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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190604T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190604T180000
DTSTAMP:20260610T123108
CREATED:20190514T083130Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190514T102942Z
UID:7748-1559664000-1559671200@www.cemeas.de
SUMMARY:The 13th Göttingen East Asia Research Salon
DESCRIPTION:The 13th Göttingen East Asia Research Salon:\nMixed Identities in Northeast Chinese Borderlands: Koreans in Liaodong in the 15th to 17th centuries\n  \nPresenter: Hanning PIAO (Fudan University\, Shanghai)\nCommentators: Yan JIN (Department of East Asian Studies\, Göttingen) & Dr. Julia C. SCHNEIDER (Department of East Asian Studies\, Göttingen) \nTime: June 4\, 2019\, 4-6 pm\nVenue: KWZ 0.701 (meeting room\, Department of East Asian Studies) \n  \nAbstract: \nMigration has existed throughout the history of human beings\, affecting the identities of migrating peoples and the societies they migrate into. Before the world has been overwhelmed by modernization\, national states and globalization\, how did migratory people perceive themselves and how were they perceived by others? Were there clear boundaries between “Us” and “Them”\, “Self” and “Others”? Was identity pure and stable or mixed and fragile? \nIn my presentation\, I will discuss these questions by examining the case of Koreans who migrated to Liaodong in the 15th to 17th centuries. In case of the Korean migrants\, identities turn out to be unstable\, mixed and entangled. \n  \n \n(Image by Hanning Piao) \n  \nShort CV: \nSince 2017\, Hanning PIAO is a Master student at the Department of History\, Fudan University. She has been a guest student at the University of Pennsylvania and at Seoul National University. Hanning earned her BA in History at the Department of History\, Zhejiang University in Hangzhou\, where she also worked as a student research assistant at the Research Center of Local Archives. \n  \nCo-organised and co-hosted by: Centre for Modern East Asian Studies and Department of East Asian Studies
URL:https://www.cemeas.de/event/east-asia-research-salon/
LOCATION:KWZ\, Heinrich-Düker-Weg 14\, 37073 Göttingen\, 37073\, Germany
CATEGORIES:East Asia Research Salon,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.cemeas.de/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Bild1.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190604T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190604T200000
DTSTAMP:20260610T123108
CREATED:20190528T084327Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190603T063158Z
UID:7788-1559671200-1559678400@www.cemeas.de
SUMMARY:Film Screening & Discussion: 30 Years of Tian'anmen
DESCRIPTION:Film Screening & Discussion: 30 Years of Tian’anmen\nThe Gate of Heavenly Peace 天安门 (1995)\n  \n  \nTuesday 04.06.2019 6pm\nZHG105\, University of Göttingen \nDirected by: Carma Hinton\, Richard Gordon\, Geremie Barme\nLanguage: Chinese Dialogue\, English voiceover translation\, subtitles & narration \nThe Gate of Heavenly Peace is a three-hour documentary film about the 1989 protests at Tiananmen Square\, which culminated in the violent government crackdown on June 4. The film uses archival footage and contemporary interviews with a wide range of Chinese citizens\, including workers\, students\, intellectuals\, and government officials\, to revisit the events of “Beijing Spring.” From the beginning of the protests in mid-April to the night of June 3–4\, the film provides a “meticulous day-by-day chronicle of the six-week period… This unglamorous but absorbing film interweaves videotaped scenes of the demonstrations and conversations with leaders and participants with an explanatory narration into an account that is as clear-headed as it is thorough and well-organized.” \n  \nSource: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Gate_of_Heavenly_Peace_(film)#cite_note-1 \nhttps://www.nytimes.com/1995/10/14/movies/film-festival-review-assessing-both-sides-in-tiananmen-square-massacre.html\nImage:tankman © Raimond Spekking / CC BY-SA 4.0 (via Wikimedia Commons) https://bit.ly/2M8b67m
