckier
> Deadline for Submissions: August 15, 2013
>
> While George Orwell's status in Britain, the US, and the West generally
> speaking is beyond question, his place in Asian and other non-Western
> cultural discourses has been less certain. From raucous democracies to
> hermit kingdoms, contemporary Asia features varied societal and political
> models, and George Orwell's writings consequently have been received very
> differently from country to country. For example, in Myanmar, the former
> Burma, Burmese Days (1934) is hailed as a first-class anti-colonial
> document, but Animal Farm, Nineteen Eighty-four, and the rest of his work
> are banned.
>
> To be sure, Orwell is profoundly linked to and deserving of consideration
> in the Asian cultural context. He was born in Bengal, served five years in
> the Indian Imperial Police in Burma, and returned from the experience a
> firm anti-colonialist. Already in his first book, Down and Out in Paris
> and London (1933), he reflected on the fate of Indian rickshaw pullers and
> gharry ponies while discussing his experiences as a dishwasher in Paris,
> and such texts as A Hanging, Shooting an Elephant, and Burmese Days have
> become classics of English colonial literature. From 1941 to 1943 he was
> employed by the Indian section of the BBCs Eastern Service. His private
> correspondence, book reviews, and essays further demonstrate his lifelong
> interest in the question of Indian independence, the future of Palestine,
> decolonization throughout Asia and around the world, and new English
> writings from Asia. Yet in Nineteen Eighty-four, a very different Asia
> looms large, for Oceania, the Anglo-American superpower in this dystopian
> classic, is permanently threatened by the two rival global powers of
> Eurasia and Eastasia.
>
> The purpose of this special issue is to invite essays that further Orwell
> scholarship in an Asian as well as global context and, in doing so, make
> possible new perspectives on one of the most influential authors of the
> 20th century.
>
> **********
>
> John Rodden is an independent scholar located in Austin, Texas. He has
> taught at the University of Virginia, the University of Texas at Austin,
> and Tunghai University in Taichung, Taiwan. He has published ten books on
> Orwell, including The Politics of Literary Reputation: The Making and
> Claiming of St. George Orwell (1989) and The Cambridge Introduction to
> George Orwell (2012). He has also published critically acclaimed
> monographs on the New York intellectuals, the politics of culture in
> Germany before and after the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the art of the
> literary interview.
>
> Henk Vynckier is the Chair of the Department of Foreign Languages and
> Literature at Tunghai University, Taichung, Taiwan. He has published on
> Orwell, collecting as a literary theme, travel literature, and the
> literary legacy of the Chinese Maritime Customs Agency (1854-1950). He is
> also an honorary researcher in the Research Center for Humanities and
> Social Sciences at the Academia Sinica contributing to an
> interdisciplinary research project on Robert Hart and the Chinese Maritime
> Customs Service.
>
> **********
>
> Concentric: Literary and Cultural Studies is a peer-reviewed journal
> published two times per year by the Department of English, National Taiwan
> Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan. Concentric is devoted to offering
> innovative perspectives on literary and cultural issues and advancing the
> transcultural exchange of ideas. While committed to bringing Asian-based
> scholarship to the world academic community, Concentric welcomes original
> contributions from diverse national and cultural backgrounds.
>
> Each issue of Concentric publishes groups of essays on a special topic as
> well as papers on more general issues. The focus can be on any historical
> period and any region. Any critical method may be employed as long as the
> paper demonstrates a distinctive contribution to scholarship in the field.
>
> Editor, Concentric: Literary and Cultural Studies
> Department of English
> National Taiwan Normal University
> 162 Heping East Road, Section 1
> Taipei 106, Taiwan
> Phone: +886 (0)2 77341803
> Fax: +886 (0)2 23634793
> Email: concentric.lit@deps.ntnu.edu.tw
> Visit the website at http://www.concentric-literature.url.tw/
>
>
>
> H-Net reproduces announcements that have been submitted to us as a free
> service to the academic community. If you are interested in an
> announcement listed here, please contact the organizers or patrons
> directly. Though we strive to provide accurate information, H-Net (and
> H-ASIA)cannot accept responsibility for the text of announcements
> appearing in this service.
>
> Send comments and questions to H-Net Webstaff:
> <webstaff@mail.h-net.msu.edu>.
