asia connections: confluences and contradictions · 2019-05-30 · tokyo in transit: japanese...
TRANSCRIPT
ASDP 23rd National Conference
Asia Connections: Confluences and Contradictions
March 2-4, 2017
Asian Studies Development Program
Hilton Portland Downtown & Executive Tower 921 SW 6th Avenue Portland, OR 97204 Tel: 503-226-1611
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The ASDP National Conference is an annual event that provides an opportunity for ASDP alumni and other interested college and university faculty members to share research related to Asian cultures and societies, as well as strategies for effectively infusing Asian content into undergraduate humanities, social science, business, and science curricula. This year, the ASDP National Conference is hosted by Portland Community College and is co-sponsored by the Asian Studies Development Program and the Association of Regional Centers for Asian Studies. To study Asia is to study connections. Whether through wide-angle historical lenses or through tightly-focused analyses of contemporary issues, studying connections among peoples, cultures, ideas and ideals enhances and broadens understanding. The 2017 ASDP National Conference presents papers from faculty and students in the humanities and social sciences that explore connections with and within Asia. In addition to providing a forum for sharing diverse, disciplinary and interdisciplinary research, the Conference welcomes proposals that explicitly explore how to connect undergraduate students with current scholarship on Asia.
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
Dr. Alisa Freedman
Talk Title: "Tokyo in Transit: Japanese Trains as Social and Cultural Vehicles" March 3, 2017 The sight of long trains rapidly snaking between skyscrapers and of commuters, especially workers in suits and students in uniforms, flooding station platforms, characterizes the allures and difficulties of Tokyo in the global imagination. The most efficient, largest, and busiest transit network in the world, Tokyo’s public transportation includes more than 100 train and 13 subway lines that carry a total of more than 28.85 million passengers daily. Tokyo vehicles are social and cultural spaces different from other metropolitan commuter networks: they are a means to see how the city has affected ways people behave. I will survey important historical changes in Tokyo’s social fabric made possible by developments in modern mass transportation. Commuter trains, streetcars, and buses have changed human subjectivity and artistic production, giving rise to gender roles that have come to represent Japan. The extension of Tokyo’s transit networks made it possible for men and women of different social classes to work, play, and interact with each other in unprecedented ways. Prewar culture involving commuter vehicles anticipates what is fascinating and frustrating about Tokyo today and provides insight into how people try to make themselves at home in the city.
Alisa Freedman is an Associate Professor of Japanese Literature and Film at the University of Oregon. Her publications include Tokyo in Transit: Japanese Culture on the Rails and Road (Stanford University Press, 2010), an annotated translation of Kawabata Yasunari’s The Scarlet Gang of Asakusa (University of California Press, 2005), a co-edited volume on Modern Girls on the Go: Gender, Mobility, and Labor in Japan (Stanford University Press, 2013), and a co-edited textbook on Introducing Japanese Popular Culture (forthcoming from Routledge in 2017), along with guest-edited journal issues, articles, and literary translations on a range of topics. She is Editor-in-Chief of the U.S.-Japan Women’s Journal and has been nationally recognized for her efforts in advising students.
Dr. Edward Slingerland
Talk Title: "Trying Not to Try: Cooperation, Trust and the Paradox of Spontaneity" March 4, 2017
Many early Chinese thinkers endorsed the spiritual ideal of wuwei, or effortless action. By advocating spontaneity as an explicit moral and religious goal, however, they were faced with the paradox of how one can try not to try, which later became one of the central tensions in East Asian religious thought. This talk will look at the paradox from both early Chinese and contemporary perspectives, drawing upon work in economics, social psychology, cognitive neuroscience, and evolutionary theory to argue that this paradox is real, and is intimately tied up with cooperation dilemmas in large-scale societies and concerns about trust and moral hypocrisy.
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Edward Slingerland is Professor of Asian Studies at the University of British Columbia and a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University. He received an M.A. from UC Berkeley in East Asian Languages (classical Chinese), and a Ph.D. in Religious Studies from Stanford University. His research specialties and teaching interests include Warring States (5th-3rd c. B.C.E.) Chinese thought, religious studies, cognitive linguistics, ethics, and the relationship between the humanities and the natural sciences. His publications include: Trying Not to Try: Ancient China, Modern Science and the Power of Spontaneity (2014); Creating Consilience: Integrating the Sciences and the Humanities (co-edited, 2012); What Science Offers the Humanities: Integrating Body & Culture (2008); Confucius: Analects (2003); and Effortless Action: Wu-wei as Conceptual Metaphor and Spiritual Ideal in Early China (2003).
