Lecture Series / Brown Bag

Censorship and Cultural Change: Vernacular Theology, the Oxford Translation Debate, and Arundel's Constitutions of 1409

Presenter: 
Jen Waldron (English) & Ryan McDermott (English)
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Tue, 10/16/2012 - 12:30

Jen Waldron and Ryan McDermott will lead an informal seminar on Nicholas Watson’s "Censorship and Cultural Change: Vernacular Theology, the Oxford Translation Debate, and Arundel's Constitutions of 1409" (1995).

*Part of the yearlong series, “Speaking in Tongues”

Location: 
Cathedral of Learning, Room 602
Contact Person: 
Jennifer Waldron
Contact Email: 
jwaldron@pitt.edu

Transnational Activism and Global Transformation: Post-National Politics and Activism for Climate Justice and Food Soverignty

Presenter: 
Dr. Jackie Smith, Professor and Brittany Duncan, a PhD candidate in the Sociology Department
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Fri, 09/28/2012 - 13:00 to Sat, 09/29/2012 - 14:00

The Sociology Department presents a Power, Resistance and Social Change Workshop

Location: 
2432 WW Posvar Hall

Negotiating Decay, Delay, and Debt: Speculation and Time-Travel in South India's Grocery Trade

Subtitle: 
Asia Over Lunch Lecture Series
Presenter: 
Laura C. Brown, Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology
Event Status: 
As Scheduled

Although they sell vegetables, milk packets, and cigarettes; owners of small roadside grocery shops in southern India might be described as in the business of time-travel. Shopkeepers’ survival depends on their ability to successfully shift objects and obligations between multiple and conflicting temporal systems. Drawing on recordings of interactions gathered between 2005-08, Brown traces how shopkeepers use refrigeration, accounts of debt, and conversations with customers to negotiate and profit from temporal troubles.

Location: 
4130 Posvar Hall
Contact Email: 
asia@pitt.edu

Avoiding Bad Moves: Relocation, Work/Family Conflict, and Japanese Career Women

Subtitle: 
Asia Over Lunch Lecture Series
Presenter: 
Blaine Connor, Director of Academic Programs, College of General Studies
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Thu, 12/06/2012 - 12:00 to 13:00

Relocation can lead to professional growth and career advancement, but can also lead to work/family conflict. In this talk Connor will present the stories of three Japanese career women whose relocations led to personal crises. These crises resulted from a workplace policy which made periodic relocation obligatory for male and female employees alike. By analyzing how they faced these crises and what gave rise to them, Connor aims to shed light on issues of work-life balance, gender equity, and obstacles to social and cultural change.

Location: 
4130 Posvar Hall
Contact Email: 
asia@pitt.edu

Medical Eclecticism and Doctor-Patient Negotiations of Treatment in Uttarakhand, India

Subtitle: 
Asia Over Lunch Lecture Series
Presenter: 
Venera Khalikova, graduate student in Anthropology
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Thu, 11/15/2012 - 12:00 to 13:00

In many areas of interaction in India, negotiations and ‘bargaining’ play an important role. This holds true for doctor-patient interactions as well, especially in the case of small-scale practitioners of Ayurveda, Unani, Homeopathy and other non-biomedical traditions. These practitioners often prescribe a treatment that lies outside of their official medical specialization, which creates a proliferation of various eclectic/hybrid therapeutic forms.

Location: 
4130 Posvar Hall
Contact Email: 
asia@pitt.edu

Blocked on Weibo: Content Regulation in Chinese Social Media

Subtitle: 
Asia Over Lunch Lecture Series
Presenter: 
Jason Q. Ng, graduate student in East Asian Studies
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Thu, 11/01/2012 - 12:00 to 13:00

Like most nations, China regulates the content that goes over its airwaves, runs through its printing presses, and is transmitted through its Internet. In July 2009, when tensions in the predominately Muslim population of China’s Xinjiang province escalated into violent riots, Chinese authorities turned off the Internet there. This inspired Jason Q. Ng to devise a computer script to test all 700,000 terms in Chinese Wikipedia to see which ones are routinely blocked on Sina Weibo, China’s most important social media site.

Location: 
4130 Posvar Hall
Contact Email: 
asia@pitt.edu

Yes, You Can: Evolving Research Tools for Japanese Studies Resources and Library Services

Subtitle: 
Asia Over Lunch Lecture Series
Presenter: 
Hiroyuki Good, East Asian Library
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Thu, 10/04/2012 - 12:00 to 13:00

You can now search for more than 1.4 million Japanese articles from 220 Japanese academic institutions through PittCat+. There are also over 15,000 Japanese dissertations freely available at the Digital Library of the National Diet Library and 227 LibGuides are developed by Pitt liaison librarians to support your research and course work. Library research tools are evolving rapidly. This presentation will illustrate the state-of-the-art research tools and new functions of Japanese databases.

All are welcome to join and bring a lunch or snack!

Location: 
4130 Posvar Hall

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