>
> H-Net Humanities and Social Sciences Online
> Humanities & Social Sciences Online
> Hosted by Matrix at Michigan State University
> Copyright (c) 1995-2012
> *********************************************************************
>
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: <http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/>
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Wednesday, November 28, 2012 1:49 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP Orienting Orwell: Asian & Global Perspectgives on
George Orwell, special issue of _Concentric: Literary & Cultural Studies_
> H-ASIA
> November 27, 2012
>
> Call for Papers - Orienting Orwell: Asian and Global Perspectives on
> George Orwell (journal special issue _Concentric: Literary and Cultural
> Studies_
> *******************************************************************
> From: H-Net Announcements <announce@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU>
>
> Call for Papers - Orienting Orwell: Asian and Global Perspectives on
> George Orwell (journal special issue)
>
> Location: Taiwan
> Call for Papers Date: 2013-08-15
> Date Submitted: 2012-11-26
> Announcement ID: 199028
> Concentric: Literary and Cultural Studies Vol. 40 No. 1 | March 2014 Guest
> Editors: John Rodden & Henk Vynckier
> Deadline for Submissions: August 15, 2013
>
> While George Orwell's status in Britain, the US, and the West generally
> speaking is beyond question, his place in Asian and other non-Western
> cultural discourses has been less certain. From raucous democracies to
> hermit kingdoms, contemporary Asia features varied societal and political
> models, and George Orwell's writings consequently have been received very
> differently from country to country. For example, in Myanmar, the former
> Burma, Burmese Days (1934) is hailed as a first-class anti-colonial
> document, but Animal Farm, Nineteen Eighty-four, and the rest of his work
> are banned.
>
> To be sure, Orwell is profoundly linked to and deserving of consideration
> in the Asian cultural context. He was born in Bengal, served five years in
> the Indian Imperial Police in Burma, and returned from the experience a
> firm anti-colonialist. Already in his first book, Down and Out in Paris
> and London (1933), he reflected on the fate of Indian rickshaw pullers and
> gharry ponies while discussing his experiences as a dishwasher in Paris,
> and such texts as A Hanging, Shooting an Elephant, and Burmese Days have
> become classics of English colonial literature. From 1941 to 1943 he was
> employed by the Indian section of the BBCs Eastern Service. His private
> correspondence, book reviews, and essays further demonstrate his lifelong
> interest in the question of Indian independence, the future of Palestine,
> decolonization throughout Asia and around the world, and new English
> writings from Asia. Yet in Nineteen Eighty-four, a very different Asia
> looms large, for Oceania, the Anglo-American superpower in this dystopian
> classic, is permanently threatened by the two rival global powers of
> Eurasia and Eastasia.
>
> The purpose of this special issue is to invite essays that further Orwell
> scholarship in an Asian as well as global context and, in doing so, make
> possible new perspectives on one of the most influential authors of the
> 20th century.
>
> **********
>
> John Rodden is an independent scholar located in Austin, Texas. He has
> taught at the University of Virginia, the University of Texas at Austin,
> and Tunghai University in Taichung, Taiwan. He has published ten books on
> Orwell, including The Politics of Literary Reputation: The Making and
> Claiming of St. George Orwell (1989) and The Cambridge Introduction to
> George Orwell (2012). He has also published critically acclaimed
> monographs on the New York intellectuals, the politics of culture in
> Germany before and after the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the art of the
> literary interview.
>
> Henk Vynckier is the Chair of the Department of Foreign Languages and
> Literature at Tunghai University, Taichung, Taiwan. He has published on
> Orwell, collecting as a literary theme, travel literature, and the
> literary legacy of the Chinese Maritime Customs Agency (1854-1950). He is
> also an honorary researcher in the Research Center for Humanities and
> Social Sciences at the Academia Sinica contributing to an
> interdisciplinary research project on Robert Hart and the Chinese Maritime
> Customs Service.
>
> **********
>
> Concentric: Literary and Cultural Studies is a peer-reviewed journal
> published two times per year by the Department of English, National Taiwan
> Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan. Concentric is devoted to offering
> innovative perspectives on literary and cultural issues and advancing the
> transcultural exchange of ideas. While committed to bringing Asian-based
> scholarship to the world academic community, Concentric welcomes original
> contributions from diverse national and cultural backgrounds.
>
> Each issue of Concentric publishes groups of essays on a special topic as
> well as papers on more general issues. The focus can be on any historical
> period and any region. Any critical method may be employed as long as the
> paper demonstrates a distinctive contribution to scholarship in the field.
>
> Editor, Concentric: Literary and Cultural Studies
> Department of English
> National Taiwan Normal University
> 162 Heping East Road, Section 1
> Taipei 106, Taiwan
> Phone: +886 (0)2 77341803
> Fax: +886 (0)2 23634793
> Email: concentric.lit@deps.ntnu.edu.tw
> Visit the website at http://www.concentric-literature.url.tw/
>
>
>
> H-Net reproduces announcements that have been submitted to us as a free
> service to the academic community. If you are interested in an
> announcement listed here, please contact the organizers or patrons
> directly. Though we strive to provide accurate information, H-Net (and
> H-ASIA)cannot accept responsibility for the text of announcements
> appearing in this service.