Other Special Guests Consul General Kojiro Uchiyama, from the Consular Office of Japan in Portland.
Conference Events
Field Trip to Lan Su Chinese Garden
Join members of PCC's Asian Studies Committee on Thursday afternoon for an informal tour of the Lan Su Chinese Garden. Lan Su Chinese Garden is a walled Chinese garden of roughly 40,000 square feet in the
Chinatown neighborhood of Portland. The name of the garden combines lan (蘭) or "orchid" and su (蘇) or
"arise” or "awaken" and can thus be interpreted poetically as the "Garden of Awakening Orchids." Lan Su Chinese Garden is one of Portland's greatest treasures and is the result of a collaboration between Portland and her sister city of Suzhou, located in China's Jiangsu province and famous for its beautiful Ming Dynasty gardens. Built by artisans from Suzhou, Lan Su is one the most authentic Chinese gardens outside of China. To enter the garden is to enter another era and a truly distinctive aesthetic combining architecture, landscape design, and nature in ways that afford direct, experiential insight into Chinese culture, history and ways of thinking.
Other Asia-related Activities and Sites in Portland "What the World Owes the Comfort Women" by Dr. Carol Gluck.
The practices and norms of public memory have changed in the seventy years since the end of World War II creating what Professor Gluck calls a “global memory culture.” Changes in the law, the role of witnesses, the realm of rights, the politics of apology, and concepts of responsibility have transformed our understanding of doing justice to the past. And in each instance the former comfort women have played a role in that transformation, helping to change attitudes toward sexual violence and women’s rights -- helping, in short, to change the world. March 2, 2017, 5:30 – 7:00, Portland State University Ballroom, Room 355, 1825 SW Broadway, Portland. Presented by The PSU Center for Japanese Studies, co-sponsored by The Friends of History.
Asia-related Sites and Activities in Portland
There are several Asia related sites in Portland, including the Oregon Nikkei Legacy Center, the Chinatown Historic District, the Portland Japanese Garden, the Lan Su Garden, the Portland Art Museum, and Powell’s City of Books. Please see: http://www.eastwestcenter.org/sites/default/files/filemanager/ASDP/ASDP 2017 National Conference/Portland_Asia-related activities-1.pdf
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Conference Schedule
Thursday, March 2nd
9:00 – 11:00 ASDP Alumni Association Board Meeting. Studio Room.
11:00 – 2:00 ARCAS Director’s Meeting. Director’s Room.
2:10 – 4:30 Visit to Lan Su Gardens. Meet in the Hotel Lobby at 2:00 PM.
12:00 – 6:00 Conference Registration – Broadway Foyer.
5:00 – 7:30
Lecture by Dr. Carol Gluck, at Portland State University Ballroom. “What the World Owes the Comfort Women.” Meet in the Hotel Lobby at 5:00 to walk over to Portland State University.
Friday, March 3rd
7:00 AM – 6:00 PM Conference Registration – Broadway Foyer.
8:00 – 5:00 Book Sales and Lan Su Chinese Gardens Information. Broadway Foyer.
8:00 – 9:00 Buffet Breakfast. Atrium Ballroom. Sponsored by PCC's Internationalization Initiatives Committee.
8:30 – 8:45 Welcoming Remarks: Peter Hershock, Dona Cady, Tom Patterson.
Friday, March 3rd 9:00 - 10:15
Panel 1 - Broadway One - Confucian Ethics and the Dharma World. Chair: Dawn Gale, Johnson County Community College
Dennis Arjo Johnson County Community College
Moral Expertise: A Comparative Philosophical Approach
Dawn Gale Johnson County Community College
Confucian Role Ethics, Gender Roles, and Ecofeminism
Keith Krasemann College of DuPage Sex Within the Dharma World: Deviance or Bad Dharma?
