South Asia Conference of the Pacific Northwest (SACPAN) 2016, UO-Portland – Program
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CAPS SACPAN Jeremiah-Riaz Poster

 

South Asia Conference of the Pacific Northwest

Friday February 5, 2016
3:30pm – Registration 

4pm – Opening Ceremony

4:15-5:15pm, Main Conference Room 142/144 – Keynote Speaker:

“The Age of Intolerance in South Asia: Contextualizing Extremism in Bangladesh, India and Pakistan” 

Dr. Ali Riaz – University Professor and Chair Department of Politics and Government, Illinois State University

5:30pm, Light Court Commons – Reception

Saturday February 6, 2016
8:00am, Room 142/144 – Coffee, tea, and light refreshments

View all presenter’s abstracts here

8:30-10am, Room 150 – Panel One: Religion and Education”, moderated by Professor Lamia Karim

J.M. Fritzman  
Associate Professor, Philosophy, Lewis and Clark University
“Thinking With, Against, and Beyond Kasmir Saivism” 
David Fiordallis
Associate Professor and Chair, Religious Studies, Linfield College
“Framing the Avadana, Framing the World”
Robinder Bedi
Assistant Professor, Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology, University of British Columbia
“Counseling Psychology in India: A Survey of Practitioners”
Sylvia Gray
Instructor of History, Education Advisory Council and Chair, Portland Community College
“Teaching History of India and the South Asian Region in Ten Weeks: Keeping it Fun and Real”

10:15-11:45am, Room 150 – Panel Two: Technology and Politics in South Asia”, moderated by Professor Jeff Hanes

Biswarup Sen
Assistant Professor, School of Journalism and Communication, University of Oregon
“The Computer in Indian Postcolonial History”
Patrick Jones
Doctoral Student, School of Journalism and Communication, University of Oregon
“Delivering Democracy: A History of Electronic Voting Machines in India”
Shehram Mokhtar
Doctoral Student, School of Journalism and Communication, University of Oregon
“Displaying Rainbow Colors: Dis-embodied Online Activism in Pakistan”
Sareeta Amrute
Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Washington
“Imagining Outsourcing through Television”

10:15-11:45am, Room 152 – Panel Three: “Gender”, moderated by Professor Arafaat A. Valiani

Farah Azhar
Doctoral Student, School of Journalism and Communication, University of Oregon
“On Cell Phones and Social Capital for Women in South Asia-Pakistan”
Katie Blank
Doctoral Student, Department of History, University of Washington
“On Interracial Marriage between Indian and British Citizens”
Kiran Sunar
Doctoral Student, Asian Studies, University of British Columbia
“Wailing to be Heard: Sikh Women’s Mourning and the Culture of Reform”
Nabeeha Chaudhary
Graduate Alumni, Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington
“This is Where You Belong- Representations of the Ideal Woman in Pakistani Television Serials”
Nadia Loan
Instructor, Women and Gender Studies, University of Oregon
“Recitational Reading: The Politics of Sound and Meaning in Women’s Quranic Engagement in Pakistan”
Sarah Ahmed
Doctoral Student, Department of Sociology, University of Oregon
“Re–conceptualizing Women’s Agency in Rural Punjab, Pakistan

Noon – 1pm, Room 142/144 – Lunch

1-2:30pm, Room 150 – Panel Four: “Politics and History”, moderated by Professor S. Charusheela

Taylor Rockhill
M.A. Candidate, South Asian Studies, University of Washington
“On the Relationship Between South Asian and the Commonwealth of Nations”
Mohammad Shafiqur Rahman
Doctoral Student, Political Science, University of Oregon
“On the Third Indo-Pakistan War and the Emergence of Bangladesh” 
Rucha Ambikar
Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, Bemidji State University
“On Narendra Modi’s Election Campaign for India’s Parliament”
William Bamber
Doctoral Student, Near and Middle East Studies, University of Washington
“The Great Game Abroad- Late Imperial Internationalism and Britain’s South Asian Intelligence Agents”
Douglas Ober
Doctoral Student, Asian Studies, University of British Columbia
“From Bo Trees to Buddha Bones: Nehruvian Buddhism and the Poetics of Power”
Zahid Akter
Doctoral Student, Department of Linguistics, University of Oregon
“Nationalism, Language Policy and People’s Mother Tongue Rights in Bangladesh”

