2003 Annual Report

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2003 Annual Report Annual Report Annual Report Page 1 Center for East Asian Studies CenterUniversity for of Kansas East Asian Studies Annual Report University of Kansas Fall, 2003 Page 2 Center for East Asian Studies Message from the Director In this annual report on the state of East Asian studies at the University of Kansas during the 2002-03 academic year, we are pleased to announce that KU’s Center for East Asian Studies was one of l6 East Asian studies centers in the U.S. to be awarded NRC funding in the 2002-03 competition and one of l8 centers to receive FLAS funding. This success was due in no small part to the number and quality of the courses that East Asian studies faculty at KU teach, to the innovative ideas that they brought to the planning of the grant proposal, and to their readiness to give presentations at the Center’s events, to serve on its committees, and to provide suggestions and continuous moral and practical support, for which the Center staff is most grateful. In response to “invitational priorities” defined by the Department of Education, in our grant proposal we targeted connections with the professional schools and the expansion of course offerings to include less commonly taught languages (particularly one related to Muslim culture) and courses tailored for “heritage speakers.” The funding we received enabled us to collaborate with the Business School to bring Tailan Chi (Ph.D., University of Washington) from the University of Illinois to KU to fill an associate professorship in International Business with a specialization in China, and it will provide opportunities for Americans to learn Uyghur and Tibetan. Uyghur, the language spoken by about 9 million of one of China’s two Muslim minority peoples, will be offered for the first time in fall 2004. (Please help this initiative to succeed by encouraging students to try learning this Turkic language!) The grant also provides for special lab sections for heritage speakers in Elementary and Intermediate Korean. Korean studies has also grown in the History of Art Department with the creation of three new courses and the recruitment of a number of new graduate students. And the Korean collection in the East Asian Library continues to grow apace. Programs funded by a large Freeman foundation grant, secured during Bill Tsutsui’s tenure as Acting Director of the Center, got under way last year. In this issue you will read about the Kansas Asia Scholars program, the Kansas Asia Community Connections initiative, and the Kansas Consortium for Teaching About Asia. Freeman funds also made possible new tenure track positions in Political Science and Communication Studies which have been filled by John Kennedy (Ph.D., UC Davis) and Yan Bing Zhang (Ph.D., University of Kansas). East Asian studies also welcomed Maria Roman Navarro, who arrived in Lawrence from Heidelberg, Germany at the end of the summer to take up her new position as curator of East Asian art and Assistant Professor of Japanese Art. Jie Zhang (Ph.D., UCLA), a specialist in Chinese phonology, joined the Linguistics Department. Thomas Huang and Tadashi Isozaki, new assistant professors in the Art and Design department, joined the Center as associate members last year. Tuition-enhancement funds provided by the Provost’s office resulted in the hiring of two Korea specialists: Kelly Chong (Ph.D., Chicago) and Anne Choi (Ph.D., USC), who will take up positions as assistant professors in the departments of Sociology and American Studies, respectively, in fall 2004. The past year saw the creation of an advanced language maintenance program designed to give faculty, staff, and students at the advanced proficiency level an opportunity to listen to lectures delivered on a variety of topics in Japanese and Chinese; Chinese language tables (Japanese language tables began in spring 2002); an NEH-funded Eastern Civilizations Workshop for the Olathe School District; and heavily attended outreach conferences on Okinawa and on “Muslim Cultures Along the Silk Roads.” Details about these activities, and many more, are reported in this issue. As we move into another academic year, we renew our invitation to you to keep us informed about your East Asia- related activities and interests so that we might continue to help facilitate the dissemination of knowledge about East Asia and exposure to East Asian cultures in the Great Plains. Elaine Gerbert Director Annual Report Page 3 Table of Contents The Annual Report is a publication of News from the Director............................ 2 the Center for East Asian Studies at the University of Kansas New East Asian Faculty .......................... 4 1440 Jayhawk Blvd. #202 Summer in Hiratsuka .............................. 6 Lawrence, KS 66045 New East Asian Courses ......................... 