Timothy Seitz McHenry County College Does a Dog Have Junzi Nature? Reflections on Nussbaum's Missing Thought in Confucian Golden Rule Arguments
Panel 2 - Broadway Two - Globalization, Interconnected Asia, US-China and Curricula. Chair: John Bowen, Central Washington University
Koushik Ghosh Central Washington University
Globalization and Climate Change: Transforming the Economies of Asia and the United States
Nancy Carr CC of Philadelphia Enhancing Business Management Courses with a Japanese Perspective: A Curriculum Module
Martin F. Farrell Ripon College US- China Economic Relations: Myths versus Realities
John Bowen Central Washington University
Nonstop: The Role of Asia’s Low-Cost Airlines in Fostering a More Interconnected Region
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Friday, March 3rd 9:00 - 10:15
Panel 3 - Broadway Three - Asian Literature, English Literacy. Chair: Marla Lunderberg, Hope College
Gerard Hogan & Yuanxia Liu
Central Washington University
Creating Community Through Poetry: Chinese/English and Japanese/English Bilingual Poetry-Reading Programs
William Lowe Howard Community College Heading East: Infusing an Asian Focus into an ESL Writing Course
Marla Lunderberg Hope College Infusing Asian Studies Into a Freshman English (Core) Class: Working With Chang-rae Lee's A Gesture Life
Panel 4 - Broadway Four - Mongolia! Chair: George P. Brown, Slippery Rock University of PA
Suzanne Penuel University of South Carolina Lancaster
What We Talk About When We Talk About Mongolia
Larissa N. Pitts University of California Berkley
Same
Henry J. Antkiewicz East Tennessee State University
Same
Friday, March 3rd 10:30 - 11:45
Panel 5 - Broadway One - Korea: Business, Unification, and Reverse Migration. Chair: Barbara Lass, City College of San Francisco
Barbara Lass City College of San Francisco Korean Reunification: An Anthropological Perspective
Yong Joo Lee Central Washington University
The Impact of Environmental Variables on Korean Bank Performance
Mary Yu Danico California Polytechnic University Pomona
Reverse Migration: A Fullbright Scholar's Experience in South Korea
Panel 6 - Broadway Two - Comparative Cultures, Human Rights, and Globalization. Chair: Jessica Sheetz-Nguyen, University of Central Oklahoma
Tracie Justus Perimeter College/Georgia State University
Food, Society, and Asian Connections in a Comparative Culture Course
Hue-ping Chin Drury University Connecting or Dividing: Connecting Human Rights
Barbara A. Bateman Perimeter College/Georgia State University
France and Asia: Everything Old is New Again
Bryan Hull Portland Community College Post-colonialism, globalization and the danger of disciplines.
Panel 7 - Broadway Three - Asian Philosophy and Religion.
Chair: Stephen J. Laumakis, University of St. Thomas
Stephen J. Laumakis U of St. Thomas, St. Paul, MN
Meditation: East and West
Kendall Marchman Young Harris College Seeking the Pureland (in the Classroom)
Haixia W Lan U of Wisconsin-La Crosse Introducing Diversity- Teaching Chinese Daoist Rhetoric
Tim Gutmann University of Chicago NEH Confucian Asia: Traditions and Transformations
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Friday, March 3rd 10:30 - 11:45
Panel 8 – Cancelled!
Lunch 12:00 - 1:30 – Atrium Ballroom
Speaker: Dr. Alisa Freedman "Tokyo in Transit: Japanese Trains as Social and Cultural Vehicles"
Friday, March 3rd 1:45 - 3:00
Panel 9 – Broadway One - The Asia Pacific Century. Chair: Nancy Martinsen, California State University East Bay
Sartaz Aziz California State University East Bay
APIA Patterns of Immigration and Migration
Ann Fajilan California State University East Bay
The Challenges of APIA Embodiment in Theatre Performance
Danvy Le California State University East Bay
Creating the APIA Learning Community and Environment
Panel 10 - Broadway Two - NEH Confucian Asia II. Chair: Pamela Herron, University of Texas at El Paso
Pamela Herron University of Texas at El Paso
NEH Confucian Asia: Traditions and Transformations II Roundtable
Chunmin Maria Tu University of Delaware Same
Gregory Wilkinson Brigham Young University Same
Panel 11 - Broadway Three - Obstacles and Synergies to Campus Collaboration. Chair: Martha Bailey, Portland Community College
Kim Smith Portland Community College Obstacles and Synergies to Campus Collaboration
Usha Ramanujan Portland Community College Same
Tiff Hayes Portland Community College Same
Anne Frey Portland Community College Same
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Friday, March 3rd 1:45 - 3:00
Panel 12 - Broadway Four - Film and Literature in Teaching About Asia. Chair: Faye Beauchamp, Community College of Philadelphia
Lara Kradinova Middlesex Community College
Post-Fulbright: Reflections on Arts and Culture in Cambodia
Jeffrey C. Kinkley Portland State University Fiction and Film as Resources for Teaching the Modern Histories of China and Other East Asian Regions
A. Paige Rogers The Community College of Baltimore County
Disturbing Motives and Difficult Choices: Decoding Violence in Representative Asian Literature
Faye Beauchamp Community College of Philadelphia
The Long March of Mao and Nyerere: Chinese and Tanzanian Confluences and Rhetorical Contrasts
Friday, March 3rd 3:15 - 4:30
Panel 13 - Broadway One - Qi, Matter and Energy. Chair: Nick Brasovan, University of Central Arkansas.
