banner for politics of warring states Japan event with old Japanese war painting in the background; text: The Politics of Warring States Japan 1467-1600 with Nick Anderson

03/03/2021: The Politics of Warring-States Japan (1467-1600) with Nick Anderson

Sigur Center Lecture Series for Asian Studies with Images of past speakers

Wednesday, March 3, 2021

10:00 AM – 11:15 AM EST

WebEx Event

Graphic of: The Politics of Warring States Japan, 1467-1600 with Nick Anderson

This presentation introduces ‘The Politics of Warring-States Japan, 1467-1600,’ a new collection of data covering political and military relations between warlords in Japan during its warring-states period, from 1467-1600. The data covers a wide variety of political phenomena from the period, including battles and wars, territorial conquest, and alliance formation, among others. The presentation will introduce the data, present descriptive statistics of key variables of interest, and reflect on how the data speak to broader theories of international relations and conflict. The presentation should be of interest to scholars of Japanese history, Early Modern East Asia, civil conflict, and international relations theory, among others. Nicholas Anderson is a Visiting Scholar with the Institute for Security and Conflict Studies at the Elliott School of International Affairs at George Washington University, and a Ph.D. Candidate in Political Science at Yale University. Mike Mochizuki, Japan-US Relations Chair in Memory of Gaston Sigur at the George Washington University, will serve as moderator for the audience Q&A.

Book cover for "The Frontier in British India" by Thomas Simpson

02/09/2021: The Frontier in British India with author Thomas Simpson

Book cover for "The Frontier in British India" by Thomas Simpson

Tuesday, February 9th, 2021

10:00 AM – 11:15 AM EST | 3:00 PM – 4:15 PM GMT

WebEx Event

The Sigur Center for Asian Studies proudly hosts Thomas Simpson, Research Fellow at the University of Cambridge, in the second edition of the 2021 New Books in Asian Studies series to discuss his recently published The Frontier in British India: Space, Science, and Power in the Nineteenth Century with Director Benjamin D. Hopkins, who will act as a moderator and discussant during the event. 

Thomas Simpson provides an innovative account of how distinctive forms of colonial power and knowledge developed at the territorial fringes of colonial India during the nineteenth century. Through critical interventions in a wide range of theoretical and historiographical fields, he speaks to historians of empire and science, anthropologists, and geographers alike.

The Frontier in British India provides the first connected and comparative analysis of frontiers in northwest and northeast India, and draws on visual and written materials from an array of archives across the subcontinent and the UK. Colonial interventions in frontier spaces and populations were, it shows, enormously destructive but also prone to confusion and failure on their own terms. British frontier administrators did not merely suffer ‘turbulent’ frontiers, but actively worked to generate and uphold these regions as spaces of governmental and scientific exception. Accordingly, India’s frontiers became crucial spaces of imperial practice and imagination throughout the nineteenth century.

This event is free, open to the public, and will be recorded. 

lunar new year 2021 event banner with floral ox; text: 2021 Lunar New Year Virtual Celebration

02/11/2021: Lunar New Year Celebration

Thursday, February 11, 2021

12:00 PM – 1:00 PM EST

Zoom Event

banner for lunar new year 2021 celebration event
 
GW’s first Lunar New Year Virtual Celebration, featuring Southern Sea Dragon and Lion Dance Association and The Chinese Street Market Pop-up
 

The George Washington University is pleased to present our first Lunar New Year Virtual Celebration in special partnership with San Diego Southern Sea Dragon and Lion Dance Association and The Chinese Street Market Pop-up. Join us for a fun-filled afternoon of education and entertainment, from introducing how various Asian cultures celebrate the Lunar New Year, showing an amazing Lion Dance performance, to ending with a cooking tutorial of a traditional holiday dish.

This free virtual event will be held in English and is open to the public. We encourage audience members to participate in wearing their traditional Lunar New Year dress.

 

Program Lineup

Audience Raffle – Surprise gift giveaway!

Opening Remarks from the Dean – Dean Paul Wahlbeck, Professor of Political Science and Dean of Columbian College of Arts and Sciences (GW)

Lunar New Year Celebration in Asia – Educational Presentation by GW Students (TBA)

Closing Remarks from Co-sponsors

  • Yonho Kim, Associate Research Professor of Practice; Associate Director of Institute for Korean Studies (GWIKS)
  • Immanuel Kim, Acting Chair of GW Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures; The Korea Foundation and Kim-Renaud Associate Professor of Korean Literature and Culture Studies (GW EALL)
  • Joshua Kai, Assistant Director of International Services Office (GW ISO)
  • Michael Tapscott, Director of Multicultural Student Services Center (GW MSSC)

Lion Dance Performance – San Diego Southern Sea Dragon and Lion Dance Association

Holiday Dish Cooking Tutorial – “Crystal Shrimp Dumpling Tutorial Video” presented by The Chinese Street Market Pop-up 

 

Sponsors

GW Confucius Institute, GW Department of East Asian Languages & Literatures, GW East Asia National Resource Center, GW Institute for Korean Studies, GW International Services Office, GW Multicultural Student Services Center, GW Organization of Asian Studies, GW Sigur Center for Asian Studies

Featured Partner

San Diego Southern Sea Dragon and Lion Dance Association, The Chinese Street Market Pop-up

Please RSVP at your earliest convenience, since registration is limited and spots are not guaranteed otherwise.