1-2:30pm, Room 152 – Panel Five: “Media, Language & Literature”, moderated by Professor Biswarup Sen

Ranjini Ray Chaudhury
M.A. Candidate, South Asian Studies, Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington
“On “Orientalism” and Portrayals of South Asian Culture in Video Games”
Shehram Mokhtar
Doctoral Student, School of Journalism and Communication, University of Oregon
“Music, Dramaturgy & Mourning Rituals: Locating the Performance of the Karbala Narrative in Sehwan, Pakistan”
Mariam Sabri
Doctoral Student, South Asian Studies, University of Washington
“Zumurrud Shah in the Mughal Imagination: The Historiography of the Hamzanama and Afghan-Mughal Relations in the Pre-Modern India”
Kristin Scheible
Associate Professor of Religion, Reed College
“The work of the Mahavamsa: Poem or Charter?”
Genoveva Castro
Doctoral Student, Asian Languages and Literature, University of Washington
“Embracing Humor and Eroticism: Bitexuality in the Vidagdha-madhava by Rupa Gosvami”

2:30-4:30pm, Room 152 – Panel Six: “Economics and Development”, moderated by Professor Angela Joya and Zahid Akter

Tariq L. Rahman
M.A. Candidate, Department of International Studies, University of Oregon
“Counter-Conduct in the Mohallas: New Houses in the Old City”
Sri Craven
Assistant Professor, Women’s Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Portland State University
“Dilemmas of Change: Gender in the ‘Global’ Gated Community”
Susmita Rishi
Doctoral Student, Interdisciplinary PhD Program in Urban Design and Planning, University of Washington
“Alternate Conceptualizations of Value and Space: Learning from the slum-dwellers of Delhi”
Sunila S. Kale
Director, South Asia Center / Associate Professor, Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington
“Corporations, the state, and rural development in India’s new ‘Company Villages'”
Melissa Tennyson
Instructor, ESL Program, Latino Network
“Development Rhetoric in Bangladesh: A Feminist Critique” 
Razia Bano
Lecturer, Department of Business Management, Karakorum International University – Pakistan
“An Analysis of fuel efficient stoves in Arandu valley of CKNP, Gilgit Baltistan”
Rucha Chandvankar
Doctoral Student, Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon
“On Social Movements and Alliance Building in Maharashtra, India”

2:45-4:15pm, Room 150 – Panel Seven: “New Directions in South Asian Film and Media Studies, moderated by Nadia Loan 

Sangita Gopal
Associate Professor, English and Cinema Studies, University of Oregon
“Indian Feminism and the Communicative Network”
Abritty Abdullah
M.A. Candidate, Women Gender and Sexuality Studies, Oregon State University
“On the Portrayal of Women in Bangladeshi Cinema”
Alka Kurian
Lecturer, School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Science, University of Washington – Bothell
“Transnational Strategies of Resistance”
Sudhir Mahadevan
Associate Professor, Comparative Literature, University of Washington
“The Movie Theater as a Technology of Film Form: a Historical Consideration”

4:30-5:30pm, Room 142/144 – Closing Ceremony & Remarks 

Back to main conference page

South Asia Conference of the Pacific Northwest (SACPAN) 2016, UO-Portland
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CAPS SACPAN Jeremiah-Riaz Poster

The University of Oregon will host the South Asia Conference of the Pacific Northwest (SACPAN) on February 5-6, 2016 at the UO White Stag Building in Portland, Oregon.

Following on the successes of previous SACPAN meetings, we invite faculty and graduate students from UW, UBC, UO, Portland State University, Oregon State University, Reed College, Lewis and Clark and area institutions to informally outline on-going, evolving, and new research on South Asia and its diasporas. We have two types of presentation formats; individual presenters and organized panels. Each presenter will get 15 minutes to present their research. Organized panels will be in a roundtable format that leaves more time for discussion of critical issues.

