The Department of East Asian Studies at Princeton University invites you to explore the culture, history, societies, politics, and languages of East Asia.
Students & auditors in the fall @Princeton course “Sources in Ancient & Medieval Japanese History,” taught by Thomas Conlan, professor of @PrincetonEAS & @PUHistory, translated the majority of ancient documents now available on joint website w/ @univkyoto: https://t.co/YipDY0Vlyf
On Monday afternoon, academic departments and programs host receptions and/or special programs for seniors and their guests. This is an opportunity for guests to meet members of the department, and, during the... https://t.co/1KIOHe36Ik
Anna Shields, a faculty member since 2015, specializes in classical Chinese literature of the Tang, Five Dynasties and Northern Song eras. Shields models “collegiality at its best,”... https://t.co/nUbwHzsHAF
Friday May 24, 2019
2 p.m., 202 Jones
Loretta Kim
Qing Borderland Administration and Modern Ethnic Identity in Northeast China
https://t.co/IYqo1dNxQy https://t.co/IYqo1dNxQy
Jialu Mi, literature professor and poet at the College of New Jersey, performed his poetry in Chinese while the audience read out loud the English translations. It was a lot of fun for all last night in 202... https://t.co/tiekdNscSc
Wednesday, March 13
202 Jones Hall, 12:00 pm
Franz Prichard
To the Limits of Visuality, and Back Again: Nakahira Takuma’s Photographic Itinerancy https://t.co/9XetdxvERL
Wednesday, March 6
202 Jones Hall, 12:00 pm
He Bian (Department of History)
The Formula of Happiness: Recipe Books, Vernacular Medicine, and the Politics of Life in Eighteenth-Century China https://t.co/yEFhWNQfBQ
Wednesday, February 27
202 Jones Hall, 12:00 pm
Guangchen Chen (Department of Comparative Literature)
The ‘Book’ as Fieldwork: The Sociability of Nature Knowledge in Early Modern Japan https://t.co/K69sBVlaaJ
Explore the history of Asians and Asian Americans affiliated with Princeton University, from the international students who enrolled in the nineteenth century to the array of campus cultural organizations today.
https://t.co/h30qY4D0aU https://t.co/QlQwBBFQ7k
Wednesday, February 6
202 Jones Hall, 12:00 pm
Federico Marcon
The ‘Book’ as Fieldwork: The Sociability of Nature Knowledge in Early Modern Japan https://t.co/ElKyTN9zT7
Wednesday, November 28, 2018, 4:30 p.m.
202 Jones, "Eavesdropping on the Perfected: Readingthe Zhenghao 真誥," a coffee-hour lecture by Stephen R. Bokenkamp
https://t.co/3i1Xt7uPdz https://t.co/3i1Xt7uPdz
Wednesday, November 7, 2018
202 Jones Hall, 12:00 pm
Paize Keulemans
“How to Read "The Romance of the Three Kingdoms" ”'
https://t.co/9jZj709W8z https://t.co/AZraLsjWnn