7 Telephone: 785-864-3849 Facsimile: 785-864-5034 Eastern Civilizations in Olathe ............... 7 Email: [email protected] First Kansas Asia Scholars Travel .......... 8 Website: www.ceas.ku.edu CEAS Member Returns from Russia ..... 10 Our faculty list and mission statement are available on our website. Rural Kansas Meets East Asia ............... 11 Report from the Longmen Grottoes ...... 12 Korean Art History at KU ...................... 14 CEAS Staff CEAS Hosts Okinawa Events.................. 16 Director Lectures in Chinese and Japanese ......... 16 Elaine Gerbert Silk Road Conference at KU .................. 17 Director, Kansas Consortium for Teaching East Asian Outreach ................................ 18 about Asia (KCTA), Kansas Asia Scholars (KAS) and Kansas Asia Community International Education in Kansas ......... 20 Connection (KACC) William M. Tsutsui KCTA Events ............................................ 21 Associate Director, KCTA, KAS and KACC Faculty News ............................................ 22 Nancy Hope Student Awards ........................................ 26 Outreach Coordinator Giving to the Center ................................ 27 Randi Hacker Alumni News ............................................ 28 Community Relations Coordinator LeaMarie Bistak Herron Student News ............................................ 28 Kansas Asia Scholars China Program Director and Assistant Director, KACC A special thank you to Michael Breen, who left in Sheree Welch Willis January, 2003 after three years as the Accounting Specialist for the Center (we wish him luck in his Kansas Asia Scholars Japan Program new endeavor as manager and part owner of Director Hometown Games in Lawrence); to Diane Hack, Patricia Graham who cheerfully and ably managed the Center office KACC Senior Researcher from February through June; and to Eileen Larson, Norma S. Larzalere Outreach Coordinator in 2002-2003, for the many Accounting Specialist gracious ways in which she facilitated outreach, Helene Ho particularly to K-12 schools. Page 4 Center for East Asian Studies CEAS Welcomes New Faculty Members Yan Bing Zhang I joined the University as a new Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication Studies. My research focuses on intercultural / intergenerational communication particularly in regards to cultural values, age stereotypes, and media effects. Frequently, I examine these issues from a cross-cultural perspective. My teaching interests include intercultural communication, East Asian communication, life span communication, mass communication, and quantitative research methods. Currently, I am teaching intercultural communication and social scientific approaches to mass communication. I earned my B.S. degree from Shandong University, my M.A. from Pittsburg State University, and my Ph.D. from the University of Kansas. Before I came to the United States, I taught English for eight years in China Coal Economic College in Yantai, China from 1986 to 1994. After receiving my Ph.D. from KU in 2002, I took a position as a tenure track assistant professor at the University of San Francisco. I am very excited to move back to Lawrence. I will develop a new course on East Asian Communication and look forward to teaching it in fall 2004. Tailan Chi Dr. Tailan Chi is an Associate Professor at the KU School of Business. Prior to joining KU in 2003, he taught for thirteen years at the University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He received his B.E. degree from the University of International Business & Economics, Beijing, China; his M.B.A. degree from University of San Francisco; and his M.A. degree in economics and Ph.D. degree in business administration from the University of Washington. Dr. Chi’s research focuses on choice of foreign market entry modes, organizational structures of multinational corporations, and market valuation of a firm’s intangible assets. He examines these phenomena from the perspectives of the new institutional economics, resource-based view and option theory, and uses both mathematical modeling and large-sample statistical methods in his work. He has published in journals such as Journal of International Business Studies, Management Science, Strategic Management Journal, Managerial and Decision Economics, Decision Sciences, IIE Transactions, and IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management. He received the Business Advisory Council’s Award for research excellence at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee School of Business Administration in 1997, and his doctoral dissertation was recognized as one of four finalists for the Richard Farmer Dissertation Award of the Academy of International Business in 1992. Dr. Chi currently serves on the editorial
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