  • Each session will have 15 minutes dedicated to comments from the audience
  • For organized panels, panel chairs may include a discussant as part of the panel
  • Individual paper presenters will be grouped thematically
  • Each session will run for 1 hour and 45 minutes
  • We encourage lively collegial critique and feedback

Program
https://caps.uoregon.edu/2016/01/07/sacpan-program/

 

Press Release
South Asia Conference of the Pacific Northwest 2016

Forum Location
The University of Oregon White Stag Building is located at 70 NW Couch Street in the Old Town Chinatown Historic District. The entire conference will take place in this building. Check-in will begin at 3:30pm outside of room 142/144.

 

This event is cosponsored by the University of Oregon, the University of Washington, and the University of British Columbia.  For more information, please call Jonathon Campbell at 541-346-5068 or jwcamp@uoregon.edu.

Conference Pictures

2014-15 Events
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2014-15 Events

Spring Term

CAPS Lim-Jong Poster

Thursday, April 9, 2015
“South Korea as the World’s Most Wired Nation: Its Digital Democracy as a Real-Life Case Study”
by Jo Jong, Seoul National University School of Law, Korea
110 Knight Law Center
7:00 – 8:00 p.m.

 

 

CAPS Jeremiah-Adams Poster
Monday, April 20, 2015
“Contemporary Human Rights Challenges in Asia”
Brad Adams, Director, Asia Division, Human Rights Watch
Oak Room, EMU
3:00 pm

 

 

CAPS Jeremiah-Perry Poster
Saturday, April 25, 2015
“China’s Higher Education Reform: A New Great Leap Forward?”
Elizabeth J. Perry, Harvard University
White Stag Building, Room 142/144 (Portland)
4:15 pm

 

 

CAPS Jeremiah-Pepinsky poster
Tuesday, April 28, 2015
“The Problem with Peripheries: Lessons from Southeast Asia and Beyond”
Thomas B. Pepinsky, Cornell University
Browsing Room, Knight Library
12:00 pm

 

 

CAPS Jeremiah-Majumdar Poster
Thursday, May 7, 2015
“The Indian History of a Global Category”
Dr. Rochona Majumdar, University of Chicago
Gerlinger Lounge
3:00 pm

 

 

CAPS Jeremiah-Takamiya Poster

Tuesday, May 26, 2015
“The Prehistory of the Ryukyu Archipelago in Japan, with a Special Focus on Discoveries from Amami and Okinawa”
Professor Hiroto Takamiya, Research Center for Pacific Islands, Kagoshima University
Knight Library Browsing Room
3:00 pm

 

 

CAPS Jeremiah-Holden Poster
Tuesday, May 26, 2014
“Divorce (Khul) at the Women’s Initiative in Pakistan and in the Diaspora”
Dr. Livia Holden, Karakoram International University, Pakistan
110 Knight Law Library
4:00 pm

 

 

CAPS_Mediascapes_conference

Friday and Saturday, May 29-30, 2015
“Japanese and Korean Mediascapes: Youth, Popular Culture, and Nation”
Gerlinger Alumni Lounge
For more information, [click here.]

 

 

Winter Term

CAPS Ancient China Poster

 

February 13-14, 2015
Ancient China: Texts, Traditions, and Transformations
A symposium in honor of Steven Durrant
For conference program, [click here].

 

 

 

CAPS Jeremiah-Rymeski Poster


Tuesday, February 17, 2015
“Bhutan: Can Happiness Sustain Tourism?”
by Jay Rymeski
375 McKenzie Hall
12:00 pm – 2:00 pm

 

 

CAPS Jeremiah-Griffen Poster

 

Friday, February 27, 2015
Jeremiah Lecture Series
“‘Ping Pong Diplomacy’: Mao, Nixon and the Art of Soft Power”
by Nicholas Griffin
Knight Library Browsing Room
4:00 pm

Fall Term

CAPS reception card 2015

 

Friday, October 3, 2014
CAPS/Asian Studies Annual Reception
Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art 

Papé Reception Hall
3:00 – 5:00 pm

 

 

 


Monday, October 6, 2014

Jeremiah Lecture
“Linguistic Politeness in Korean: Phonetics and Multimodality”
Bodo Winter,  University of California, Merced
Knight Library Browsing Room
3:30-5:30 pm

 

Friday, October 10, 2014
Conference: Comparative Historical Ecology in Ancient Northeast Asia
Many Nations Longhouse
9:00 am – 5 pm
For conference schedule please [click here].

