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Multimedia
CCS Noon Lecture Series 2007-08
China Through a Global Lens. Global Information Flows and Chinese Responses to Tragic News Events Vanessa Fong, Assistant Professor, Graduate School of Education, Harvard University. September 18, 2007 (audio
)
China Through a Global Lens. Africa's Silk Road: China and India's New Economic Frontier Harry Broadman, Economic Advisor, African Region, The World Bank. Co-sponsored by the Center for Afroamerican and African Studies and the Center for South Asian Studies. September 25, 2007 (audio
)
China Through a Global Lens. China and the Global Politics of Cultural Heritage Magnus Fiskesj?, Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology, Cornell University. Co-sponsored by the U-M Museum of Anthropology. October 2, 2007
(audio
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China Through a Global Lens. Cosmopolitan Ethics, Aesthetics, and Confucianism: Kang Youwei's Great Community Ban Wang, Professor of Chinese Literature, Stanford University. Co-sponsored by the Institute for the Humanities. November 13, 2007 (audio
)
China Through a Global Lens. The China Threat: New Facts or Old Scares? Andrew Ross, Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis, New York University. November 27, 2007 (audio
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Chinese Pasts in a Global Present. Quemoy on the Front Line: Militarization and Modernity in a Cold War Flashpoint (1949-1992) Michael Szonyi, John L. Loeb Associate Professor of the Humanities, Department of East Asian Languages and Civilization, Harvard University. January 22, 2008 (audio
)
Chinese Pasts in a Global Present. Revolutionary Alcehmy: Shanghai's "January Revolution: Reinterpreted Yiching Wu, Michigan Society of Fellows and Assistant Professor of Anthropology and History. January 29, 2008. (audio
)
Chinese Pasts in a Global Present. China's Capitalism, Confucianism, and the New Nationalism Lionel Jensen, Associate Professor of East Asian Languages and Cultures and History, University of Notre Dame. February 5, 2008 (audio
)
Chinese Pasts in a Global Present. Why Didn't Zhao Mingcheng Send Letters to his Wife, Li Qingzhao, When he was Away? Ronald Egan, Professor of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies, UC Santa Barbara (audio
)