Nick Brasovan University of Central Arkansas
Qi, Matter and Energy: neo-Confucian Engagements with New Materialism
Clayton Crockett University of Central Arkansas
Same
Eiho Baba Furman University Same
Panel 14 - Broadway Two - Learning Languages. Chair: Ching-Hsuan Wu, Western Kentucky University
Joshua S. Nelson Central Washington University
Resistance is Futile: The Rise of English as the Post-Modern World's Lingua Franca
Ching-Hsuan Wu Western Kentucky University
Creating Global Professionals: Connecting Undergraduate Education with China and Taiwan Through Domestic Advanced Language Training and Overseas University Direct Enrollment and Internships.
Panel 15 – Broadway Three - Communicating with East Asia. Chair: Meiling Wu, California State University East Bay
Meiling Wu California State U. East Bay From Traditional Painting to Contemporary Animation
Rie Kawachi Hannon California State U. East Bay Experiencing Japanese Culture: An Online Course beyond Classroom
Huitzu Lu California State U. East Bay Bilingual Approach: China Headline News vis-a vis Japan Headline News
Shiori Hoke-Grellar California State U. East Bay Bilingual & Multicultural Approach on Folktales and Cultures
Panel 16 - Broadway Four - Art and Chinese Gardens. Chair: Tom Patterson, Johnson County Community College
Albert Wong The U. of Texas at El Paso An Incoherent Identity: An Asian American Artist
Ray Olson ASDP Alumnus Chinese Classical Gardens DVD
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Friday, March 3rd
ASDP Alumni Association Meeting - 4:45 - 5:30 - Broadway One & Two. All Are Welcome!
Opening Reception - 6:00 - 8:00 – Atrium Ballroom. All Are Welcome! Remarks by Consul General Kojiro Uchiyama, of the Consular Office of Japan in Portland,
and Welcoming Remarks from Kendra Cawley, Dean of Academic Affairs Portland Community College
Saturday, March 4th
8:00 – 5:00 Book Sales and Lan Su Chinese Gardens Information. Broadway Foyer.
8:00 – 12:00 Conference Registration – Broadway Foyer.
Saturday, March 4th 9:00 - 10:15 Panel 17 - Broadway One - Teaching Asian History and Asian Studies.
Chair: Sylvia Gray, Portland Community College
Sylvia Gray Portland Community College Teaching Chinese History in 10 weeks: Keeping it Fun and Real
Jessica Sheetz-Nguyen
U of Central Oklahoma Women's History: New Publications in Asian Studies
Melissa Ludtke Independent Producer/Writer
China: Talking Across Cultures, Connecting Across Themes – All in the Digital Realm
Matthew Ruane Florida Institute of Technology
Adapting the Infusing Experience: Lessons Learned from Teaching "HUM 3085: The British Empire and South Asia"
Panel 18 - Broadway Two - Building a Japanese Language Program. Chair: Takako Yamaguchi, Portland Community College
Takako Yamaguchi Portland Community College Successes and Challenges in Building a Robust Japanese Language Program
Donna Yount Portland Community College Same
Tee Kamoshita Portland Community College Same
Ben Corum Portland Community College Same
Caitlyn Lemmon Portland Community College Same
Leeza Rancourt Portland Community College Same
Orrin Aylward Portland Community College Same
Panel 19 - Broadway Three - Everything is Connected: Asian Art and Culture. Chair: Akiko Walley, University of Oregon
Akiko Walley University of Oregon Everything is Connected: The Potential of the Object Oriented Approach to the Study of Asian Art and Culture
Jenny Lin University of Oregon Same
Kristin Seaman University of Oregon Same
Anne Rose Kitagawa University of Oregon Same
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Saturday, March 4th 9:00 - 10:15
Panel 20 - Broadway Four - Unresolved Historical Issues and Border Controversies in East Asia. Chair: George P. Brown, Slippery Rock University of PA
Bang-Soon L. Yoon Central Washington University
"Comfort Women" Movement's Statue Politics Hinder South Korea- Japan Diplomatic Relations
Robert Y. Eng University of Redlands The Defend Diaoyutai Movement of the Early 1970s: Transnational Activism, Civic Engagement, and State-Society Relations
Michael A. Launius Central Washington University
The Dokdo and East Sea Controversies Between Korea and Japan
Saturday, March 4th 10:30 - 11:45
Panel 21 - Broadway One – No Wa, and Meeting in the Green Room Chair: Joseph Overton, Kapiolani Community College
Paul Dunscomb U of Alaska Anchorage There is No Joy in Fukuoka: The Other Crisis in Japanese Professional Baseball of 2004
Katharine Purcell Trident Technical College The Surfing Roots in East-West Connections
Panel 22 - Broadway Two - Connecting with China on a Budget.