 

 

 

CAPS Lim-Robinson Poster


Monday, October 13, 2014

Lecture: Moral Society and Amoral State: Political/Social Controversies in South Korea
Michael Robinson, Indiana University
McKenzie Hall, Room 375
12:00 pm

 

 


October 25-26, 2014
Conference: China in Asia: Historical Connections and Contemporary Engagement
Alumni Lounge, Gerlinger Hall
Oct 25: 9:00am – 5pm
Oct 26: 9:00am – 1pm
For the full conference schedule please [click here].

CAPS Vietnam poster
November 5-8, 2014

Conference: Engaging with Vietnam
EMU Ballroom
For more information about registering please [click here].

 

 

 

CAPS City in S. Asia Poster

November 13-14, 2014
Conference: The City in South Asia and Its Transnational Connections
Knight Library, Browsing Room
Nov 13: 11:00am – 4pm
Nov 14: 10:00am – 5:30pm
For the full conference schedule please [click here].

 

 

 

CAPS Jeremiah-Kern Poster

Friday, December 5, 2014
Lecture: Comix East and West?! The Shocking Transnational Affair of Japanese and Euro-American Comics (And Their Manga, Manhwa, Manhua Lovechildren)
Adam Kern, Professor of Japanese Literature and Visual Culture
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Browsing Room, Knight Library
1:00 pm

Cultivating Korea: Enriching East Asian Curriculum with Korean Studies
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Workshop: Cultivating Korea: Enriching East Asian Curriculum with Korean Studies

Friday, August 21st, 2015, 10 am to 5 pm
White Stag Block, UO Portland

Screen Shot 2015-08-17 at 11.40.34 AM

This one day workshop is aimed at faculty who are interested in developing curriculum that incorporates Korean Studies into East Asian coursework. The workshop will provide a broad, interdisciplinary introduction to the subject, with thoughts and examples that can be brought into the classroom. Speakers will explore Korea through the lenses of history, language, cinema, arts and culture.

This event is sponsored by the Center for Asian and Pacific Studies and the National Resource Center for East Asian Studies.

 

Workshop Schedule:

10 am: Opening Remarks (Lucien Brown, University of Oregon)

10:10 am: “Broad Palette, Complicated Design: Teaching Large Ideas Using the Korean Historical Experience” Michael Robinson (East Asian Languages and Cultures, Indiana University)

11:40 am: “Language, Ideology, and Power in the Two Koreas” Lucien Brown (East Asian Languages and Literatures, University of Oregon)

1:10 pm: Lunch Break

1:50 pm: “History from Things: Korean Culture Reflected in Art” Anne Rose Kitagawa (Chief Curator, Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art at the University of Oregon)

3:20 pm: “Korean Cinema, Cinematic Korea: Nation, History, Culture” Dong Hoon Kim (East Asian Languages and Literatures, University of Oregon)

4:50 pm: Closing Remarks (Anne Rose Kitagawa, Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art)

 

Further updates to this page will include links to content. Please check back after the event.

Conference: Japanese and Korean Mediascapes: Youth, Popular Culture, and Nation
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CAPS_Mediascapes_conferenceJapanese and Korean Mediascapes: Youth, Popular Culture, and Nation

Friday and Saturday, May 29-30, 2015
Gerlinger Alumni Lounge
The University of Oregon

 

This two-day event will explore the globalization of Japanese and Korean popular culture with an eye to major historical movements and media trends. Through case studies of television dramas, video games, popular music, comics, and other media, we will investigate how popular culture, especially trends among youth, has shaped world views, defined artistic genres, and altered commercial landscapes. We will question how this cultural exchange can soothe historical tensions and help lead to better political relations. This is one of the first conferences at the University of Oregon or elsewhere to examine Japanese and Korean popular culture together.

Sponsored by: The Center for Asian and Pacific Studies, and is cosponsored by the Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures, the College of Arts and Sciences, the Asian Studies Program, the National Resource Center for East Asian Studies, the Global Studies Institute, the Jeremiah Lecture Series Fund, the Myung Sup Lim Lecture Series Fund, the Department of Political Science, and the Cinema Studies Program.