The South Korean flag with a line of people walking next to a blue image with event information

04/06/2021: Rights Claiming in South Korea Book Launch & Panel Discussion

Tuesday, April 6, 2021

3:00 PM – 4:30 PM EDT

Zoom Events

The South Korean flag with a line of people walking next to a blue image with event information

In this webinar, co-editors Celeste Arrington (George Washington University) and Patricia Goedde (Sungkyunkwan University) will introduce their new book Rights Claiming in South Korea (Cambridge University Press) with fellow chapter contributor Erin Chung (Johns Hopkins University). Sociologists Paul Chang (Harvard) and Hae Yeon Choo (University of Toronto) will discuss the edited volume’s findings and contributions to our understanding of rights-based activism in contemporary South Korea.

People in South Korea have defined and articulated diverse grievances as rights violations and engaged in claims-making to remedy them. In what institutional contexts do such rights claiming occur, and what sources of support are available for utilizing different claims-making channels? This edited volume illuminates rights in action by investigating how rights are interpreted and acted upon via petitions, court claims, protest, and other legal mobilization methods. Our research shows that rights claims are diversifying in Korea and opportunities and resources for rights claiming have improved. But obtaining rights protections and catalyzing social change remains challenging. Contributors from across the social sciences analyzed original interviews, court rulings and statutes, primary sources in archives and online, and news media coverage in Korean. The chapters uncover conflicts over contending rights claims, expose disparities between law on the books and law in practice, trace interconnections among rights and movements, and map emerging trends in the use of rights language. Case studies include women, workers, people with disabilities, migrants, and sexual minorities.

The book launch is co-sponsored by the GW Institute for Korean Studies and the Sigur Center for Asian Studies, and its speakers will represent three continents: we look forward to hosting a diverse audience to discuss rights claiming in this event.

book cover with background image of the Indo-Chinese border; text: The Frontier Complex: Geopolitics and the Making of the India-China Border, 1846-1962 by Kyle Gardner

03/31/2021: The Frontier Complex with author Kyle J. Gardner

Wednesday, March 31, 2021

10:00 AM – 11:15 AM EDT

Live book launch via WebEx

book cover of kyle gardner's the frontier complex
 

The Sigur Center for Asian Studies will host our non-resident scholar Kyle J. Gardner to launch his new book, The Frontier Complex: Geopolitics and the Making of the India-China Border, 1846-1962, as the third edition of the 2021 New Books in Asian Studies series. This event will also feature Dr. Bérénice Guyot-Réchard of King’s College London as a discussant, Sigur Center Director Benjamin D. Hopkins as a moderator, and an introduction by the Dean of the Elliott School of International Affairs, Alyssa Ayres.

Gardner reveals the transformation of the historical Himalayan entrepôt of Ladakh into a modern, disputed borderland through an examination of rare British, Indian, Ladakhi, and Kashmiri archival sources. In doing so, he provides both a history of the rise of geopolitics and the first comprehensive history of Ladakh’s encounter with the British Empire. He examines how colonial border-making practices transformed geography into a political science and established principles that a network of imperial frontier experts would apply throughout the empire and bequeath to an independent India.

Through analyzing the complex of imperial policies and practices, The Frontier Complex reveals how the colonial state transformed, and was transformed by, new ways of conceiving of territory. Yet, despite a century of attempts to craft a suitable border, the British failed. The result is an imperial legacy still playing out across the Himalayas. Gardner has shared his expertise of the Ladakh region following the China-India border clashes last year on Deutsche Welle TV, Times of India, Observer Research Foundation, and more.

The Frontier Complex: Geopolitics and the Making of the India-China Border, 1846-1962 is available from Cambridge University Press with a 20% discount using code FRCO2021.

 
 
 
book cover of eric schluessel's book land of stangers

01/26/2021: Land of Strangers: The Civilizing Project in Qing Central Asia

logos of the central asia program, the elliott school book launch program, and the sigur center in one image

Tuesday, January 26, 2021

10:00 AM – 11:00 AM EST

Live online book launch

book cover of eric schluessel's book land of stangers

The Central Asia Program, the Sigur Center for Asian Studies, and the Elliott School Book Launch Series invite you to the book launch event, the first in our New Books in Asian Studies series this year. We will host Eric Schluessel, Assistant Professor of History at George Washington University, for the launch of his book, Land of Strangers: The Civilizing Project in Qing Central AsiaRian Thum, Associate Professor of History at Loyola University, and Marlene Laruelle, Director of the GW Institute for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies and the GW Central Asia Program, will provide additional insight as a discussant and a moderator, respectively.