Chair: Eric Kendrick, Perimeter College, Georgia State University
Eric Kendrick Perimeter College- Georgia State University
Connecting with China on a Budget: Curricular, Campus, and Community Initiatives
Fred Bounds Perimeter College- Georgia State University
Same
Liam Madden Perimeter College- Georgia State University
Same
Panel 23 – Broadway Three - Challenging Conventional Wisdom About Identity Politics and Asian Studies.
Chair: Taine Duncan, University of Central Arkansas
Taine Duncan University of Central Arkansas
Resistance and Black Buddhism: bell hooks' Transnational and Intersectional Identity Politics
James Deitrick University of Central Arkansas
Who is Buddhist? Jewish Mindfulness, Christian Yoga, and Religious Identity in the 21st Century
Zachary Smith University of Central Arkansas
Awakening the Masses: National and Class Identity Formation in Early 20th Century Chinese Popular Textbooks
Panel 24 - Broadway Four - Community Education: Preserving and Learning. Chair: Cynthia Bayse, Oregon Nikkei Endowment
Cynthia Bayse Oregon Nikkei Endowment Preserving, Sharing and Learning from a Community's History
June Shuman Oregon Nikkei Endowment Same
Weston Nakamura-Koyama
Oregon Nikkei Endowment Same
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Saturday, March 4th
Lunch 12:00 - 1:30 – Atrium Ballroom
Speaker: Dr. Edward Slingerland
"Trying Not to Try: Cooperation, Trust and the Paradox of Spontaneity"
Saturday, March 4th 1:45 - 3:00
Panel 25 – Broadway One - Pedagogical Strategies for Introducing Asian Studies. Chair: Joseph Overton, Kapiolani Community College
Pete Giordano Belmont University The Use of Confucian Understandings of Personhood in a Theories of Personality course in Psychology
Qingjun Li Belmont University Creative Uses of Mulan in Teaching: Tradition and Transformation of a Woman Warrior
Ronnie Littlejohn Belmont University The Erasure of Morality in Ethics and Moral Theory: Suggestions from Buddhism and Daoism
Panel 26 - Broadway Two - Art and Religion in Asia. Chair: Lisa B. Safford, Hiram College
Kerri Gamache Middlesex Community College
A Visual Essay on "Syncretism" in Khmer Buddhist Art
Lawrence E. Butler George Mason University Mosques in China: An Update from 21st Century Shanghai
Lisa B. Safford Hiram College Syncretism in Early Buddhist Japanese Art: the Case of Zenki and Goki
Lisa B. Safford & Alaina Seguin
Hiram College Eyes of the Storm: Kamakura Sculptural Embedded Crystals Expressive of an Age of Anxiety
Panel 27 - Broadway Three - Connecting Ancient Science to the Modern World. Chair: Deb Williams, Johnson County Community College
Matt Marone Mercer University Science revealed in Brush Talks from Dream Brook (梦溪笔谈), Connecting
Ancient Science to the Modern World.