>
> Send comments and questions to H-Net Webstaff:
> <webstaff@mail.h-net.msu.edu>.
>
> H-Net Humanities and Social Sciences Online
> Humanities & Social Sciences Online
> Hosted by Matrix at Michigan State University
> Copyright (c) 1995-2012
> *********************************************************************
>
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: <http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/>
Fw: H-ASIA: CFP: Imagining Globality: China's Global Projects in Culture, Edmonton, Univ of Alberta, 12-14 June 2013
----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Wednesday, November 28, 2012 1:41 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP: Imagining Globality: China's Global Projects in
Culture, Edmonton, Univ of Alberta, 12-14 June 2013
> H-ASIA
> November 27, 2012
>
> Call for papers: Imagining Globality: China's Global Projects in Culture,
> University of Alberta, Edmonton, June 12-14, 2013
>
> *******************************************************************
> From: H-Net Announcements <announce@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU>
>
> CFP: Imagining Globality: China's Global Projects in Culture
> Location: Alberta, Canada
>
> Call for Papers Date: 2013-01-31
> Date Submitted: 2012-11-22
> Announcement ID: 198981
> This conference will explore China's global projects in culture and how
> these projects variously imagine a global world and China's place in it.
> It will be held June 12-14, 2013 in Edmonton, Canada.
>
> Recent popular and academic discourses have speculated much on "China's
> rise" and its implications for the future global order. Representations of
> China, which oscillate between a positive 'rise' or negative 'threat',
> bestow on the Chinese state, explicitly or implicitly, the power to make
> the world over according to its own desires. The concept of global
> projects (as theorized by Anna Tsing) enables us, however, to analyse
> larger global processes as a composite of projects. Such global projects
> may work together or to conflicting ends, but each is culturally and
> institutionally specific and thereby circumscribed in its ability to shape
> the global order according to its own imagined globality.
>
> As 'soft power' issues increasingly make their way into China's official
> state discourse, it becomes necessary to consider the ways in which
> individuals and organizations in and from China are engaging with the
> world through culture, both officially and unofficially. The images and
> imaginaries being generated through the various cultural global projects
> emanating from China are significant in understanding how Chinese
> individuals and organizations see China, how they hope to be seen by
> others, and how they are discursively negotiating China's shifting place
> in the world.
>
> This interdisciplinary conference will bring together scholars from
> diverse backgrounds to explore the ways in which China has in the recent
> past and is today engaging with the world culturally. We invite
> submissions from scholars in the social sciences and humanities whose
> research engages with the following broad themes: 1) China Imagined: In
> what ways are the Chinese state, organizations and individuals portraying
> China? Who are the key actors (or what are the key events) shaping
> projected images of China? To what ends do such representations work? What
> tensions and/or contradictions may exist across different depictions or in
> what ways might they be mutually reinforcing? 2) Globalities Imagined: In
> what ways do China's various global projects imagine the world, and in
> particular China's role/place in it? In what ways do depictions intended
> for global circulation and consumption reinforce or contradict narratives
> intended for home audiences? What intellectual/social/cultural
> contributions is China generating to address global issues? 3) Cultural
> Political Economy: In what ways is Chinese culture being used as a
> resource in global engagements (cultural, political, economic, or
> otherwise) and to what purpose? In what ways is cultural power tied to
> China's growing economic and political interests?
>
> Possible topics include but are not limited to: China's culture
> industries in global context (e.g. media, film, music, cultural products)
> Confucius Institutes China's soft power and/or cultural diplomacy
> China's mega-events Popularization and/or circulation of Chinese culture
> outside China (e.g. TCM, Chinese New Year) China's contributions to
> issues of global concern (e.g. development, governance) China's cultural
> engagements with different regions such as Africa, Asia, North America,
> Europe, etc. (i.e. how does China engage differently with different
> geographical regions?) Chinese culture and transnational capitalism (e.g.
> corporate diplomacy)
>
> The deadline for submission of presentation proposals is January 31, 2013.
>
> Proposals should be approximately 300 words in length and submitted by
> email (preferably in the text of the email) to
> imagingglobality@ualberta.ca. Please also include your name, designation,
> department, and institution. Applicants will be notified of acceptance by
> late February 2013.
>
> Accommodations and some meals will be provided to panelists.
>
> For additional information, please contact the conference organizers at:
> imagingglobality@ualberta.ca.