 

Friday, May 29

9:15 am
Opening Remarks
Jeff hanes, Alisa Freedman, HyeRyoung Ok

9:30 am
Panel 1 — Visualizing History and Youth Movements
Moderator: Jeff Hanes
Presenters: Shunya Yoshimi (University of Tokyo); Shige (CJ) Suzuki (Baruch College, City University of New York)

11:00 am
Break

11:15 am
Panel 2 — Trans/National Mediascapes, Gender, and Mobility
Moderator: Bish Sen
Presenters: Dal Yong Jin (Simon Fraser University); Dong Hoon Kim (University of Oregon); Alisa Freedman (University of Oregon)

1:15 pm
Break

2:15 pm
Panel 3 — Pop Music and the Politics of Idols
Moderator: Loren Kajikawa
Presenters: Eun Young Jung (University of California, San Diego); Toby Slade (University of Tokyo)

3:45 pm
Break

4:00 pm
Graduate Panel
Moderator: Michael Arnold, LeRon Harrison
Presenters: Emily Cole, Michelle Crowson, Akiko Hirao, John Moore, Stephen Murnion

5:30 pm
Reception

Saturday, May 30

10:00 am
Panel 4 — Games, Fans, and Social Play
Moderator: Julie Voelker-Morris
Presenters: Florence Chee (Loyola University Chicago); Kathryn Hemmann (George Mason University)

11:30 am
Coffee Break

11:45 am
Panel 5 — Fan Activism and Popular Culture
Moderator: Sangita Gopal
Presenters: Sharalyn Orbaugh (University of British Columbia); HyeRyoung Ok (University of Oregon)

1:15 pm
Lunch Break

2:15 pm
Closing Discussion

 

UO-Karakoram International University Partnership
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20150822_134317

Purpose of the Project

As a U.S. State Department grant funded project, the primary goal is to foster a partnership that aims to promote academic interchange between Karakoram International University (KIU) in Gilgit, Pakistan and the University of Oregon (UO) by bringing faculty members into conversation about research and teaching, especially regarding innovative curricular development at KIU in environmental sustainability and entrepreneurship.

Project Activities

Over the course of three years:

  • Five groups of four KIU faculty members each will spend approximately three months at the UO. During this time, they will focus on working with UO research and teaching faculty, as well as professional development staff on curriculum development and academic scholarship
  • In turn, five groups of UO faculty members and professional development staff each will spend approximately two weeks at KIU working with teaching faculty and professional development staff to review curricular and program developments
  • Establish an interdisciplinary Center for Environmental Sustainability; this may be incorporated into the existing IMARC (Integrated Mountain Area Research Centre) but with a distinct mandate
  • Establish a Teaching Effectiveness program and an English institute to assist KIU faculty as part of establishing a Continuing Faculty Professional Development Center
  • Explore possibilities to establish a Center for Sustainable Entrepreneurship at KIU
  • Develop and enhance library resources at KIU to increase access to information for students and faculty
  • Provide funding for professional equipment as identified in the course of the partnership

All exchanges will explore potential research collaborations. The Partnership will strive to develop enduring academic and institutional relationships that will persist after the grant period concludes.

For more details, click here to read the official project announcement.

Join our Facebook page to follow our activities and events! We are regularly updating with pictures and posts on our most recent activity.

To find out more about KIU, visit their website.

   university-of-oregon_200x200

Re-Inventing Japan: University Stimulation of Local Economies in Japan and the US
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New International Summer Opportunity for Students!

Re-Inventing Japan:  University Stimulation of Local Economies in Japan and the US

June 22 – July 17, 2015
Eugene, Oregon and Akita, Japan

 

Akita Mountain VillageOverview

In this collaborative, intercultural program, an elite group of UO students will team up with select students from Akita International University (AIU) in Japan for 4 weeks (2 weeks in Oregon and 2 weeks in Japan) to explore the history, development, present status, and future of local contributions of universities in Akita and Oregon to local economies.  Students will participate in lectures, field research, and analysis in Oregon and Japan, culminating in a formal, public presentation based on their comparative study.  For program information and to see a detailed course syllabus please follow this link.

This program is ideal for undergraduate or graduate students interested in Business, Economics, Political Science, Asian Studies, or International Studies.  While there are no prerequisites, students must have strong analytical and research skills.  Knowledge of Japan and Japanese language is helpful, but not required.

