2008-09 Events

July 6 – 8, 2009
Documenting Taiwan on Film: Methods and Issues in New Documentaries
Workshop and Film Screenings
At the University of OregonThese events are free and open to the public. For a complete schedule, please click here.
Thursday, June 4, 2009
Panel Discussion
“Retrospectives on Tiananmen:  Two Decades Later”
Knight Library Browsing Room
7:00 pmPanel Participants:
Bryna Goodman, Department of History
David Li, Department of English
Richard Suttmeier, Department of Political Science
Tuong Vu, Department of Political Science
Friday, May 29, 2009
Brown Bag Talk
“Water Pollution Control Issues in China”
Zhuoni Wang, PhD Candidate, School of Environment and Natural Resources, Renmin University of China; Courtesy Research Assistant, Center for Asian and Pacific Studies, University of Oregon
Gerlinger Hall, Room 103 (CAPS Seminar Room)
12:00 pm
Friday, May 15, 2009
Jeremiah Lecture Series
“Male Friendship and Male Homosexuality in Late Imperial China”
Martin Huang, Professor, East Asian Languages & Literature, University of California at Irvine
Lillis Hall, Room 175
3:30 pm
Thursday, May 14, 2009
Jeremiah Lecture Series
“Transforming an Urban Informal Settlement in an Asian Mega City: The Work of the Orangi Pilot Project, Karachi.”
Arif Hasan, Architect and Planner; Visiting Professor of Architecture and Planning, University of Karachi in Pakistan
Knight Library Browsing Room
3:30 pm
Friday, April 17, 2009
Jeremiah Lecture Series
“The Japanese Community of Shanghai: The First Generation, 1862-1895”
Joshua Fogel, Canada Research Chair and Professor, History Department, York University
McKenzie Hall, Room 375
3:30 pm
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Department of History Pierson Lecture Series
“The Precious Raft of History: The Past, the West, and the Woman Question in China”
Joan Judge, Associate Professor, Division of Humanities/School of Women’s Studies, York University
McKenzie Hall, Room 229
3:30 pm
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
“Humiliate-able Bodies: Rape in Wartime Propaganda Cartoons of the Sino-Japanese War”
Louise Edwards, Director, China Research Centre, University of Technology Sydney (UTS), Australia
Knight Library Browsing Room
3:30 pm
Thursday, March 5, 2009
“South Asian Models: New Strategies for Book History in the 21st Century”
Abhijit Gupta, Reader in English, Jadavpur University; Fulbright Senior Research Fellow, University of California at Riverside
EMU Maple Room
3:00 pm
Thursday, February 26, 2009
“How to Write a Woman’s Life Into and Out of History: The Case of Wang Zhaoyuan (1763-1851)”
Dr. Harriet Zurndorfer, Sinological Institute, Leiden University, The Netherlands
Knight Library Browsing Room
4:00 pm
Friday, February 20, 2009
Workshop: “Social Complexities in the Centers and Frontiers in Northern China”
Education Room, Museum of Natural and Cultural History
9:00 am – 3:00 pmFor a complete program, please click here.
November 18, 2009
“SURVIVING THE KILLING FIELDS”
Impacts and Aftermath of the Cambodian Genocide
Mills International Center, EMU
5:30 – 7:00 pm
October 23 – 25, 2008
Taiwan Film Festival
For a complete schedule, please click here.
Thursday, October 16,2008
Jeremiah Lecture Series
“Border Crossing and the Woman Writer: The Case of Gui Maoyi (1765-1835/6)”
Ellen Widmer, Edith Stix Wasserman Professor of East Asian Studies, Wellesley College
Thursday, October 16,2008
Jeremiah Lecture Series
”What is Buddhist Philosophy?”
M. David Eckel, Distinguished Teaching Professor of the Humanities, Boston University
Knight Library Browsing Room
4:00 pm 

Friday, October 10, 2008

CAPS/Asian Studies Annual Reception
Knight Library Browsing Room
4:00 – 5:30 pm*A meeting with the new Dean of CAS, Scott Coltrane and the Associate Dean for Social Sciences, Larry Singell, will precede the reception. It will be held in the Knight Library Administration Office, Room 115 at 3:00 pm. This is a great opportunity to speak with them about the future of Asian Studies, your wishes, concerns, etc.
August 25-29, 2008
“The Physician Manase Dosan (1507-1594): An International Workshop on Medical Texts and Sino-Japanese Writings in Early Modern Japan”
McKenzie Hall, Room 375This event is co-sponsored by the Nisho Gakusha University Center of Excellence (COE) Program and the University of Oregon’s Center for Asian and Pacific Studies. Financial support is provided by Nishogakusha COE, the Yoko McClain Faculty Endowment Fund, the Office of International Programs, the Oregon Humanities Center, the Center for Asian and Pacific Studies, and the Departments of History and Art History.For a complete program, please click here.

