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China Undisciplined, Day Two

An interdisciplinary graduate student conference celebrating the creative spaces that arise in the (de)construction of "China", May 30-31, 2008.

Friday, May 30, 2008
8:30 PM - 4:00 PM
Royce 314

8:30-9:00 Continental Breakfast

9:00-10:00 – PANEL THREE Outsiders from Within – The Tibet Case
Discussant: Richard von Glahn

Here we have two different approaches to discussing the formation of Tibetan tradition and identity. How much of Tibet’s identity is linked to its tradition, and how is this translated in the modern day? How is this process similar to or different from similar movements related to the definition of Chinese identity? How is the creation of Tibetan identity and tradition created within a Chinese space, and can this process be compared with other attempts to emphasize local or ethnic distinctions in the PRC? How has Tibet reacted to attempts to incorporate its tradition into an overarching Chinese narrative?

  • Cedar Bough Saeji [cedarbough@gmail.com] (University of California, Los Angeles)
    “The Journey Deepens the Meaning of the Destination: Stories of Tibetan Pilgrims Prostrating to Lhasa”
  • Deborah Cohen [wlkchrflly@earthlink.net] (University of California, Los Angeles)
    "What is the Tibetan Avant-Garde?"

 

10:00-11:00 – PANEL FOUR Translating Modernity
Discussant: Brian Bernards

These two papers focus (in very different ways on the translation of modern thought or modern technology in late imperial China. In light of recent criticisms of modernization theory and other Eurocentric narratives of change and history, what might we learn about the limitations of inquiries based on teleological assumptions about progress through an analysis of the initial reception of certain ideas in China? What problems or advantages or possibilities do we discover in the translation of such concepts, and what possibilities for different ways of understanding the Chinese past and future emerge?

  • Darryl Brock [darrylbrock21@yahoo.com] (Claremont Graduate University)
    “Darwinian Evolution: Chinese Intellectual Development and Social Change”
  • Nathaniel Kenneth Isaacson [nki@ucla.edu] (University of California, Los Angeles)
    Untitled, analysis of “Death Ray On A Coral Island”

 

11:00- 12:15 – PANEL FIVE Colonial Education
Discussant: Nathaniel Kenneth Isaacson

These examinations of national and colonial enterprises involve questions that span a number of boundaries, and encourage questions about the purposeful creation of identity and the confusions that ensue. What role does education play in the imagination of national identity and relationships to outside communities? What technologies are employed in the process of configuring a more modern society, and how do these play against notions of Chinese-ness – especially in a place like Taiwan?

  • Sayaka Chatani [sc2049@columbia.edu] (Columbia University)
    “Colonizing Teachers in Taiwan: An analysis through Taiwan Kyōiku 1940”
  • Winifred Chang [changwinnie@yahoo.com] (University of California, Los Angeles)
    “Unhonored Veterans: Taiwanese Imperial Soldiers in World War II”
  • Jennifer Liu [jliu11@uci.edu] (University of California, Irvine)
  • “Nationalism and Guomindang Policy on Secondary Education in Early Postwar Taiwan”

 

12:15 – 1:15 Lunch

1:15 – 2:30 – PANEL SIX Early China, Contemporary Theory
Discussant: Maura Dykstra

These three presentations contemplate the experiences and rhetoric of early China in conversation with more recent theories of understanding the past and present. How well do today’s methods of understanding the world apply to the past, and what might we learn about our own approaches to academic production through more careful attention to earlier categories of thought and action?

  • Anke Hein [ankehein@ucla.edu] (University of California, Los Angeles)
    “Encountering the ‘Fuzziness’ of Past Realities: Typology and Nomenclature in Chinese Archaeology”
  • Matthew Cochran [matthew.cochran@gmail.com] (University of California, Los Angeles) “Figured Language, Self-presentation, and Poetry in Yang Xiong's Fayan”
  • Zhang Zhaoyang [zzy@berkeley.edu] (University of California, Berkeley)
    “A Study on Civil Cases in Early China”

2:30-2:45 Coffee Break

2:45- 4:00 PANEL SEVEN China and Chinese
Discussant: Yan Yunxiang

In our attempts to overcome national boundaries in our understanding of the Chinese tradition, questions about language, literature, and historical identity have become increasingly important. How have more recent understandings of the Chinese language and Chinese-speaking communities outside of the mainland challenged or reinforced our assumptions about China? What meaningful categories of analysis may we create to encourage more encompassing fields of inquiry, and what dangers should we consider in the process?

  • Ming Tao [taoming@humnet.ucla.edu] (University of California, Los Angeles)
    “A Discourse-Pragmatic Study of the Relative Order of Numeral-Classifier and Relative Clauses in Mandarin Chinese”
  • Joshua Herr [jherr@ucla.edu] (University of California, Los Angeles)
    “Voting with their feet (or ships): Ha Tien under the Mac and the Min Huong in Quang Nam, 17th to 19th centuries”
  • Brian Bernards [bernards@ucla.edu] (University of California, Los Angeles)
  • "Plantation and Rainforest: The Language of Coloniality and Nature in Sinophone Malaysian Literature"

 

4:00-5:00 – Discussion

For more information please contact

Richard Gunde
Tel: (310) 825-8683
gunde@ucla.edu

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