>
> If you feel your question(s) may be pertinent to others, please also feel
> free to contact us through our facebook page:
> http://www.facebook.com/pages/China-Institute-at-the-University-of-Alberta/171003582915953
>
> Conference webpage:
> http://www.china.ualberta.ca/Conferences/ImaginingGlobality.aspx
>
> Heather Schmidt
> University of Alberta
> China Institute
> 203 Telus Ctr
> Edmonton, AB T6G 2R1
> tel: 780-492-1263
> Email: imaginingglobality@ualberta.ca
> Visit the website at
> http://www.china.ualberta.ca/en/Conferences/ImaginingGlobality.aspx
>
>
>
> H-Net reproduces announcements that have been submitted to us as a free
> service to the academic community. If you are interested in an
> announcement listed here, please contact the organizers or patrons
> directly. Though we strive to provide accurate information, H-Net (and
> H-ASIA)cannot accept responsibility for the text of announcements
> appearing in this service.
>
> Send comments and questions to H-Net Webstaff:
> <webstaff@mail.h-net.msu.edu>.
>
> H-Net Humanities and Social Sciences Online
> Humanities & Social Sciences Online
> Hosted by Matrix at Michigan State University
> Copyright (c) 1995-2012
> *********************************************************************
>
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: <http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/>
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Wednesday, November 28, 2012 1:41 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP: Imagining Globality: China's Global Projects in
Culture, Edmonton, Univ of Alberta, 12-14 June 2013
> H-ASIA
> November 27, 2012
>
> Call for papers: Imagining Globality: China's Global Projects in Culture,
> University of Alberta, Edmonton, June 12-14, 2013
>
> *******************************************************************
> From: H-Net Announcements <announce@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU>
>
> CFP: Imagining Globality: China's Global Projects in Culture
> Location: Alberta, Canada
>
> Call for Papers Date: 2013-01-31
> Date Submitted: 2012-11-22
> Announcement ID: 198981
> This conference will explore China's global projects in culture and how
> these projects variously imagine a global world and China's place in it.
> It will be held June 12-14, 2013 in Edmonton, Canada.
>
> Recent popular and academic discourses have speculated much on "China's
> rise" and its implications for the future global order. Representations of
> China, which oscillate between a positive 'rise' or negative 'threat',
> bestow on the Chinese state, explicitly or implicitly, the power to make
> the world over according to its own desires. The concept of global
> projects (as theorized by Anna Tsing) enables us, however, to analyse
> larger global processes as a composite of projects. Such global projects
> may work together or to conflicting ends, but each is culturally and
> institutionally specific and thereby circumscribed in its ability to shape
> the global order according to its own imagined globality.
>
> As 'soft power' issues increasingly make their way into China's official
> state discourse, it becomes necessary to consider the ways in which
> individuals and organizations in and from China are engaging with the
> world through culture, both officially and unofficially. The images and
> imaginaries being generated through the various cultural global projects
> emanating from China are significant in understanding how Chinese
> individuals and organizations see China, how they hope to be seen by
> others, and how they are discursively negotiating China's shifting place
> in the world.
>
> This interdisciplinary conference will bring together scholars from
> diverse backgrounds to explore the ways in which China has in the recent
> past and is today engaging with the world culturally. We invite
> submissions from scholars in the social sciences and humanities whose
> research engages with the following broad themes: 1) China Imagined: In
> what ways are the Chinese state, organizations and individuals portraying
> China? Who are the key actors (or what are the key events) shaping
> projected images of China? To what ends do such representations work? What
> tensions and/or contradictions may exist across different depictions or in
> what ways might they be mutually reinforcing? 2) Globalities Imagined: In
> what ways do China's various global projects imagine the world, and in
> particular China's role/place in it? In what ways do depictions intended
> for global circulation and consumption reinforce or contradict narratives
> intended for home audiences? What intellectual/social/cultural
> contributions is China generating to address global issues? 3) Cultural
> Political Economy: In what ways is Chinese culture being used as a
> resource in global engagements (cultural, political, economic, or
> otherwise) and to what purpose? In what ways is cultural power tied to
> China's growing economic and political interests?
>
> Possible topics include but are not limited to: China's culture
> industries in global context (e.g. media, film, music, cultural products)
> Confucius Institutes China's soft power and/or cultural diplomacy
> China's mega-events Popularization and/or circulation of Chinese culture
> outside China (e.g. TCM, Chinese New Year) China's contributions to
> issues of global concern (e.g. development, governance) China's cultural
> engagements with different regions such as Africa, Asia, North America,
> Europe, etc. (i.e. how does China engage differently with different
> geographical regions?) Chinese culture and transnational capitalism (e.g.
