Jan 9th |
Territory and Conflict in the East China Sea Panel Discussion |
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4:00PM |
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Bunche Hall 6275 |
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Jan 17th |
Buddhism in the Writings of Tao Hongjing(456-536). – Stephen Bokenkamp |
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2:00PM |
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Bunche Hall 10383 |
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Jan 21st |
The Restoration of Law Practice and Legal Reforms in China. – Peng Xuefeng彭雪峰 |
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3:00PM |
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UCLA Law Building, Room 1314 |
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Jan 23rd |
The "Taoist School" of the Warring States Period:A Framework and Outline for Its Study – Lin Zhipeng |
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4:00PM |
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Bunche Hall 10383 |
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Jan 28th |
The Farewell Speech of King Wen of the Zhou:A New Discussion of the "Baoxun" Text Among the Bamboo Manuscripts in the Collections of Tsinghua University – Lin Zhipeng |
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12:00PM |
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Bunche Hall 10383 |
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Feb 10th |
Human Kinds and Animal Species in Early Modern China – Yuming He |
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4:00PM |
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Bunche Hall 10383 |
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Feb 15th |
What Time is it There? Taiwan as Crossroad – Taiwanese Films Screening |
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Thirteen films screened over nine days, more details to follow |
Mar 19th |
Billy Wilder Theater, Hammer Museum |
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Feb 17th |
Understanding Taiwanese Opera歌仔戲 – Liao Chiung-chih廖瓊枝 |
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4:00PM |
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Young Research Library - Main Conference Room |
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Feb 20th |
Rebellion and Repression in China, 1966-1971 – Andrew G. Walder |
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4:00PM |
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Bunche Hall 10383 |
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Feb 23rd |
Discussion with Peggy Chiao:Film producer, Writer and Professor – Peggy Chiao |
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7:00PM |
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Billy Wilder Theater, Hammer Museum |
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Feb 25th |
New Taiwan Cinema and its Impacts – Peggy Chiao |
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4:00PM |
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Bunche Hall 10383 |
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Mar 3rd |
Chemical Compositions:Industrial Anxiety, Epistemological Uncertainty, and the Question of Authenticity in Modern China – Eugenia Lean |
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4:00PM |
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Bunche Hall 10367 |
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Mar 11th |
China's New Demographic Reality and It's Implications – Cai Yong |
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4:00PM |
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Bunche Hall 10367 |
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Buddhism in the
Writings of Tao Hongjing(456-536)
Lecture by Stephen R. Bokenkamp,
Arizona State University
Friday,
January 17, 2014 2:00 PM - 4:00
PM 10383 Bunche
Hall
Stephen R.
Bokenkamp is Professor of Chinese in the School of International
Languages and Cultures and the Department of Religious Studies at Arizona State
University. He received his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley,
and is the author of Early Daoist Scriptures(University of California Press,
1997), Ancestors and Anxiety: Daoism and the Birth of Rebirth in China, as well
as numerous articles on medieval Chinese Daoism and literature. Bokenkamp’s
areas of study include the Daoist religion, particularly of the period from the
1st through the 10th centuries C.E.; Chinese thought, society, and literature of
the same period; and Buddho-Daoist interactions.
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