At the close of the nineteenth century, near the end of the Qing empire, Confucian revivalists from central China gained control of the Muslim-majority region of Xinjiang, or East Turkestan. There they undertook a program to transform Turkic-speaking Muslims into Chinese-speaking Confucians, seeking to bind this population and their homeland to the Chinese cultural and political realm. Instead of assimilation, divisions between communities only deepened, resulting in a profound estrangement that continues to this day.

In Land of Strangers, Eric Schluessel explores this encounter between Chinese power and a Muslim society through the struggles of ordinary people in the oasis of Turpan. He follows the stories of families divided by war, women desperate to survive, children unsure where they belong, and many others to reveal the human consequences of a bloody conflict and the more insidious violence of reconstruction. Schluessel traces the emergence of new struggles around essential questions of identity, showing how religious and linguistic differences converged into ethnic labels. Reading across local archives and manuscript accounts in the Chinese and Chaghatay languages, he recasts the attempted transformation of Xinjiang as a distinctly Chinese form of colonialism. At a time when understanding the roots of the modern relationship between Uyghurs and China has taken on new urgency, Land of Strangers illuminates a crucial moment of social and cultural change in this dark period of Xinjiang’s past.

As part of the Sigur Center’s New Books in Asian Studies series, which supports authors and local DC bookstores with a monthly giveaway: Follow these steps to be eligible to win a hardcover copy ($140 value!) of Land of Strangers. 1. Attend with the name you registered as 2. Subscribe to the Sigur Center’s General Interest newsletter and follow the Sigur Center on Facebook. 3. Subscribe to the Central Asia Program’s newsletter and follow CAP on Facebook. The Sigur Center will randomly select a winner during the event, purchase the book from a local DC bookstore, and pay for shipping. The contest is only open to those with a U.S. mailing address.

 

 

 
image with details of the jiangsu cup competition

04/10/2021: 2021 Jiangsu Cup Chinese Speech Contest

image with details of the jiangsu cup competition (laid out in text below)

Saturday, April 10, 2021

9:00 AM EDT

Live competition via Zoom

The George Washington University Jiangsu Cup Chinese Speech Contest is the premier Chinese language speech competition for the Greater Washington D.C. higher education community, annually welcoming student competitors from universities and colleges throughout Washington, D.C., Maryland and Virginia. Since the Jiangsu Cup’s inception in 2011, over 300 student participants have competed for scholarships and exchange opportunities in China, including full- and partial-scholarships to study the Chinese language at Nanjing University and fully-funded tours of the beautiful Jiangsu Province. 2021 marks the 10th anniversary of holding the Jiangsu Cup Chinese Speech Contest and will be the 1st time holding it virtually.

The competition is open to undergraduate and graduate students in the Washington DC area whose native language is not Chinese, who have taken at least 280 hours of college-level Chinese or equivalent, and possess a proficiency level of intermediate to advanced. During the nomination period for the competition, from 11/6/2020 to 2/19/2021, Participating universities need to return the nomination form by the deadline, recommending up to 8 student contestants for each institution for the 2021 Jiangsu Cup. Each school or institute should notify nominated students to visit the official program website and follow the listed registration guidelines. After the nomination period, finalists will be announced on March 12th. Finalists will then compete in the Final Round competition on April 10, which will be live streamed via Zoom. More information will be announced soon on spectator registration. Awards include scholarship opportunities for study abroad in Jiangsu

For general inquiries regarding participation, please visit https://blogs.gwu.edu/jiangsucup/ or contact the GW CCAS Global Initiatives Office at ccasglobal@gwu.edu.

Two individuals stand in the Angkor Panorama Museum

2/18/2021: State of Grace: The North Korean-Built Angkor Panorama Museum

Thursday, February 18, 2021

3:00 PM – 4:30 PM EST

 Zoom Events

Two individuals stand in the Angkor Panorama Museum
About the Event:

Relatively little known, and yet readily visible in the form of its conspicuous façade situated along Siem Reap’s present-day tourist trail, the Angkor Panorama Museum stands as a curious component of Angkor Archeological Park. Designed and built by the Mansudae Overseas Project, a branch of North Korea’s central art studio, the space opened in December 2015 only to shutter its doors less than four years later in November 2019. On at least one front, the Angkor venture veered from Mansudae Overseas Projects’ representative work, a corpus that has, to date, consisted largely of socialist monuments commissioned by or gifted to African nations. With the Angkor Panorama Museum, Mansudae engaged for the first time with the overtly religious subject matter, which gives shape to a singular condensation of socialist realism and visual conventions associated with Hinduism and Buddhism.