Past Events, Listed by Academic Year

2013-2014
2012-2013
2011-12
2010-11

2009-10
2008-09
2007-08
2006-07
2005-06
2004-05
2003-04


2005-06 Events

2005-06 Events

SUMMER EVENTS

Monday, July 31, 2006

Jeremiah Lecture Series
“Deep Listening, Deep Hearing: Buddhism and Psychotherapy East & West”
Dr. Jan Chozen Bays, M.D., Abbot, Great Vow Zen Monastery
Gerlinger Lounge
7:00 pm

SPRING TERM EVENTS

Thursday, April 6, 2006

Korea Speaker Series – Brown Bag talk
“High-Tech Ventures in Korea”
Moonhyun Nam, Reporter, Seoul Economic Daily; Visiting Scholar, Center for Asian and Pacific Studies
103 Gerlinger Hall
12:00 pm

Friday, April 14, 2006

China Speaker Series – Engaging China: History, Culture, Politics
“Why Ancient China Just Never Goes Away”
Steve Durrant, Professor of Chinese Literature; Acting Associate Dean of Humanities, University of Oregon
Lillis Hall, Room 212
12:00 pm

This talk is cosponsored by the Lundquist College of Business.

Monday, April 17, 2006

Korea Speaker Series
“Our Nation: A Korean Punk Rock Community” Lecture and Documentary Showing
Dr. Stephen Epstein, Director, Asian Studies Institute, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Lillis Hall, Room 111
4:00 pm

The rise of a new youth subculture in the Republic of Korea is an outgrowth of dramatic changes occurring there in the 1990’s. The country elected its first civilian president, it experienced new prosperity, and became increasingly exposed to Western influences. Young Koreans became exposed to the internet and a steady stream of new musical influences. Our Nation is a stunning portrayal of how Korean youth are using punk rock to find their voices in a rapidly changing culture.

This talk is cosponsored by the Oregon Humanities Center and the Asian Studies Program.

Friday, April 21, 2006

China Speaker Series – Engaging China: History, Culture, Politics
“Let the Best Win. Ritual, Performance, and Competition in Chinese History”
Ina Asim, Associate Professor of History, University of Oregon
Lillis Hall, Room 212
12:00 pm

This talk is cosponsored by the Lundquist College of Business.

Friday, April 28, 2006

Jeremiah Lecture Series
“Lovers, Talkers, Monsters, and Good Women: Contrasting Images from 16th-Century Chinese Epitaphs and Fiction.”
Katherine Carlitz, Assistant Director for Academic Affairs, Asian Studies Center; Adjunct Professor, Department of East Asian Languages & Literatures, University of Pittsburgh
Knight Library Browsing Room
3:30 pm

Monday, May 1, 2006

Jeremiah Lecture Series
“The City and the Citizen: Forms in Bombay and Bengal in the 50s Cinema”
Moinak Biswas, Department of Film Studies, Jadavpur University, Calcutta
Knight Library Browsing Room
4:00 pm

Moinak Biswas writes on Indian cinema and culture and has contributed to various journals and anthologies. He edits the Journal of the Moving Image, an annual publication of Jadavpur University, has edited two volumes of Bengali writings by Hemango Biswas, and the forthcoming (April, 2006) Apu and After: Revisiting Rays Cinema (Calcutta: Seagull Books and Oxford: Berg Publishers).

This event is presented by the Center for Asian and Pacific Studies and cosponsored by the CSWS Empire RIG, the Oregon Humanities Center, Asian Studies, Comparative Literature, English, Ethnic Studies, the Wayne Morse Center for Law and Politics, and the Center on Race, Ethnicity, and Sexuality Sttdies (CRESS).

Tuesday, May 2, 2006 – EVENT CANCELLED

Jeremiah Lecture Series
“Kamishibai: the Construction of Space and the National Imaginary in Modernizing Japan”
Sharalyn Orbaugh, Associate Professor of Asian Studies and Women’s Studies, University of British Columbia
Lillis Hall, Room 182
4:00 pm

Friday, May 5, 2006

China Speaker Series – Engaging China: History, Culture, Politics
“Transforming the Chinese Economy: The Making of a High Tech Competitor”
Richard P. Suttmeier, Professor of Political Science, University of Oregon
Lillis Hall, Room 212
12:00 pm

This talk is cosponsored by the Lundquist College of Business.

