As part of the Digital China network, BICC staff Robert Bickers, Jamie Carstairs and Tehyun Ma, have been involve in preparing a pop-up exhibiton at the Bristol City Museum (9 February) and M-Shed (10 February). For fuller details see the ‘Visualising China’ blog.
Category Archives: Seminars
Call for papers: Workshop on Animals in Asian history, society and thought
Call for papers: BICC Workshop: Animals in Asian history, society, thought
Manchester, January 24-26 January, 2013, Manchester
While rice dominates the modern view of Asia, animals have always played a crucial in Chinese and Japanese society, history and thought. This workshop attempts to shift the perspective and discuss Asian notions of animals in their understanding and management of nature. Are animals an overlooked topic in Asian studies? What role did they actually play in Asian thought, as a resource, as a living being, and in state politics and individual lives? What was the relation between humans and animals and how can such an approach be used to understand changes in Asia society and approaches to fields of scientific and technological development? The workshop aims at historical and cross-cultural comparison. It has identified three core perspectives (1) Rites and resources; (2) Planning living beings, state management of animals and people. (3) Scholarly things, living creatures: animals in literature and art.
Scholars across the humanities, social sciences and science studies are invited to submit proposals on any topic pertaining to the study of animals in Asia. The conference will operate as a workshop (works-in-progress are welcome). Each paper will be discussed individually following a brief presentation by the author and discussion. Confirmed participants include Roel Sterckx (Cambridge, UK), Vincent Goossaert (CNRS, France), and Han Yi (IHNS, China).
Proposals must include a title and an abstract of no more then 250 words and can be submitted electronically to dagmar.schaefer@manchester.ac.uk. Participants will be notified of their selection by Dec, 15, 2013. Limited funding is available to help cover travel and lodging for participants.
Date of workshop: January 24-26 January, 2013, Manchester
Professor Dagmar Schäfer , Chair, Centre for Chinese Studies (CCS), School of Arts, Languages, and Cultures (SALC)
Introducing the new BICC website
Welcome! The BICC website today relaunches in its new format, combining a record of the journey undertaken so far, with details of our new and forthcoming activities across the three partners — the Universities of Bristol, Manchester and Oxford — as well as the institutions in which our community of former students and staff are now working. Based now at the University of Bristol, BICC research is taking place across the United Kingdom, from Aberdeen in the north, down to the Southwest of England, and of course in China itself. It involves a very wide range of international academic partners and forms of collaboration and interaction with different stakeholders beyond the university sector, and it continues to keep postgraduate training at the heart of its activities.