Co-sponsored by the GW Institute for Korean Studies, the Soh Jaipil Lecture Series, “State of Grace: The North Korean-built Angkor Panorama Museum in Light of DPRK-Cambodian Cultural Relations,” will feature Douglas Gabriel, 2020-21 Korea Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow at GW, and Immanuel Kim, Korea Foundation and Kim-Renaud Associate Professor of Korean Literature and Culture Studies at GW. Their discussion will contextualize the eccentricities of Mansudae’s Angkor project against the historical background of what amounted to an enduring friendship between Cambodia’s Prince Norodom Sihanouk (1922–2012) and North Korea’s Kim Il-sung (1912–1994). Exiled for prolonged periods throughout his life, Sihanouk spent substantial intervals at a palace that Kim had ordered built for him outside of Pyongyang. There, he produced music and poetry eulogizing North Korean–Khmer solidarity and directed several films in the Korean language that featured all-Korean casts. This array of cultural artifacts anticipated the narrative arc of Mansudae’s Angkor museum by suggesting an unlikely convergence between the respectively secular-communist and religious ideological foundations of the North Korean and Cambodian states — one rooted in a proven resiliency against imperialist aggressors.

This event is free, open to the public, and will be recorded. 
title of the event on a background of a map of South, Southeast, and East Asia

02/04/2020: Roundtable on Taiwan and Indo-Pacific Partnerships: Regional Trends

Conference room with text overlay "Taiwan Roundtable" and Sigur logo

Thursday, February 4, 2020

8:00 PM – 9:30 PM EST

WebEx Events

title of the event on a background of a map of South, Southeast, and East Asia

The Indo-Pacific is the most critical region today for global prosperity and security. As the region continues in a state of flux, pivotal states are increasingly recognizing opportunities that Taiwan offers as a partner. Join us for a discussion on how relations are playing out between Taiwan and leading states India, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand, with experts from the US and Asia.

Join the Sigur Center for Asian Studies for a discussion with influential experts in the US and Taiwan for their perspectives on what we can expect as we look ahead to the next four years on topics from cross-Strait relations, US-Taiwan free trade agreement, and post-pandemic recovery.

 

Agenda

Welcome Remarks: Benjamin D. Hopkins, Director, Sigur Center for Asian Studies

Expert Panel:

  • India and Taiwan: Forging Ties under the New Southbound Policy – Sana Hashmi, Taiwan Fellow, Institute of International Relations, National Chengchi University
  • Australia, New Zealand, and Taiwan: Strengthening Relations under Turbulent Times – I-wei Jennifer Chang, Research Fellow, Global Taiwan Institute
  • Japan and Taiwan: Consolidating Ties and Charting New Directions – Mike Mochizuki, Japan-US Relations Chair in Memory of Gaston Sigur, George Washington University
  • Moderator: Deepa M. Ollapally, Associate Director, Sigur Center for Asian Studies

The event will feature an extensive period for audience Q&A.

Square version of page banner with text "Sigur Center for Asian Studies Lecture Series" on a blue background

01/14/2021: India’s Domestic Politics and the Democratic Reckoning with Pratap Bhanu Mehta

Speaker at Podium addressing audience with text overlay "Sigur Center Lecture Series for Asian Studies"

Thursday, January 14, 2021

10:00 AM – 11:00 AM EST | 8.30 PM – 9.30 PM IST

WebEx Events

Portraits of Pratap Bhanu Mehta, former Vice-Chancellor of Ashoka University, and Deepa Ollapally, Associate Director of the Sigur Center for Asian Studies

The Sigur Center invites you to our Lecture Series, which highlights policy-relevant, innovative, and original scholarship about Asia.

Indian democracy is under enormous strain. Democratic norms and long-standing institutional foundations are facing a slew of challenges. As India enters a pandemic-ridden 2021, how seriously are its democratic traditions and politics threatened and what are countervailing forces?

The Sigur Center for Asian Studies proudly hosts Pratap Bhanu Mehta, Former Vice-Chancellor of Ashoka University; former President of Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi; and a leading scholar and commentator on Indian politics, for the first virtual edition of our Sigur Center Lecture Series. Mehta will share his commentary and then turn to a conversation with the moderator, Deepa Ollapally, Associate Director of the Sigur Center, before turning to audience Q&A.

Registration closes at 10:00am EST on January 13. This event is on the record, open to the public, and will be recorded. Media inquiries must be sent to gwmedia@gwu.edu in advance. If you need specific accommodations, please contact gsigur@gwu.edu with at least 3 business days’ notice.

This event is free, open to the public, and will be recorded.