> corporate diplomacy)
>
> The deadline for submission of presentation proposals is January 31, 2013.
>
> Proposals should be approximately 300 words in length and submitted by
> email (preferably in the text of the email) to
> imagingglobality@ualberta.ca. Please also include your name, designation,
> department, and institution. Applicants will be notified of acceptance by
> late February 2013.
>
> Accommodations and some meals will be provided to panelists.
>
> For additional information, please contact the conference organizers at:
> imagingglobality@ualberta.ca.
>
> If you feel your question(s) may be pertinent to others, please also feel
> free to contact us through our facebook page:
> http://www.facebook.com/pages/China-Institute-at-the-University-of-Alberta/171003582915953
>
> Conference webpage:
> http://www.china.ualberta.ca/Conferences/ImaginingGlobality.aspx
>
> Heather Schmidt
> University of Alberta
> China Institute
> 203 Telus Ctr
> Edmonton, AB T6G 2R1
> tel: 780-492-1263
> Email: imaginingglobality@ualberta.ca
> Visit the website at
> http://www.china.ualberta.ca/en/Conferences/ImaginingGlobality.aspx
>
>
>
> H-Net reproduces announcements that have been submitted to us as a free
> service to the academic community. If you are interested in an
> announcement listed here, please contact the organizers or patrons
> directly. Though we strive to provide accurate information, H-Net (and
> H-ASIA)cannot accept responsibility for the text of announcements
> appearing in this service.
>
> Send comments and questions to H-Net Webstaff:
> <webstaff@mail.h-net.msu.edu>.
>
> H-Net Humanities and Social Sciences Online
> Humanities & Social Sciences Online
> Hosted by Matrix at Michigan State University
> Copyright (c) 1995-2012
> *********************************************************************
>
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: <http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/>
Fw: AWOL - The Ancient World Online
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, November 27, 2012 11:09 PM
Subject: AWOL - The Ancient World Online
AWOL - The Ancient World Online |
- Roman Amphorae: a digital resource
- Amphoreus: Online Database of the "Bulletin Amphorologique"
- Online Open Access Catalogue: Ancient Carved Ambers in the J. Paul Getty Museum
- Dittenberger-Vahlen Collection of Classical Texts Online
Roman Amphorae: a digital resource Posted: 27 Nov 2012 06:58 AM PST Roman Amphorae: a digital resource University of Southampton, 2005 The aim of this website is to provide an online introductory resource for the study of Roman amphorae. In the Roman empire amphorae were pottery containers used for the non-local transport of agricultural products. Their fragments litter archaeological sites of all kinds on land and at sea and have been a subject of serious study for over 100 years. They are crucially important to archaeologists in providing direct evidence for inter-regional and long-distance movement of agricultural products within the empire, and have been an important source of data in the increasingly sophisticated debates about the scale and structure of the Roman economy over the last thirty years. While the study of amphorae also encompasses the stamps, painted inscriptions (tituli picti) and production sites, this website concentrates upon the containers alone. |
Amphoreus: Online Database of the "Bulletin Amphorologique" Posted: 27 Nov 2012 06:53 AM PST
|
Online Open Access Catalogue: Ancient Carved Ambers in the J. Paul Getty Museum Posted: 26 Nov 2012 06:15 PM PST Ancient Carved Ambers in the J. Paul Getty Museum By FAYA CAUSEY With technical analysis by Jeff Maish, Herant Khanjian, and Michael Schilling
Introduction Catalogue Technical Essay BibliographyAbout |
Dittenberger-Vahlen Collection of Classical Texts Online Posted: 26 Nov 2012 01:50 PM PST Dittenberger-Vahlen Collection of Classical Texts Illinois Harvest / Large-scale Digitization Initiative, University of Illinois Until recently this large collection of Universitätsschriften and other short scholarly works on Latin and Greek literature has been accessible only on not widely distributed microfilm. 2254 items are now accessible in multiple formats with first rate bibliographic metadata. Dittenberger-Vahlen Collection in Worldcat The Classics Library of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is continuing to digitize books from it's collection, many but not all of which are also from its Dittenberger-Vahlen Collection. These digital scans were created by the library's Digital Content Creation department. They will eventually appear in the Dittenberger-Vahlen Collection of Classical Texts, but in the meantime they are accessible at the Internet Archive. To promote this project, they have created a Tumblr account that features the latest items to have been digitized and added to the Internet Archive: With thanks to Mark Wardecker, Acting Classics Librarian, University of Illinois at Urbana, and to Bruce Swann, former Classics Librarian, University of Illinois at Urbana, for making this collection available |
You are subscribed to email updates from AWOL - The Ancient World Online To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)