Skip Navigation

News

icon-story

Campus Tour in China


 
icon-story

Interview with Kenneth Pai


 
icon-story

Interview with 白先勇


 
icon-story

Outtake from Scene 3, "Interrupted Dream"

Clip from Mudanting

 
icon-story

UCLA Performance of 'Peony Pavilion' to Come, But Reviews Are In

'Youth Edition' of the Kun opera stops in Berkeley and Irvine, earning plaudits from critics.

 
icon-story

Chinese Kun Opera Masterpiece 'The Peony Pavilion' Opens UCLA Live's Fifth International Theatre Festival Sept. 29–Oct. 1

While this groundbreaking 16th-century opera has been seen in the United States in three previous incarnations, Kenneth Pai's 2004 production is regarded as the most faithful modern restoration of the original kun opera to date.

 
icon-story

The Kun Opera 'Peony Pavilion' Comes to UCLA

Adapted from a classic script by the renowned Taiwanese writer Kenneth Pai, the critically acclaimed "Young Lovers' Edition" of the Kun opera Peony Pavilion (Mudanting) will be hosted by UCLALive over three consecutive evenings beginning September 29th, 2006.

 
icon-story

China's Clout in Africa

Absence of political strings makes Chinese investment attractive for African governments, says Maryland foreign policy specialist Ernest J. Wilson III.

 
icon-story

Call for Papers for OYCF-UC Irvine Joint Conference on Social Classes in Transitional China

Abstracts are due by March 15; conference to be held May 26-28, 2006

 
icon-story

UCLA Club Reaches Out to Families with Children from China

The UCLA-based Chinese Cultural Dance Club works with area youth, including children adopted from China.

 
icon-story

Chinese Labor Activist Han Dongfang on Why China Needs Unions

Han's UCLA Regents Lecture is now available via streaming video.

 
icon-story

Fighting HIV in the Golden Triangle

UCLA researchers find grassroots approaches to curbing the spread of HIV in China and Vietnam.

 
icon-story

Recarving China's Past: The Wu Family Shrines and the Story of the Stones

Princeton curator Cary Liu, the Eighteenth Sammy Yukuan Lee lecturer, questions assumptions about 'Wu Family Shrines,' prevailing approaches to Chinese art and history.

 
icon-story

Q&A: Eric Hayot

A Global Fellow at the International Institute takes up queries on torture, Abu Ghraib, the adoption of Chinese girls, and success in academia.

 
icon-story

Agreeing to Disagree

David Schaberg and Yunxiang Yan bring vastly different perspectives to their co-directorship of the Center for Chinese Studies.

 
icon-story

Japan's Economy Steamrolls Back

In an excerpt from a longer Chicago Tribute opinion piece, UCLA professor Sanford M. Jacoby argues that Japan's economy is back on track.

 
icon-story

Reporting China: Tales from the Dragon's Mouth

A conversation with Seth Faison and John Pomfret

 
icon-story

Schaberg and Yan to head UCLA Center for Chinese Studies

Two young, yet distinguished, scholars take over as co-directors of one of America's top China programs.

 
icon-story

Taiwan and China Cross-Strait Debate Comes to UCLA

Taiwanese and Chinese scholars discuss the reasons for and effects of the Anti-Secession law

 
icon-story

Lotus Steps 2005 -- UCLA's Chinese Cultural Dance Club

Highly-regarded student-led program brings dance to Los Angeles audiences. Beyond its performances, the club also provides training for pre-teen students.

 
icon-story

Islam in China -- a workshop for teachers

May 14 workshop looks at the history of Islam in China, at Muslim societies in China, and the lives of Chinese Muslims. Enrollment space is limited.

 
icon-story

The Business of Lobbying in China

Scott Kennedy discusses the growing influence of domestic & foreign businesses on China's national economic policy

 
icon-story

Richard Baum Testifies before Congressional Commission

Director of the UCLA Center for Chinese Studies testifies on recent political developments in China

 
icon-story

UCLA's Yunxiang Yan receives Association for Asian Studies China Book Prize

Levenson prize-winning Private Life Under Socialism shows how Chinese villagers, including young women, are increasingly demanding autonomy and privacy.

 
icon-story

Mao and Markets -- Business the Chinese Way

Nick Steele, a student in last year's Shanghai Global Institute, discusses working in a rapidly changing China.

 

Page:  First  Prev  2  3  4  5  6 7  8 

7 of 8 pages. Total Records: 198. Displaying 25 records per page.