Higher Education

Performing Social Forgetting in a Post-Conflict Landscape: The Case of Cyprus

Presenter: 
Rabia Harmansah, PhD Candidate
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Wed, 09/10/2014 - 12:00 to 13:00

Working in both the Greek/Southern and the Turkish/Northern parts of Cyprus, Rabia Hamansah conducted ethnographic research on six Orthodox Christian and Muslim religious sites for two years, in order to investigate how formerly shared religious landscape contributed to the ways in which collective remembering and forgetting is practiced by Greek and Turkish Cypriots, and how religious and cultural heritage was destroyed, manipulated, accommodated, and reimagined during periods of conflict.

Location: 
3106 Posvar Hall, Anthropology Lounge

Split Lives: Korean-Chinese Transnational Bodies and Time

Subtitle: 
Talking About Asia
Presenter: 
June Hee Kwon, Department of Anthropology
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Fri, 10/17/2014 - 12:00 to 13:00

This talk examines the transnational temporality—back and forth—created by the combined effects of visa regulations, the characteristics of transnational labor, and transnational female working bodies. On the basis of ethnographic research on Korean Chinese migrant workers moving between China and Korea, I highlight the spatial division created by this repetitive migration: Korea is a place for making money, whereas China is a place for spending money; Korea is a place for working (productive labor), China is a place for resting (reproductive labor).

Location: 
4217 Posvar Hall

Pittsburgh Contemporary Writers' Series: Peter Hessler

Presenter: 
Peter Heslsler, 2014/15 William Block Sr. Award Winner
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Thu, 04/16/2015 - 20:30

Peter Hessler has received the 2008 National Magazine Award for Excellence in Reporting, a 2011 Macarthur Fellowship, and the 2001 Kiriyama Prize. He is the author of River Town: Two Years on the Yangtze; Country Driving: A Chinese Road Trip; Strange Stones: Dispatches from East and West; and Oracle Bones: A Journey through Time in China, a finalist for the 2006 National Book Award. He is a contributing writer for National Geographic and a staff writer at The New Yorker, for which he has served as the Beijing, China correspondent from 2000 to 2007 and currently covers Egypt.

Location: 
Pitt Public Health Auditorium (130 De Soto St)
Contact Phone: 
412-624-6508

Making Mosques in America and Japan; or, How Islam Went Truly Global

Subtitle: 
World History Center Speaker Series: East Asia, Eurasia, and the World
Presenter: 
Nile Green, University of California, Los Angeles
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Fri, 11/21/2014 - 12:00

In the early 1920s and 30s, the first purpose-built mosques were established in the United States and Japan. Despite being on the far sides of the planet in Detroit and Kobe, their foundation reflected the ability of South Asian Muslim "religious entrepreneurs" to operate on what was by the 1920s a truly global scale. In tracing the commonalities between this first institutional emergence of Islam in two new world regions, the lecture identifies the global processes of religious competition and exchange and the reasons why Indian Muslims emerged at the forefront of them.

Location: 
3703 Posvar Hall
Contact Person: 
World History Center
Contact Phone: 
412-624-3073
Contact Email: 
worldhis@pitt.edu

Asia in the World Histories: Frontiers and Environments

Subtitle: 
World History Center Speaker Series: East Asia, Eurasia, and the World
Presenter: 
Peter Perdue, Yale University
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Fri, 10/31/2014 - 12:00

Because of the dramatic growth of Asian economies, the salience of Asia among world historians has risen significantly in the past decades. We can see this prominence in the greater space devoted to Asia in world history textbooks, curricula, and to some extent in faculty positions. Yet because of the lingering influence of Eurocentrism and the constraints imposed by traditional Area Studies, gaps and discrepancies remain.

Location: 
3703 Posvar Hall
Contact Person: 
World History Center
Contact Phone: 
412-624-3073
Contact Email: 
worldhis@pitt.edu

Modernity's Diffusion and Studying the Japanese Empire

Subtitle: 
World History Center Speaker Series: East Asia, Eurasia, and the World
Presenter: 
Alexis Dudden, University of Connecticut
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Fri, 09/12/2014 - 12:00

From a global perspective, even using the term "empire" in relation to Japanese history is not just about the past but about modernity—colonial modernity—and its implications for the present. My talk will consider various recent trends in approaching the Japanese empire writ large. Particular focus rests on the enduring problem with many broader imperial studies' continued failure to examine and/or incorporate Japan's experience into their theoretical frameworks, which only perpetuates exceptionalist ideas about Japan as "different" from home pre-supposed norm.

Location: 
3703 Posvar Hall
Contact Person: 
World History Center
Contact Phone: 
412-624-3073
Contact Email: 
worldhis@pitt.edu

Crisis and Criticism: The Predicament of Global Modernity

Presenter: 
Arif Dirlik
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Wed, 09/10/2014 - 17:00

Arif Dirlik is now an Independent Scholar living in Oregon. Arif Dirlik was Professor of History at Duke University from 1971 – 2001. He was then Knight Professor of History and Anthropology and Director of Center for Critical Theory and Transnational Studies at the University of Oregon. Dirlik is one of the leading experts on the political culture and party politics of the People’s Republic of China. He is the author of more than a dozen books on Chinese Communism, Revolution, Chinese Historiography, and historiography from such presses as Oxford, California, and Duke.

Location: 
The Humanities Center, 602 Cathedral of Learning

Design Thinking: Japanese Style

Presenter: 
Bob Tobin
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Thu, 09/25/2014 - 12:30 to 14:00

What are the elements of Japanese aesthetics and design?
How is the Japanese approach to creativity different from the American approach? How can you apply these principles to your daily life?

Location: 
4130 Posvar
Cost: 
free
Contact Person: 
Jacqueline Saslawsku
Contact Phone: 
4126481559
Contact Email: 
jsaslawski@katz.pitt.edu

Covering a Changing Europe: Reflections on the New Journalism

Presenter: 
Laurent Sierro, Journalist with the Swiss National New Agency & Transatlantic Media Fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Tue, 09/16/2014 - 12:00 to 13:00

Mr. Laurent Sierro has covered events in East and West Europe and the Middle East for ten years, most recently for the Swiss National News Agency. He will lead a discussion on the how changes in Europe and the nature of reporting have affected modern journalism.

Location: 
4217 Posvar Hall
Contact Email: 
euce@pitt.edu

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