Deb Williams Johnson County Community College
Traditional Ecological Knowledge: Indigenous Perspectives on Environmental Problem Solving
Kim Smith Portland Community College Achieving a Sustainable Future Through Education, Collaboration, and Agenda 2030
Panel 28 - Broadway Four - Japan: Cinema, Literature, Gender, and Civic Education. Chair: Fay Beauchamp, Community College of Philadelphia
Laura Viviana Castruita
The Univeristy of Texas at El Paso
Miyazaki's Heroines, Witches and the Fragmentation of the Female Identity
Lissa Schneider- Rebozo
U of Wisconsin- River Falls A Husband, A Wife, A Bandit: Voice in Kurosawa’s Rashomon, Akutagawa’s “In the Bamboo Grove,” and the Konjaku Monogatari shu
Setsuko Buckley Whatcom Community College
Social Justice, Diversity, and the Needs of Civic Education in Japan
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Saturday, March 4th 3:15 - 4:30
Panel 29 - Broadway One - Performance Art, Heroic Fantasy, Zen Bikers and Soul Mountain. Chair: Dona Cady, Middlesex Community College
Jeffrey Dippman Central Washington University
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance Beside Lingshan/Soul Mountain
Paul Rodell Georgia Southern University A Philippine Theater of Memory: Performance Art and the Next Generation's 'Memory' of the Marcos Era
Dona Cady Middlesex Community College
The Hero in Translation: Looking at Heroic Fantasy Literature through the Concepts of Ren and Wu-wei
Panel 30 - Broadway Two - Memory and Labor Migration. Chair: Chong Eun Ahn, Central Washington University
Chong Eun Ahn Central Washington University
Across Asia and the Pacific: An Interdisciplinary Approach to the Question of Memory and Tradition in Labor Migration
Tongyu Wu University of Oregon Same
Xia Zhang Portland State University Same
Panel 31 - Broadway Three - Asia Council: Collaborating on Study Abroad, Curriculum Issues and Faculty Development. Chair: Baogang Guo, Dalton State College
Eric Spears Georgia College Cooperation on Study Abroad, Asian Studies Certificates and Teaching Asia Faculty Workshops in The University System of Georgia
Eric Kendrick Perimeter College / Georgia State University
Same
Baogang Guo Dalton State College Same
Panel 32 - Broadway Four - Sustaining Asian Studies. Chair: Martha Bailey, Portland Community College
Martha Bailey Portland Community College Sustaining an Asian Studies Program with Contingent Faculty Leadership
Sylvia Gray Portland Community College Same
Hsiao-Yun Shotwell Portland Community College Same
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Additional Information about the Conference Sponsors
The East-West Center promotes better relations and understanding among the people and nations of the United States, Asia, and the Pacific through cooperative study, research, and dialogue. Established by the U.S. Congress in 1960, the Center serves as a resource for information and analysis on critical issues of common concern, bringing people together to exchange views, build expertise, and develop policy options. The Center is an independent, public, nonprofit organization with funding from the U.S. government, and additional support provided by private agencies, individuals, foundations, corporations, and governments in the region. Over more than fifty years of serving as a U.S.-based institution for public diplomacy in the Asia Pacific region with international governance, staffing, students, and participants, the Center has built a worldwide network of 62,000 alumni and more than 1,100 partner organizations.
The Asian Studies Development Program (ASDP) was launched in 1991 to enhance teaching about Asia at American two-year and four-year colleges and universities at the undergraduate level. In recent years, ASDP has also included Asian faculty in selected programs. Since its inception, more than 1,500 professors from the U.S. and Asia have participated in ASDP programs.
A joint program of the East-West Center and the University of Hawai‘i, ASDP offers a variety of content-focused faculty and institutional development programs and activities centered around summer residential institutes, field seminars in Asia, workshops on the U.S. mainland, and an annual academic conference.
The Association of Regional Centers for Asian Studies (ARCAS) is composed of the 19 regional centers of ASDP. ARCAS is a non-profit organization affiliated with ASDP and works closely with ASDP in such initiatives as the development of faculty development workshops and ASDP's annual conferences. The Association of Regional Centers for Asian Studies is committed to promoting the study of Asia and Asian cultures in undergraduate programs at colleges and universities throughout the United States. The mission of this Association is to provide high quality programs for faculty, administrators, staff, and students at member institutions and other institutions served by the regional centers. The purpose of these programs is to enhance teaching, learning, and research in Asian studies. Portland Community College (PCC) is the largest post-secondary institution in Oregon: PCC serves nearly 90,000 full-time and part-time students. PCC has four comprehensive campuses, eight centers and dozens of independent locations throughout the community that offer courses and provide student services. PCC fills a unique role, one that offers high quality education and opportunities for students, which in turn contributes to the vibrancy of Portland's economic community. Special Thanks go to the Asian Studies Committee and Internationalization Initiatives Committee of Portland Community College who organized and sponsored the conference events in Portland; to Peter Hershock and the staff at ASDP for their help in organizing the conference; to George P. Brown (Slippery Rock University of PA) and Kathleen Doss for organizing the Conference Program and schedule; and to Denyse Peterson (Portland Community College) for her thoughtful finishing touch!