Friday, May 12, 2006

Jeremiah Lecture Series
“Performing (in) Bali: Kembali, Bali, and Hyper-Bali”
Michael Tenzer, Professor of Music, University of British Columbia
Knight Library Browsing Room
3:00 pm

Bali’s vibrant culture has experienced virtually nonstop accelerated change for a hundred years or more, almost always in conjunction with the phenomenon of cross-cultural interaction. This presentation combines film and discussion to problematize the multidimensional strategies, successes, and compromises that Balinese culture–seen here in terms of its music–has devised to cope with such change, which includes both inward-facing ultra-traditionalism and the upheavals of ongoing interface with others. These videos will be used a springboard for discussing cross-cultural interaction in the Balinese context and how it has changed over time.

Thursday, May 18, 2006

Korea Speaker Series – Brown Bag Talk
“Institutional Inertia: The Six Party Talks and the Future of Two Koreas”
Sangbum Shin, Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Oregon
159 PLC (Oregon Humanities Center Conference Room)
12:00 pm

Friday, May 19, 2006

China Speaker Series – Engaging China: History, Culture, Politics
“Networked Intelligence for the China Market”
Robert Felsing, East Asian Bibliographer, Knight Library, University of Oregon
Lillis Hall, Room 212
12:00 pm

This talk is cosponsored by the Lundquist College of Business.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Jeremiah Public Lecture
“Candor the World Over: Toward Some Unlikely Connections Between Japanese film, Global Ideology, Health Care and Political Resistance”
Eric Cazdyn, Associate Professor of East Asian Studies, Comparative Literature and Cinema Studies, University of Toronto
Knight Library Browsing Room
4:30 pm

This talk explores a new candor emerging in the world today, one that immediately recognizes the objective logic of global capitalism–how the stunning inequalities in the world (especially around access to life-saving medications) are not the result of capitalism’s failures, but of its successes. One unlikely place where this growing candor is expressed is in contemporary Japanese cinema (in particular, in the work of Tsukamoto Shinya, Miike Takashi, and Kurosawa Kiyoshi). Clinical, imminent, non-referential, and non-moralizing: these directors twist their cold obsession with horror and the wounded body out of the bloody facts of contemporary history–while at the same time seeming to care nothing for the world. But when these insular cinematic obsessions are put near our most radical democratic desires (for global equality and justice), something sparks and fuses with some of the more hopeful political movements in the world today.

Friday,June 2, 2006

China Speaker Series – Engaging China: History, Culture, Politics
“U.S.-China Relations: Is a Rising China a Threat to the U.S.?”
Hua-yu Li, Associate Professor of Political Science, Oregon State University
Lillis Hall, Room 212
12:00 pm

This talk is cosponsored by the Lundquist College of Business.

WINTER TERM EVENTS

Monday,January 23, 2006

Jeremiah Public Lecture
“Comparative Study of Religion: Its Relevance to Study of Any One Tradition and to Philosophy of Religion”
Dale Cannon, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies, Western Oregon University
180 PLC
7:30 pm

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Chinese New Year Celebration and Introduction of the
Chinese Flagship K-16 Academic Director, Madeline Spring
3:30 – 5:30 pm
EMU International Resource Center

Thursday, February 2, 2006

Jeremiah Public Lecture
“Meaning and Mantra: Indic Philosophy of Language in East Asia”
Richard Payne, Dean, Institute of Buddhist Studies, Graduate Theological Union
Gerlinger Lounge
7:30 pm

Monday, February 27, 2006

Phi Beta Kappa Public Lecture
“East and West in the Origins of a Modern World Economy”
Kenneth L. Pomeranz, Chancellor’s Professor of History, University of California, Irvine
180 Prince Lucien Campbell Hall
7:30 pm

Abstract:
Up until the eve of the Industrial Revolution, the more advanced economies in various parts of Eurasia were more similar than we had realized. This, in turn, demands new explanations for the enormous divergence in wealth and power that emerged in the nineteenth century and a new perspective on the old question of “Why was Europe first?”
Friday, March 10, 2006

“China: Its Borderlands and Its Neighbors”
Morris Rossabi, Professor of History, East Asian Institute at Columbia University and
The Graduate Center, City University of New York
Clark Honors College Library – Chapman Hall
3:00 pm

This talk is presented by the Clark Honors College and cosponsored by the Center for Asian and Pacific Studies and the Department of History. For more info, please call 346-3345.