URL:https://www.cemeas.de/event/film-screening-discussion-30-years-of-tiananmen/
LOCATION:ZHG
CATEGORIES:Film Screening
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.cemeas.de/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Wandmalerei_-tankman-_A._Signl_Vogelsanger_Straße_283Köln-Ehrenfeld-9256-e1559032997473.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190611T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190611T180000
DTSTAMP:20260610T123108
CREATED:20190516T095337Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200618T125343Z
UID:7771-1560268800-1560276000@www.cemeas.de
SUMMARY:The 14th Göttingen East Asia Research Salon
DESCRIPTION:The 14th Göttingen East Asia Research Salon:\nMeasuring Reliability in the Wartime Transport of Provisions: The Case of Mao Yuanyi (1594-1641) \n  \n  \nPresenter: Masato Hasegawa (Max Planck Institute for the History of Science)\nCommentators: Dr. Charlotte Backerra\, Dr. Julia Schneider \nTime: Tuesday\, 11.06.2019\, 4 pm (c.t.) – 6 pm\nVenue: VG 2.101\, University of Göttingen\n \n  \nAbstract \nThis paper examines the notion of efficiency and reliability in the wartime transport of provisions during the late Ming period. Primarily drawing on writings of Mao Yuanyi (1594-1641)\, one of the most prolific writers of the period on military matters\, this study assesses how technologies\, animals\, and human labor enabled the overland transport of military provisions in late Ming society. A military strategist and advisor\, Mao participated in the Ming defense effort against the Jurchen troops in Liaodong in the early seventeenth century. In his seminal study on the conduct of war\, The Record of Military Preparedness (Wubeizhi)\, he extensively discussed the costs and benefits of the transport methods that were available at the time\, including wooden carts\, pack animals\, and water transport. Among the various methods considered in The Record of Military Preparedness\, Mao clearly favored what he called “human transport” (renyun)\, which exclusively relied on the labor of human bearers. By analyzing his writings on the transport of provisions and his forceful argument in favor of employing human labor\, this study not only illuminates the manner in which consideration over the duration and speed of transport entailed an appraisal of reliability over the long term. It also reveals how local communities in the Liaodong region became intricately involved in the planning and implementation of war in the late Ming period. \nFor an essay draft please contact us (assist@cemeas.uni-goettingen.de). \nShort Bio \nMasato Hasegawa received his PhD in History from Yale University in 2013 and previously taught Chinese\, Korean\, and East Asian history at the University of Oregon\, Columbia University\, and New York University. His research centers on the question of how individual lives intersected larger historical changes in borderlands in early modern East Asia. His dissertation\, “Provisions and Profits in a Wartime Borderland: Supply Lines and Society in the Border Region between China and Korea\, 1592–1644\,” examined the impact of cross-border wars on local society in the Chinese-Korean borderland during China’s political transition from the Ming to the Qing dynasty. Focusing on the wartime procurement and transport of provisions across the Chinese-Korean borders\, it analyzed the manner in which the logistics of cross-border military campaigns profoundly affected and disrupted the lives of individuals and the region’s agricultural cycle. He is currently revising his dissertation for publication and preparing a new project on the notion of reliability in connection with technologies\, animals\, and seasonality in the Sino-Korean borderland of the early seventeenth century. \nSource: https://www.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/users/mhasegawa \n  \nImage: Qi Jiguang 戚繼光 (1528-1588)\, Lianbing shiji zaji 練兵實紀雜集 [Miscellaneous notes concerning military training]\, fascicle 6\, leaf 22.