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Conference Presenters
Antkiewicz Henry Professor, Department of History East Tennessee State University
ANTKIEWH@ mail.etsu.edu
Arjo Dennis Chair, Dept. of Philosphy and Religion, Professor of Philosphy
Johnson County Community College
Aylward Orrin Student Portland Community College
Aziz Sartaz Lecturer, Department of English California State University - East Bay
Sartaz.aziz@ csueastbay.edu
Baba Eiho Department of Philosophy Furman University Eiho.baba@ furman.edu
Bailey Martha Instructor of Philosophy and Religion, Chair Asian Studies Committee
Portland Community College
Basye Cynthia Education Manager Oregon Nikkei Endowment
cynthia@ oregonnikkei.org
Bateman Barbara Associate Professor of French Perimeter College of Georgia State University
Beauchamp Fay Professor of English & Director of Center for International Understanding
Community College of Philadelphia
Fay.beauchamp@ gmail.com
Bounds Fred Professor of Economics and Business
Perimeter College - Georgia State University
Bowen John Professor of Geography Central Washington University
Brasovan Nicholas Professor, Dept. of Philosophy and Religion
Central Arkansas University
Brown George Professor, Department of Political Science, Director, Honors Program
Slippery Rock University george.brown@ sru.edu
Buckley Setsuko Instructor of Japanese Language Whatcom Community College
sbuckley@ whatcom.ctc.edu
Butler Lawrence Associate Professor of Art History George Mason University
Cady Dona Dean of Global Education Middlesex Community College
cadyd@ middlesex.mass.edu
Carr Nancy Management and Marketing Department
Community College of Philadelphia
Chin Hue-ping Professor and Chair of History, Philosophy and Religion
Drury University [email protected]
Crockett Clayton Professor, Dept. of Philosophy and Religion
Central Arkansas University
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Danico Mary Yu
Associate Dean of the College of Environmental Design; Director of Asian America Transnational Research Initiative; Professor
Cal Poly Pomona [email protected]
Deitrick James Associate Professor of Philosophy and Religion
University of Central Arkansas
Dippmann Jeffrey Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies
Central Washington University
Jeffrey.dippmann@ cwu.edu
Duncan Taine Associate Professor of Philosophy University of Central Arkansas
Dunscomb Paul Professor and Chair, Department of History
University of Alaska Anchorage
pedunscomb@ alaska.edu
Eng Robert Professor of History University of the Redlands
Eun Ahn Chong Assistant Professor, Department of History
Central Washington University
Fajilan Ann Associate Professor, Department of Theatre and Dance
California State University - East Bay
Ann.fajilan@ csueastbay.edu
Farrell Martin Professor of Politics and Government
Ripon College [email protected]
Frey Anne Education Abroad District Manager
Portland Community College
Gale Dawn Professor, Dept. of Philosophy and Religion
Johnson County Community College
Gamache Kerrianne Assistant Professor Middlesex Community College
GAMACHEK@ middlesex.mass.edu
Ghosh Koushik Professor of Economics Central Washington University
Koushik.ghosh@ cwu.edu
Giordano Pete Professor of Psychology Belmont University Pete.giordano@ belmont.edu
Gray Sylvia Professor of History Portland Community College
Guo Baogang Director, Center for International Education
Dalton State College [email protected]
Hayes Tiff International Education Portland Community College
Hoffman Lunderberg
Marla Associate Professor of English Hope College [email protected]
Hogan Gerard Professor and Librarian Central Washington University
Gerard.Hogan@ cwu.edu
Hoke-Geller Shiori Lecturer, Department of Modern Languages and Literature
California State University - East Bay
Shiori.Hoke@ csueastbay.edu
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Hull Bryan Professor of English Portland Community College
Justus Tracie Associate Professor, Dept. of ESL & World Languages
Perimeter College, Georgia State University
Kamoshita Tee Japanese Language Faculty Portland Community College
Tee.kamoshita@ pcc.edu
Kawachi Hannon
Rie Lecturer, Department of Modern Languages and Literature
California State University - East Bay
Rie.Hannon@ csueastbay.edu
Kendrick Eric Associate Department Chair, World Languages & ESL
Perimeter College - Georgia State University
Kinkley Jeffrey Courtesy Professor of History and Courtesy Professor of World Languages and Literatures
Portland State University
jeffreykinkley@ gmail.com
Kitagawa Rose Ann Chief Curator of Collections & Asian Art and Director of Academic Programs
University of Oregon [email protected]
Kradinova Lara Associate Professor of English Middlesex Community College
KRADINOVAL@ middlesex.mass.edu
Krasemann Keith Professor of Philosophy and Religious Studies
College of DuPage [email protected]