Monday,March 20, 2006

Jeremiah Public Lecture
“Scythe and the City: Exploring Death in 20th Century Shanghai”
Christian Henriot, Fulbright Scholar, Center for Chinese Studies, University of California, Berkeley
375 McKenzie Hall
4:00 pm

FALL TERM EVENTS

Thursday, October 6, 2005

Jeremiah Public Lecture
“Chinese Family Survival Strategies in War and Revolution”
Sherman Cochran, Hu Shih Professor of History, Cornell University
Knight Library Browsing Room
4:00 pm

Friday,October 7, 2005

CAPS/Asian Studies Reception
375 McKenzie Hall
3:00 – 5:00 pm

Thursday, October 13, 2005

Jeremiah Public Lecture
“Pakhtuns and Political Challenges for Pakistan”
Dr. Ghulam Taqi Bangash, Dean, Faculty of Arts & Humanities; Professor, Department of History, University of Peshawar, Pakistan
Rogue River Room (in the EMU, near the food court)
4:00 pm

Pakhtuns have been in the news ever since the Pakhtun-dominated government of the Taliban was ousted by U.S. forces in October 2002. That same month, an Islamist coalition was voted into office in the Pakhtun-dominated Northwest Frontier Province (NWFP) that borders Afghanistan in Pakistan. Today, global politics still embroil local politics in the NWFP as Pakistani military forces hunt for terrorists in Pakhtun tribal areas along the border. Professor Bangash will address what the issues are for Pakhtuns in Afghanistan, the NWFP and nearby tribal areas in Pakistan, and the ensuing political challenges these issues create for the government of Pakistan.

Friday, October 21, 2005

Jeremiah Public Lecture
“The Political Landscape of War Memory in Japan”
Franziska Seraphim, Department of History, Boston College
375 McKenzie Hall
3:00 pm

Past Events, Listed by Academic Year

2013-2014
2012-2013
2011-12
2010-11

2009-10
2008-09
2007-08
2006-07
2005-06
2004-05
2003-04

 

2009-10 Events

 

SPRING TERM EVENTS

Friday, April 9 – Saturday, April 10, 2010
International Workshop
Infinite Worlds: The Cultural Biography of Chinese Classical Gardens
UO White Stag Block Buildings in Portland
For a complete workshop schedule and registration, please click here.
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Jeremiah Lecture “Crisis and Reconciliation in Swat”
Dr. Sultan-i-Rome, Professor of Politics and History, Jahanzeb College, Swat, NWFP, Pakistan
Gerlinger Lounge 4:00 pm
Monday, April 19, 2010
“Where is Shanghai? Visual Art and the City”
Lisa Claypool, Associate Professor of Art History and Humanities, Reed College
Mills International Center (EMU)
3:00 pm

Thursday, April 22, 2010
Jeremiah Speaker
“Inequality and Its Enemies in Contemporary China”
Mark Selden, Senior Research Associate in the East Asia Program at Cornell University
Mills International Center (EMU)
3:00 pm
Friday, April 30, 2010
Public Lecture
“Why So Blue?: Mandala Transmission and the Transformation of Eighth-Century Representational Modes”
Cynthea Bogel, University of Washington
Pape Room – Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art
5:00 pm
Friday, April 30 – Saturday, May 1, 2010
Symposium
“Nara, City of East Asia: Cosmopolitanism and Localism in 8th-Century Japan”
Pape Room – Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art
9am – 4 pm
For a complete symposium schedule, please click here.

Friday, May 14, 2010
Conference
“International Conference on Nuclear Weapons and the Security of Korea and East Asia”
Knight Library Browsing Room
9:00 am – 5:00 pm
For a complete schedule, please click here.
Friday, May 14, 2010
Jeremiah Lecture Series
“Looking Backward to Go Forward: On Future Korea-U.S. Relations”
Dr. Yang Sung-chul, Chairman, the Kim Dae-jung Peace Foundation Advisory Committee and a Distinguished Professor, Korea University; former Korea Ambassador to the United States, 2000-2003
Knight Library Browsing Room
5:30 pm

 

WINTER TERM EVENTS
Thursday, January 7, 2010
Jeremiah Lecture Series
“Kitty on the Go: Japanese Cute as Transborder Fetish”
Christine Yano, University of Hawaii
Knight Library Browsing Room
2:30 pm
Friday, January 8 – Saturday January 9, 2010
Conference: Modern Girls on the Go: Gender, Mobility, and Labor in Japan
For a complete Conference schedule, please click here.
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Jeremiah Lecture
“Politics and Passion in Maorist and Post-Mao China”
Ban Wang, Professor Chinese Literature, Stanford University
Mills International Center EMU
3:00 pm