URL:https://www.cemeas.de/event/research-salon/
LOCATION:VG\, Platz der Göttinger Sieben 7\, 37073 Göttingen\, Germany
CATEGORIES:Conference,East Asia Research Salon,Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.cemeas.de/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Bild-für-Poster-1.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190618T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190618T180000
DTSTAMP:20260610T123108
CREATED:20190307T094830Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190617T120357Z
UID:7420-1560873600-1560880800@www.cemeas.de
SUMMARY:Lecture: Greening for urban wellbeing: A Sustainability Assessment of the Kökyar Protection Forest in NW China
DESCRIPTION:Lecture:\nGreening for urban wellbeing: A Sustainability Assessment of the Kökyar Protection Forest in NW China\n  \n  \nProf. Dr. Martin Welp (Eberswalde University for Sustainable Development)\nTime: Tuesday\, 18.06.2019\, 4 pm-6 pm\nVenue: VG 4.103\, University of Göttingen \nAbstract \nChina has made remarkable achievements in increasing forest and vegetation cover in large parts of the country. The Three-North Shelter Forest Program (also known as the great green wall) is one the famous national initiatives to hold back desertification. On the local level\, the city of Aksu\, located at the fringe of the Taklimakan desert in NW China\, started already in the 1980s preparing and planting the so called Kökyar protection forest. It is an ecological engineering project with the intent of protecting the city from frequent dust and sand storms. The forest is well-known in China\, has been awarded by the UN and is highlighted as an achievement of the so called “Kökyar-spirit”. We examined the shelterbelt from a broader perspective\, embedding Kökyar to the wider context of social and environmental problems in South Xinjiang. Results affirm the economic sustainability of the shelterbelt\, but see a mixed record for the social sphere as well as negative trade-offs when looking at the ecological dimensions — especially due high water consumption of the protection forest (a combination of poplar shelterbelts and orchards) and its impacts down-stream. There is a trade-off between artificial shelterbelt plantations for urban ecosystem services on the one hand side\, and natural riparian forests and their biodiversity on the other hand side. In such agroforestry schemes systemic interactions need to be considered and locally adapted species favored. \nShort CV \nMartin Welp holds a professorship in Socioeconomics and Communication at the Eberswalde University for Sustainable Development (Faculty of Forest and Environment). He is head of the International Master Study Programme Global Change Management (M.Sc.). He earned his Doctoral degree at the Technische Universität Berlin in Germany and his Master’s degree in Forestry at the University of Helsinki in Finland. Before his current position he worked as senior researcher at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK)\, Department Global Change and Social Systems. He is engaged in stakeholder dialogues in science-policy-platforms as well as in management\, researching positions and agreements among actors\, dialogue methods and the theoretical framing of such dialogues. Research projects have focused on global (environmental) change with special attention to socio-economic dimensions and human well-being. Past projects include among others SuMaRiO – Sustainable Management of River Oases along the Tarim River / China funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research. The full list of projects and publications in the field of climate mitigation and adaptation as well natural resources management (integrated coastal zone management\, integrated river basin management\, forest management\, and arid land management can be found at URL:  www.hnee.de/welp. \n  \n  \nHosted by the Centre for Modern East Asian Studies (CeMEAS) in cooperation with the Academic Confucius Institute (ACI) and the Old Botanical Garden at the University of Göttingen.\n \n  \nImage: CC BY-SA 2.0.\, Louis Dallara\, Dead Cedar Trees\, https://flic.kr/p/4Xh7cn
URL:https://www.cemeas.de/event/lecture-greening-for-urban-wellbeing-a-sustainability-assessment-of-the-kokyar-protection-forest-in-nw-china/
LOCATION:VG\, Platz der Göttinger Sieben 7\, 37073 Göttingen\, Germany
CATEGORIES:CeMEAS Lecture Series,Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.cemeas.de/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/2594620219_857465a32e_z.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190618T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190618T190000
DTSTAMP:20260610T123108
CREATED:20190528T092715Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190704T104107Z