The program will be led by two faculty members, Tetsuya Toyoda from Akita International University (International Law) and Jeff Stolle from the University of Oregon (Management), and will be managed by the UO’s Center for Asian and Pacific Studies.

 

Highlights:

  • Akita International University (AIU: Kokusai Kyoyo Daigaku in Japanese) is a small, English-speaking, liberal arts college founded in 2004.  Because of its highly globalized curriculum, it attracts competitive students from all over Japan.
  • Funded by the Japan Ministry of Education and Akita International University, students from Akita International University and the University of Oregon will work on international teams on an interdisciplinary topic.  It will give them hands-on experience working in an international setting, both in Oregon and in Japan.
  • Students will gain valuable skills in international teamwork, research, and presentations through an intensive research project.
  • The Oregon session will include a two-day trip to Portland for business and government visits.

 

Location

The Oregon portion will be held on the UO campus from June 22 – July 4.  There will be a two-day trip to Portland on June 25-26. The Japan portion will be held in Akita, Japan, from July 5 – July 17.

Akita is the capital city of Akita Prefecture, located in the Tōhoku region of Japan.  It takes about one hour by airplane or four hours by train to get to Akita from Tokyo.  The local economy is principally agricultural, including fishing, forestry and rice farming.  It is famous for its sake and has hundreds of hot springs (onsen).

 

Registration and Credits

Students participating in this program will be registered and will receive 4 credits from Akita International University.

 

Application Process:

To be considered, all applications need to submit the following:

  1. An application form, found here:  AIU-UO Program Application
  2. UO Transcripts
  3. The names and phone numbers of three references

Please bring in a hardcopy of the application to the Center for Asian and Pacific Studies, located in 110 Gerlinger Hall. Applications will be accepted until 5 pm on March 2, 2015.

 

Eligibility Requirements

This program is open to undergraduate and graduate students across majors and fields at the UO as well as other universities. To be eligible, students must have by departure:

  • an overall GPA of 3.3 or above
  • completed at least 45 credits (freshman year complete)
  • no Japanese language required, though knowledge of Japan and/or Japanese is preferred

Students must also make satisfactory academic progress throughout the application process and otherwise comply with policies and procedures of the host university and the University of Oregon.

If you do not meet the minimum requirements, please contact Lori O’Hollaren before applying.

 

Selection and Participation

Participants must meet the eligibility requirements for their chosen program, and be prepared academically and socially to succeed in an intensive, international and intercultural program.  Participants must satisfactorily complete the following:

  • well-written program application
  • interview process for finalists (week of March 9th)
  • timely submission of required paperwork
  • attendance at pre-departure orientation sessions
  • payment of program fees

Program participants must also demonstrate the ability to be successful overseas through evidence of maturity, motivation, and flexibility, and such other characteristics as the selection committee deems relevant.

 

Program Details

Summer 2015: June 22 to July 17, 2015

 

Accommodations

While in Eugene, no accommodations will be provided to UO students.  When in Japan, local housing will be provided on the AIU campus.  Students are responsible for their own meals (approximately $200 for 2 weeks in Japan).  The program will cover the 2 nights in Portland on June 25-26 for a field trip.

 

Financial Information

The program will cover the following expenses:

  • Round-trip airfare to Japan
  • AIU tuition and fees
  • Shared hotel accommodations in Portland, Oregon for two nights

 

UO students are required to cover:

  • A $1500 Program Fee*
  • Lodging and meals while in Eugene
  • Books and materials (approximately $50)
  • Meals while in Japan (approximately $200)
  • Personal expenses

*Scholarships of up to $500 will be available.  Please see application for details.

 

Further Information

Lori O’Hollaren, 110 Gerlinger Hall, 541-346-1521, loholl@uoregon.edu

Jeff Stolle, 428 Lillis Hall, 541-684-3800, jstolle@uoregon.edu

English Language Proficiency Verification
Posted on

You will need to verify your English language proficiency is sufficient enough to successfully participate in your program and to function on a day-to-day basis. It may be verified and documented in one of the following two ways:

 

  • a signed letter from your home institution stating that you are an employee at the institution, and English is the language you teaches , or conduct research or business on a day-to-day basis This is a sample letter; Please feel free to use it if it works for you. Foreign Institutiuon English Language Proficiency Verification[1]

 

Once I get all of this information, I will submit the papers to our office of International Affairs.  They will issue the J-1 paperwork, which I will then send to you.  Please let me know which address is best to use for Federal Express delivery.