Thursday, January 28, 2010
“Who owns Taiwan
Peng Ming-min, Chairman, Peng Ming-min Foundation
Knight Library Browsing Room
3:30 pm
The talk by Peng Ming-min can be found here.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Jeremiah Lecture Series
“Music Competitions in Bali: Enlisting the Invisible World to Become Champions of the Visible”
Wayne Vitale, Trotter Visiting Professor, University of Oregon School of Music and Dance
Knight Library Browsing Room
7:00 pm
Monday, February 22, 2010
Jeremiah Lecture Series
“Crime and Punishment in China – A History of Penal Systems in the Twentieth  Century”
Klaus Muehlhahn, Professor of History, Indiana University
Knight Library Browsing Room
4:00 pm
Monday, March 15, 2010
Digital China and Social Media

Livestream of New York panel from The Paley Center for Media plus Portland panel discussion
UO White Stag Block Buildings in Portland
3:30 – 6:00 pmFor more information and registration, please click here.This event is cosponsored by the Northwest China Council and the Center for Asian and Pacific Studies.


FALL TERM EVENTS

Thursday, September 24, 2009
Brown Bag talk
“Shamans, Nostalgias, and the IMF: South Korean Popular Religion in Motion”
Laurel Kendall, American Museum of Natural History
159 PLC (OHC Conference Room)
12:00 pm
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Jeremiah Lecture Series
Yomi Braester, Department of Comparative Literature and Program in Cinema Studies, University of Washington
“The Instant City and the Postspatial Turn in Chinese Cinema”
Knight Library Browsing Room
3:00 pm
Thursday, October 22, 2009
CAPS/Asian Studies Annual Reception
Mills International Center (above the EMU Post Office)
3:00 – 5:00 pm
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Poetry Reading
“Tiger Tracks: Poetry and Performance from Southwest China”
By Aku Wuwu, Poet and Professor of Yi Studies and Ethnic Minority Literature at the
Southwest Nationalities University in China
Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art – Lecture Hall
4:00 pm
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Jeremiah Lecture Series
“Tilting Toward Quagmire: Afghanistan and Vietnam”
John Prados, Senior Fellow and Project Director, National Security Archive
Knight Library Browsing Room
7:00 pm
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Jeremiah Lecture Series
“Dangerous Amusements: Labor, Sociability and Counterpublic Culture in Hawaii, 1909-1930”
Denise Khor, Lecturer, Department of History, Harvard University
Knight Library Browsing Room
4:00 pm


Past Events, Listed by Academic Year

2013-2014
2012-2013
2011-12
2010-11

2009-10
2008-09
2007-08
2006-07
2005-06
2004-05
2003-04

CAPS Faculty Reading Group

A limited number of grants of $500 will be made to establish CAPS focused reading groups that meet to discuss articles and books on a topic within the CAPS fields. Application must be made by a group of no fewer than three CAPS faculty (one of whom is designated the coordinator of the group.)

The grant is to be used for the reproduction of articles and the purchase of books for group use; it may also be put toward the invitation of speakers. At the end of the academic year, the coordinator of the group is required to submit to CAPS a report on the group’s activities. Applications (including an explanation of the focus of the group and a list of members) are due on October 30th.

To submit a proposal, please click here to complete the online application form.

CAPS Small Professional Grants for Faculty

The Center for Asian and Pacific Studies is offering awards of up to $500 in support of the professional activities of its faculty. Awards will be made for the following purposes: travel to conferences to present papers (once funds from the faculty member’s department have been exhausted), travel to library, museum, and archival collections; and expenses related to book and article production and publication.

To submit a proposal, please click here to complete the online application form.

Applications will be reviewed twice per year. The deadlines for small grant applications are:

Fall: October 30th (for winter and spring projects)

Spring: April 15th (for summer and fall projects)

Awards must be used within one year of the date of the award. Applicants may apply for a CAPS Small Grant before they’ve been accepted to a conference, though their award will be continent upon acceptance confirmation.

No retroactive awards can be made. Successful applicants are asked, after the award has been used, to write a brief letter to CAPS reporting on the completion of the relevant project. Please note: Funds are limited, and graduate student awards are prioritized.

 

Taiwan Film Festival

Taiwan Film Festival

October 20-22, 2010
Willamette Hall, Room 110


A festival of feature and documentary films, showcasing the finest and most innovative films of Taiwan’s Public Television Service.

