Lecture

Contested Environmentalism: Trees and the Making of Modern China

Type: 
Friday, April 4, 2025 - 14:00 to 15:30
Event Location: 
Cathedral of Learning G14

For decades, tree planting has been at the heart of Chinese environmental endeavors, and forestry is pivotal to its environmentalism and green image more generally. During the Mao era, while forests were razed to fuel rapid increases in industrial production, the "Greening the Motherland" campaign also promoted conservationist tree-planting nationwide.

CANCELED The “DeepSeek Moment:” China and the Crisis of American Confidence with Kaiser Kuo

Type: 
Thursday, February 20, 2025 - 17:30 to 19:00
Event Location: 
Baker Hall CMU Campus, A53

China's recent achievements in artificial intelligence, exemplified by DeepSeek's breakthrough LLM, represent more than just technological advancement - they signal a fundamental shift in global innovation dynamics. While Chinese companies have demonstrated remarkable capabilities in areas from EVs to social media to AI, U.S. responses continue to follow a predictable pattern: disbelief, anger, accusations of theft, and blame.

Entangled Indigeneity on The Urban Margin: Three Stories About Amis' Lifeworld and Their Animal Kin in Contemporary Taiwan

Type: 
Wednesday, February 19, 2025 - 14:00 to 15:00
Event Location: 
4130 Posvar Hall

Dr. Yi-tze Lee will explore the cultural and environmental connections of the indigenous Amis people of Taiwan, focusing on their interactions with animal kin such as pigs, birds, and fish. Drawing from his research and recent publication
(Environmental Shift in the Entangled Anthropocene: Use of Birds in Amis Ritual Practices of Taiwan, UBC Press, 2024), this lecture delves into Amis rituals and ceremonies, their adaptation to modern environmental governance, and the broader implications for human-species relationships in an urbanized context.

Han Junghyun, the Language of Adolf and Albert

Type: 
Tuesday, December 3, 2024 - 17:00
Event Location: 
4130 Posvar Hall

Join us for a talk by Han Junghyun, a fiction writer from South Korea, as she discusses contemporary Korean literature and her role in shaping it. Her debut short novel, "The Language of Adolf and Albert", won the Dong-a Ilbo New Writer's Contest in 2015. Since then, she has received several prestigious awards.

Time and History Between China, Russia, and North Korea: Ed Pulford

Type: 
Thursday, November 14, 2024 - 14:00
Event Location: 
5404 Posvar Hall

Dr. Pulford's research focuses on experiences of socialism and empire in borderland and minority regions in Eurasia, including along the China-Russia border, the focus of his first two books. His most recent project examines the experiences of cross-border ‘Chinese’ minorities in Southeast, Central and Northeast Asia. In many global locations, crossing state borders involves a sense of temporal shift.

Front-Line Issues: War, Climate, and Refugees

Type: 
Thursday, March 27, 2025 - 13:00 to 14:30
Event Location: 
4130 Posvar Hall

The UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change recently predicted that global average temperatures will rise 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels in the mid-2030s. Over the last decades, a global network of scholars, policy makers, activists, and others have organized to offer ways to mitigate and even reverse the effects of climate change. What offramps can these solutions and movements offer our collective humanity?

Eurasian Environments in Global Context

Type: 
Thursday, December 5, 2024 - 15:00 to 16:30
Event Location: 
Zoom

The UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change recently predicted that global average temperatures will rise 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels in the mid-2030s. Over the last decades, a global network of scholars, policy makers, activists, and others have organized to offer ways to mitigate and even reverse the effects of climate change. What offramps can these solutions and movements offer our collective humanity?

Kicking the Hydrocarbon Habit

Type: 
Thursday, February 6, 2025 - 13:00 to 14:30
Event Location: 
4130 Posvar Hall

The UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change recently predicted that global average temperatures will rise 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels in the mid-2030s. Over the last decades, a global network of scholars, policy makers, activists, and others have organized to offer ways to mitigate and even reverse the effects of climate change. What offramps can these solutions and movements offer our collective humanity?

Korea-China Relations and China's Northeast Asia Project

Type: 
Friday, October 25, 2024 - 15:00
Event Location: 
4130 Posvar Hall

This talk will analyze the various parts of China’s “Northeast Asia Project” and its role in the structure of Korea-China relations. The Northeast Asia project was a scholarly project conducted by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences on the history of the region. It views the region as a unified multiethnic Chinese state and provides the historical basis for current regional relations.