Conference: Ancient China: Texts, Traditions and Transformations
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CAPS Ancient China Poster

Ancient China: Texts, Traditions, and Transformations

A Symposium in Honor of Stephen W. Durrant

This symposium brings together colleagues, research associates, and former graduate students to present research on early Chinese literature and culture in honor of Dr. Stephen W. Durrant’s long career. The Symposium will begin on Friday, February 13th with a public lecture by Dr. Wendy Larson, (Professor Emeritus, East Asian Languages and Literatures), followed on Saturday, February 14th with nine research presentations by scholars in the field of Chinese Studies on topics including paleography, textual study and criticism, historiography, Manchu studies, narrative, and cultural studies.

 

Friday, February 13

Keynote Lecture
Knight Library Browsing Room
5:00 pm (Reception to Follow)

“Every Day in Every Way: Optimism in 1950s China and America”
Wendy Larson, University of Oregon

Saturday, February 14

Symposium Papers
Gerlinger Lounge
9:00 am – 5:00 pm

9:00 am
Welcome Remarks

9:15 am
“A Publicly Posted Document from the Xin Period”
Charles Sanft, University of Tennessee

10:00 am
“Harmonizing with the Unseen: The Tradition of Lord Pei, Perfected of Pure Numen”
Matthew Wells, University of Kentucky

10:45 am
“Materialized Filial Piety: The Body and Filial Piety in Early Texts”
Jianjun He, University of Kentucky

11:30 am
“The Uses of Barbarians in Early China”
Li Waiyee, Harvard University

12:15 pm
Lunch Break

1:30 pm
“New Thoughts on Pleasure in Zhuangzi”
Michael Nylan, University of California Berkeley

2:15 pm
“Nurhaci in the Yargiyan kooli
Stephen Wadley, Portland State University

3:00 pm
“Narratives of Ritual Adjudication”
David Schaberg, University of California Los Angeles

3:45 pm
“Further Thoughts on Liu Zhiji and Sima Qian”
Esther Klein, University of Sydney

4:15 pm
“Warming up the Past: Paul Serruys, Stephen Durrant, and the Voices of Ancient China”
Anthony Clark, Whitworth University

This event is presented by the Center for Asian and Pacific Studies and is cosponsored by the Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures and the College of Arts and Sciences. Additional funding provided by the Jeremiah Lecture Series Fund and the National Resource Center for East Asian Studies. For more info, please call 541-346-1521.

UO-Karakoram International University Partnership
Posted on

Purpose of the Project

As a U.S. State Department grant funded project, the primary goal is to foster a partnership that aims to promote academic interchange between Karakoram International University (KIU) in Gilgit, Pakistan and the University of Oregon (UO) by bringing faculty members into conversation about research and teaching, especially regarding innovative curricular development at KIU in environmental sustainability and entrepreneurship.

Project Activities

Over the course of three years:

  • Five groups of four KIU faculty members each will spend approximately three months at the UO. During this time, they will focus on working with UO research and teaching faculty, as well as professional development staff on curriculum development and academic scholarship
  • In turn, five groups of UO faculty members and professional development staff each will spend approximately two weeks at KIU working with teaching faculty and professional development staff to review curricular and program developments
  • Establish an interdisciplinary Center for Environmental Sustainability; this may be incorporated into the existing IMARC (Integrated Mountain Area Research Centre) but with a distinct mandate
  • Establish a Teaching Effectiveness program and an English institute to assist KIU faculty as part of establishing a Continuing Faculty Professional Development Center
  • Explore possibilities to establish a Center for Sustainable Entrepreneurship at KIU
  • Develop and enhance library resources at KIU to increase access to information for students and faculty
  • Provide funding for professional equipment as identified in the course of the partnership

All exchanges will explore potential research collaborations. The Partnership will strive to develop enduring academic and institutional relationships that will persist after the grant period concludes.

For more details, click here to read the official project announcement.

Join our Facebook page to follow our activities and events! We are regularly updating with pictures and posts on our most recent activity.

To find out more about KIU, visit their website.

   university-of-oregon_200x200