Wednesday, October 20

5:45 pm – Birds Without Borders: Black-Faced Spoonbills
Release: 2009 (53 min)
Genre: Documentary
Director: Dean Johnson

As a beautiful bird only found in the wetlands of Asia, the black-faced spoonbill is magnificently captured in HD. Meet the dedicated individuals, around the world, who share the goal of protecting this endanger animal’s remaining habitats.

7:00 pm – Opening Remarks and Reception (Willamette Atrium)

7:45 pm – Nyonya’s Taste of Life*
Release: 2007 (78 min)
Genre: Feature Film
Director: Wen Chih-yi
*Discussion with filmmaker after the screening

The film looks into the lives of Indonesian and Thai workers who come to Taiwan expecting a better life. Just like the complex flavors of Nyonya’s cuisine, with a mixture of sour, spicy, and sweet – the film is filled with misunderstandings, conflicts, miscommunications, and the reconciliation (or un-reconciliation) between Taiwanese and their guest workers.

Thursday, October 21

5:45 pm – The Secret in the Satchel
Release: 2007 (51 min)
Genre: Documentary
Director: Lin Tay-jou

For 10 years, university professor Lin Tay-jou has read thousands of student journals, giving him insights into their turbulent lives. He invites three of his students to document their stories in this film. Each one has different traumas and disadvantages; however, it does not prevent them from becoming more mature in real life.

7:00 pm – Brief Reception (Willamette Atrium)

7:30 pm – Taipei 24H*
Release: 2009 (94 min)
Genre: Feature Film
Directors: Cheng Fen-fen, Niu Cheng-zer, Debbie Hsu, Cheng Hsiao-tse, Lee Chi Y., Chen Yin-jung, An Je-yi Lee Kang-sheng
*Discussion with Lee Kang-sheng after the screening

“Taipei 24H” divides 24 hours in Taipei into 8 shorts. It opens with Cheng Fen-fen’s upbeat and comedic Share the Morning, and ends with Lee Kang-sheng running the final leg of this relay with Remembrance at 4am. Well-known director Tsai Ming-liang makes a rare appearance visiting a late night coffee shop. In between is Cheng Hsiao-tse’s love story Saver the Lover’s and DJ Chen’s magical ride on Taiwan’s subway, Dream Walker. Taipei 24H is a contemporary urban chronicle of a vibrant city rarely at sleep.

Friday, October 22

7:00 pm – The Wave Breaker
Release: 2009 (86 min)
Genre: Feature Film
Director: Zero Chou

Hao-yang is a young man with motor neuron disease, a terminal disease that has paralyzed him. Passed down by his father, his brother refuses to take the test to see if he too has the disease. As his mother fights for a cure, Hao-yang begs his younger brother to bring him to the ocean, a place of happiness for him.

All events will be held in Willamette 110 and are free and open to the public.


This Film Festival is presented by the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office (San Francisco). For more information about the entire festival, please click here. Local sponsors include the Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures and the Center for Asian and Pacific Studies.
For more information, please call (541) 346-1521.

Birds Without Borders – Black-faced Spoonbills
2009 Special Prize for Biodiversity, EARTH VISION, Japan
2009 Asian TV Awards, Singapore
2009 AIB International Media Excellence Awards, UK
2009 Natural TIFF, Japan
2009 International Festival of Ornithological Film, France
2009 Green Wave 21st Century European Environment Festival, Bulgaria
2009 Green Screen , International Nature Film Festival, Germany

Nyonya’s Taste of Life
2008 Golden Chest International Television Festival, Bulgaria
2008 International Women’s Film Festival in Seoul, Korea
2007 Best Single Drama/Best Actress/Best Director, Golden Bell Awards, Taiwan
2007 Women Make Waves Film, Taiwan

The Secret in the Satchel
2009 CINE Golden Eagle Award, U.S.A
2009 MOMA, Documentary Fortnight, U.S.A
2009 Asian Queer Film & Video Festival, Japan
2008 Golden Award, Shanghai TV Festival, China
2008 Golden Chest International Television Festival, Bulgaria
2008 INPUT, South Africa 2008 Kassel Documentary Film and Video Festival, Germany
2008 Beijing Independent Film Festival, China
2007 Pusan International Film Festival, Korea
2007 International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam, The Netherlands
2007 International Film Festival and Forum on Human Rights, Switzerland

