Podchaser Logo
Home
East Asian Studies

Wesleyan University

East Asian Studies

A Technology podcast
Good podcast? Give it some love!
East Asian Studies

Wesleyan University

East Asian Studies

Episodes
East Asian Studies

Wesleyan University

East Asian Studies

A Technology podcast
Good podcast? Give it some love!
Rate Podcast

Episodes of East Asian Studies

Mark All
Search Episodes...
This presentation will survey how memories of historical trauma such as the Holocaust and Nanking Massacre were transferred into Hebrew and Chinese national literatures during the post-Holocaust and post-Nanking Massacre period. The focus will
Eiko Otake will give a lecture, titled “Nakedness,” during which she will discuss physical, metaphorical, and metaphysical nakedness, and explore what it means for an artist to be naked
From Sacred Cow to Kobe Beef: A Bovine View of the Meiji Restoration by Daniel Botsman Professor, Chair, Council on East Asian Studies, Yale University
Writing against Amnesia: A Legacy of Chinese Intellectuals. Jian Guo, Professor of English University of Wisconsin-Whitewater History, paradoxically, is always current in China. It is a mirror against which the present is viewed. It is light th
Vera Schwarcz, Freeman Professor of East Asian Studies & History: Historian and poet, Chen Yinke has been riveting the attention of Chinese intellectuals for the past two decades. In fact, his life and vast corpus of scholarly and literary outp
Michael Puett Ritual Substitutions: Theories of Ritual from Classical China 10/30/2014
Murakami Ryu (b. 1952) is a prolific writer who has produced writings in a diverse array of genres, including his award-winning debut novel "Almost Transparent Blue" and his critically-acclaimed work "Coin Locker Babies". Takahashi Harb examine
Assistant professor of Japanese and Comparative Literature, Boston University. Recent work in cognitive narratology has given us a new language with which to talk about the representation of consciousness in narrative. Rather than being localiz
Chris James, Senior Associate, Regulatory Assistance Project talks about China's plan to improve air quality.Sustained economic growth and the most significant rate of urbanization ever have transformed China in just a few decades. China's eco
Lecture to be given by Ralph Samuelson, Senior Advisor, Asian Cultural Council; Teacher and Performer of Japanese Music
Democracy can be but is not always associated with stronger protections against environmental degradation. Thailand's environmental regime has become stronger over the past two decades and its policy processes more participatory over the last d
Stephan Morrell demonstates a tea ceremomy.
In the weeks leading up to the Paris Climate Summit, the world is talking about China and its environment. Professor Mary Alice Haddad, Chair of the College of East Asian Studies, talks with Barbara Finamore, Senior Attorney and Asia Director
Bruce Baird, Assistant Professor of Languages and Literature, University of Massachusetts AmherstButoh defies description. Observers resort to verbal contortions to articulate what they see: "the grotesque and the beautiful, the nightmarish and
Japanese Tea Ceremony presented by Stephen Morrell, Landscape Designer
About 16,000 Jews who managed to escape from the Third Reich just before the war landed in Shanghai, the only place in the world which did not require a visa for entry. Their survival there depended on the attitudes of the Japanese, who control
The highlight of the academic year at the CEAS is the Mansfield Freeman Lecture, which invites an outstanding scholar or other luminary in the field to present an original lecture on a topic of concern both to specialists and the rest of the We
Smiling peasants, parading tractors, model workers, cowering imperialists . . . such utopian made-to-order propaganda images dominate the imagination of socialist-era China's graphic art. The 1950s magazine Cartoon (Manhua, 1951-1960) complicat
Richard Krauss, Professor Emeritus of Political Science, University of Oregon Amidst China's economic growth and new military might, Beijing also believes that Chinese arts should enjoy respect and influence abroad. But this goal has been elusi
Dan O'Neil, Associate Professor, University of California, Berkeley One of the major new voices in contemporary Chinese cinema, the director Fruit Chan first gained international notoriety with his film Dumplings (200). Set in the aftermath of
Dr. Markus Rodlauer Deputy Director of the International Monetary Fund's Asia and Pacific Division
Aspects of the great North Cave at Xiangtangshan, created on a colossal scale in the middle of the sixth century and damaged in subsequent centuries, most severely in the twentieth century when many pieces were removed and sold in the art marke
Rate

Join Podchaser to...

  • Rate podcasts and episodes
  • Follow podcasts and creators
  • Create podcast and episode lists
  • & much more

Unlock more with Podchaser Pro

  • Audience Insights
  • Contact Information
  • Demographics
  • Charts
  • Sponsor History
  • and More!
Pro Features