Lan Haixia Professor of English University of Wisconsin-La Crosse
Lass Barbara Instructor, Dept. of Behavioral Sciences
City College of San Francisco
Laumakis Stephen Professor of Philosophy and Director, Aquinas Scholars Honors Program
University of St. Thomas SJLaumakis@ stthomas.edu
Launius Michael Department of Political Science Central Washington University
Michael.launius@ cwu.edu
Le Danvy Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science
California State University - East Bay
Danvy.le@ csueastbay.edu
Li QingJun Assistant Professor of Asian Studies and Chinese Language
Belmont University Qingjun.li@ belmont.edu
Lin Jenny Assistant Professor & Director of Graduate Studies, History of Art and Architecture
University of Oregon [email protected]
Littlejohn Ronnie
Professor of Philosophy & Director of Asian Studies, Concurrent Professor in Foreign Languages, Zengzhou Univeristy (PRC)
Belmont University Ronnie.littlejohn@ belmont.edu
Liu Yuanxia Chinese Language Lecturer Central Washington University
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Lowe William Associate Professor, Coordinator of Asian Studies
Howard College WLowe@ howardcc.edu
Lu Huitzu Professor, Department of Modern Languages and Literature
California State University - East Bay
Huitzu.Lu@ csueastbay.edu
Ludtke Melissa Independent Producer/Writer Melissa.Ludtke@ gmail.com
Madden Liam Associate Professor of English and Humanities
Perimeter College - Georgia State University
Marchman Kendall Assistant Professor of Religious Studies
Young Harris College [email protected]
Marone Matt Associate Professor of Physics Mercer University MARONE_MJ@ mercer.edu
Nakamura-Koyama
Weston Graduate Student, School of Law University of Oregon [email protected]
Nelson Joshua Professor of Japanese Central Washington University
joshua.nelson@ cwu.edu
Olson Raymond Alumnus, ASDP [email protected]
Overton Joseph Professor and Director, Honda International Center
Kapiolani Community College
Penuel Suzanne Associate Professor of English University of South Carolina - Lancaster
suzannepenuel@ gmail.com
Pitts Larissa Graduate Student, Department of History
University of California - Berkeley
Larissa.jesanis@ berkeley.edu
Purcell Katharine English Instructor & Director of the International Education Office
Trident Technical College
Katharine.Purcell @tridenttech.edu
Ramanujam Usha Instructor and Department Chair of Business Administration
Portland Community College - Rock Creek Campus
Usha.ramanujam@ pcc.edu
Rodell Paul Professor, Department of History Georgia Southern University
rodell@ georgiasouthern.edu
Rogers A. Paige Professor of English The Community College of Baltimore County
progers@ ccbcmd.edu
Ruane Matthew School of Arts and Communications
Florida Institute of Technology
Safford Lisa B. Professor of Art History and Art Department Chair
Hiram College [email protected]
Schneider-Rebozo
Lissa Professor and Director of Undergraduate Research
University of Wisconsin River Falls
Schumann June Founding Executive Director Oregon Nikkei Endowment
jaschumann@ earthlink.net
Seaman Kristen HA & AM University of Oregon kseaman@ uoregon.edu
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Seguin Alaina Student presenting with L. Safford Hiram College
Seitz Timothy Instructor of Philosophy McHenry County College
Sheetz-Nguyen
Jessica Professor of History University of Central Oklahoma
jsheetznguyen@ uco.edu
Smith Kim Instructor of Sociology Portland Community College
Smith Zacchary Associate Professor of History University of Central Arkansas
Spears Eric Assistant Vice President, International Education
Georgia College [email protected]
Vivana Castruita
Laura Graduate Student The University of Texas at El Paso
lvcastruita@ miners.utep.edu
Walley Akiko Maude I. Kerns Associate Professor of Japanese Art
University of Oregon akikowalley@ gmail.com
Williams Deborah Professor and Chair, Environmental Science Department
Johnson County Community College
Wong Albert Professor of Art The University of Texas at El Paso
Wu Meiling Professor & Chair, Modern Languages & Literature
California State University - East Bay
Meiling.wu@ csueastbay.edu
Wu Ching-Hsuan
Academic Director Western Kentucky University
Ching-hsuan.wu@ wku.edu
Wu Tongyu Graduate Student, Department of Sociology
University of Oregon tongyuw@ uoregon.edu
Yamaguchi Takako Japanese Language Program Chair Portland Community College - Sylvania Campus
Yong Joo Lee Associate Professor, Dept. of ESL & World Languages
Central Washington University
Yoon Bang-Soon Professor, Department of Political Science
Central Washington University
Bang-Soon.Yoon@ cwu.edu
Yount Donna Japanese Language Faculty Portland Community College
Zhang Xia Adjunct Assistant Professor College of Urban and Public Affairs & Department of Anthropology
Portland State University
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Cover photos of Lan Su Gardens by George P. Brown