Taipei 24H
2010 International Film Festival Rotterdam, The Netherlands
2010 San Francisco Int’l Asian American Film Festival, U.S.A.
2009 Best Feature Film, HDFEST, U.S.A.
2009 Official Selection, Taipei Film Festival, Taiwan
2009 Jury’s Special Prize, Seoul International Drama Awards, Korea
2009 Bronze Chest Prize, Golden Chest International TV Festival, Bulgaria
2009 Tokyo International Film Festival, Japan 2009 Pusan International Film Festival, Korea

Wave Breaker
2009 Women Make Waves Film, Taiwan

CAPS Working Group on South Asia

 

Chair
Anita Weiss, International Studies; Institutional Trustee to AIPS
aweiss@uoregon.edu

South Asia Faculty
Shankha Chakraborty, Economics
shankhac@uoregon.edu

Howard Davis, Architecture
hdavis@aaa.uoregon.edu

Nil Deshpande, Physics
desh@oregon.uoregon.edu

Jim Earl, English
jwearl@darkwing.uoregon.edu

Sangita Gopal, English
sgopal@uoregon.edu

Veena Howard, Religious Studies
veena@vyanet.com

Lamia Karim, Anthropology
lamia@darkwing.uoregon.edu

Mark Levy, Music
mlevy@oregon.uoregon.edu

John Lukacs, Anthropology; Institutional Trustee to AIIS
jrlukacs@darkwing.uoregon.edu

Ken Liberman, Sociology
liberman@oregon.uoregon.edu

Randy McGowan, History
rmcgowen@oregon.uoregon.edu

Nagesh Murthy, Decision Sciences
nmurthy@uoregon.edu

Eric Pederson, Linguistics
epederso@darkwing.uoregon.edu

Bish Sen, Journalism and Communication
bsen@uoregon.edu

Norm Sundberg, Psychology
nds@uoregon.edu

Sunil Khanna, Courtesy Appointment, Anthropology (Oregon State University)
Skhanna@oregonstate.edu

 


 

Pacific Islands Studies

The Pacific Islands Studies Program offers individualized programs of study and research emphasizing Pacific island cultures. The University of Oregon has a long-standing educational and scholarly interest in the Pacific islands involving active researchers and teachers in many fields. The committee began as a formal body in 1987 and has worked since to coordinate instruction, research, and exchange programs at the university that are related to the Pacific islands. Interdisciplinary perspectives essential for understanding natural and cultural environments, cultural history and change, and educational and modern socioeconomic issues in the Pacific are stressed.

A wide range of faculty members of the University of Oregon conduct research and do teaching and training programs related to the Pacific Islands. Their expertise and inter-related interests provide an interdisciplinary perspective essential for understanding natural environments, cultural background and change, and modern socio-economic issues in the Pacific area.

Courses on Pacific subjects are taught at both the undergraduate and graduate level and cover diverse topics. Students can enroll in undergraduate courses and advanced degree programs in various departments and through the Asian Studies Program. Pacific Islands Studies participates in the Asian Studies Program’s B.A. and M.A. degree programs by providing courses that may be used to satisfy degree requirements, e.g., in developing as secondary cultural or geographical area with Southeast Asia. Undergraduate- and graduate-level courses are available in anthropology and archaeology, art history, biology, geological sciences, international studies, political science, and sociology.

William Ayres, Anthropology, teaches classes on Pacific Islands archaeology and anthropology and organizes the program’s interdisciplinary Pacific Islands Studies class. Aletta Biersack, Anthropology, gives several courses on social anthropology, especially about New Guinea. Andrew Goble, History, has taught on Japan’s presence in the Pacific Islands. An interdisciplinary class on Pacific environments and resources is taught by William Ayres. Stephen Johnson integrates sociology and political science in his class on sociological patterns in developing Pacific countries. Richard Sundt, Art History, regularly offers a two course sequence on Pacific Islands art and works with students to exhibit their Pacific-inspired creations in the Krause Gallery.

The Pacific Island Archaeological Project, directed by William S. Ayres, offers students opportunities to participate in archaeological and anthropological study in the Pacific. Through several means, students visit the Pacific to carry out consulting and research projects in a variety of areas.

Training in selected Pacific Island languages is possible through individual study using tutors and materials developed at the Yamada Language Center. The center now has language-study modules for Pohnpeian and Kosraen.