UID:7795-1560880800-1560884400@www.cemeas.de
SUMMARY:Sonderführung: China – Gehölze aus dem Reich der Mitte
DESCRIPTION:China – Gehölze aus dem Reich der Mitte\nSonderführung durch den  forstbotanischen Garten und das pflanzengeographische Arboretum der Universität Göttingen\n\n  \n  \n  \nDipl.-Ing. Volker Meng (University of Göttingen)\nDienstag\, 18.06.2019\, 18:00 – ca. 19:00\, Arboretum China\, Bushaltestelle Tammanstraße am Nordcampus \nDie Führung wird von Dipl.-Ing. Volker Meng im Rahmen der Vortragsreihe China’s Green Transformation im Sommersemester 2019 angeboten.  Veranstalter der Vortragsreihe sind das Centre for Modern East Asian Studies (CeMEAS) und das Akademische Konfuzius Institut (AKI) an der Universität Göttingen. \nDie Führung ist kostenfrei und eine Anmeldung ist nicht nötig. \nAnfahrt und Treffpunkt: \nArboretum China\nBushaltestelle Tammanstraße am Nordcampus\nRoute 1:\nHaltestelle Göttingen Campus (Linie 41) bis Goldschmidtstraße\, dann zu Fuß 2 Minuten bis Haltestelle Tammanstraße\nRoute 2:\nHaltestelle Göttingen Blauer Turm (Linie 23) Richtung Uni-Nord bist Tammanstraße \n  \nImage: Barockschloss: Ginkgo\, Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic (CC BY-SA 2.0)\, https://flic.kr/p/7aBeHS\n 
URL:https://www.cemeas.de/event/china-geholze-aus-dem-reich-der-mitte/
LOCATION:Tammanstraße\, Tammanstraße\, 37077 Göttingen\, 37077\, Germany
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.cemeas.de/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Ginkgo.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190618T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190618T200000
DTSTAMP:20260610T123108
CREATED:20190603T192746Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190606T100027Z
UID:7823-1560880800-1560888000@www.cemeas.de
SUMMARY:Lecture: Japan and China on the Silk Road: a Global History of Politics and Culture in Eurasia
DESCRIPTION:Lecture: \nJapan and China on the Silk Road: a Global History of Politics and Culture in Eurasia\n  \nProf. Selçuk Esenbel (Department of History\, Boğaziçi University Istanbul)\nJun 18\, 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM\nKWZ 0.609\, University of Göttingen \nJapan on the Silk Road is a  global history  of politics and culture from the late 19th century until the end of the second world war connected to  the Great Game between competing empires of Russia\, Britain\, and China in the vast area of Eurasia across the Middle East and Central Asia. Between 1868-1945 Japanese diplomats\, military officers\, archaeologists\, and linguists traversed the land locked and maritime Silk Roads pursuing imperial interest and exploring ancient civilizations. \nA global team of scholars bring to light Japan’s intellectual and political encounters with the peoples and cultures of Asia\, in particular Turks and Persians\, Hindus and Muslims of India\, Mongolians and the Uyghur of Inner Asia\, and Muslims in China. The study exposes the entanglements of pre-war Japanese Pan-Asianism with Pan-Islamism\, Turkic nationalism and Mongolian independence as a global history of imperialism and the Japanese connections to Ottoman Turkey\, India\, Egypt\, Iran\, Afghanistan\, and China. At the same time it reveals a discrete global narrative of cosmopolitanism in  Japan’s intellectual and political encounters with the peoples and cultures of  Eurasia Asia along this  transnational geography. The Japanese experience also shows the background to the One Belt One Road  vision of China today and the revival of the “Silk Road” as a geography of competition and contestation. \nProf. Selçuk Esenbel got her BA from George Washington University\, M.S. from Georgetown University and Ph.D from Columbia University. She has been Chair of History Department\, Director of Asian Studies Center\, Turkish Director of Confucius Institute\, and University Administrative Council Member; she is President of Japanese Studies Association in Turkey since 2002. Her latest publications include: Turk-Cin Iliskilerine Turkiye’den Bakislar (Turkish-Chinese Relations: Perspectives from Turkey\, 2012)\, Japan\, Turkey\, and the World of Islam: The Writings of Selcuk Esenbel (2011)\, and Japan and the World of Islam: Transnational Nationalism and World Power\, 1868-1945 (forthcoming\, 2014). She got the High Achivement Award for Senior Scholars from Boğaziçi University in 2005\, and the Special Prize for Japanese Studies from Japan Foundation in 2007. \n  \n 
URL:https://www.cemeas.de/event/lecture-japan-and-china-on-the-silk-road-a-global-history-of-politics-and-culture-in-eurasia/
LOCATION:KWZ\, Heinrich-Düker-Weg 14\, 37073 Göttingen\, 37073\, Germany
CATEGORIES:Lecture
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