I. Pacific Islands Studies Committee
  • William Ayres, Professor, Anthropology. Pacific archaeology and anthropology; research in Micronesia and Polynesia.
  • Aletta Biersack, Professor, Anthropology. Pacific ethnology and socio-cultural anthropology; research in New Guinea and Tonga.
  • Shirley Coale, Research Assoc., Education, Special education consultant, Micronesia.
  • Maradel Gale, Assoc. Professor., Ret., Professor, Planning, Public Policy and Management. Public policy and management training, Micronesia, Samoa, Fiji.
  • Richard Hildreth, Professor, Law. Micronesia and Australia, environmental law.
  • Adria Imada, Asst. Professor, Ethnic Studies/Anthropology. US Empire, performance and popular culture, Hawaii, Pacific Islands, and Asian America.
  • Kathy Poole, Overseas Program Coordinator, Office of International Programs. Coordinating programs in the Asia/Pacific region. Pacific experience in Fiji and Palau.
  • Judith Raiskin, Associate Professor and Director, Women’s Studies Program. Women’s studies and Pacific Islands post-colonial literature.
  • Greg Ringer, Adj. Asst. Professor. Planning, Public Policy and Management. International tourism, protected areas and sustainable community development.
  • Paula Rogers, Asst. Professor, East Asian Lang. and Lit.. Austronesian languages, Taiwan.
  • Richard Sundt, Associate Professor, Art History. Pacific art, traditional and contemporary.
  • Hilda Yee Young, Academic Advising. Pacific Islands; Hawai’ian Studies and student groups.
  • Dick Zeller, Research Assoc/Co-Director, Western Regional Resource Center: Special Education consultant; Micronesia and SamoaAffiliated Members:
  • Virginia Butler, Assoc. Professor, Anthropology, Portland State University; Pacific ecology/faunal studies.
  • Anne Chambers, Ph.D. Anthropology, Southern Oregon University.
  • Keith Chambers, Ph.D. Anthropology, Director of International Services, Southern Oregon University.
  • Rufino Mauricio, Ph.D. Anthropology, Chief Archaeologist, Federated States of Micronesia Historic Preservation Program. Pacific archaeology and traditional culture, Pacific Islands Studies.
  • Dick Dewey, School of Extended Studies, Portland State University; Palau ecology and resource conservation.
  • Osamu Kataoka, Assistant Professor, Kansai Gadai University, Osaka, Japan. Ph.D. Candidate, Anthropology, Micronesian archaeology.
  • Suzanne McMenis, Graduate student, Education, University of Oregon. Western Micronesia
  • Gwen Scott, Graduate student, Geography, University of Oregon.
  • Joan Wozniak, PhD. Candidate, Anthropology, University of Oregon

Jeremiah Lecture Series Support

The Center for Asian and Pacific Studies is accepting proposals from UO faculty for speakers to visit the UO and deliver a public lecture on campus. These guests will be part of the Jeremiah Lecture Series, administered by the Center for Asian and Pacific Studies. We have funds to pay most expenses associated with the lecture, including honorarium, travel, publicity, reception, etc. Applicants are encouraged to include possible cosponsors in their applications. The visitors must lecture on a topic related to Asia and/or the Pacific and be relevant to a public audience.

To submit a proposal, please click here to complete the online application form.

Deadlines for invited speaker applications are:

Fall: October 30th (for speakers coming in winter/spring/summer)
Spring: April 15th (for speakers coming fall 2023/winter)

 

Engaging China: History, Culture, Politics

The “Engaging China” project represents a collaboration between the Lundquist College of Business and the Center for Asian and Pacific Studies at the University of Oregon. The project grew out of a UO-wide East Asia initiative launched by the university president in 2004. It is supported by a two-year U.S. Department of Education Business and International Education grant.

The project aims to introduce faculty and students in the MBA program to the challenges and opportunities of business in China, and it works from the premise that cultural and historical knowledge are essential to business success. In preparation for this study tour to Beijing and Shanghai, faculty and students participated in a semester-long seminar series that featured lectures on Chinese culture, history, politics, economics, and business by UO faculty China experts and distinguished invited speakers. During the summer prior to the study tour, students worked through background reading assignments and worked up research projects related to an annual theme: Sports Marketing and the Beijing Olympics in Year 1 and Entrepreneurship and Sustainable Supply Chain in Year 2. Upon their return from the study tour, faculty participants will integrate their experience into the MBA curriculum, and student participants will submit final reports and generate presentations for local and regional businesspeople.

Now in its second year, the “Engaging China” project has made an indelible impact on the MBA program. Private donors have stepped up to offer continuing support, and the College of Business has committed itself over the long term to cultivate greater awareness of Asia’s place in the global economy, to revise the business curriculum accordingly, and thus to prepare select students for careers in international business.

It is our hope that the “Engaging China” project will stimulate other new international projects on campus, similarly conceived to promote interdisciplinary collaboration and cross-cultural learning.