Episodes
Lecture by Stephen R. Bokenkamp, Arizona State University
Published 01/22/14
Talk by Mr. Peng Xuefeng, Chairman and Founder of Dacheng Law Offices
Published 01/22/14
Talk by Tamara Chin, Associate Professor of Literature, Yale-NUS, beginning 2014
Published 12/04/13
Talk by Kevin O'Brien, University of California, Berkeley
Published 11/22/13
Lecture by Pierre-Étienne Will, Chair of History of Modern China, Collège de France
Published 11/08/13
Lecture by Pierre-Étienne Will, Chair of History of Modern China, Collège de France
Published 11/08/13
Yuan: Chinese Architecture, Mongol Patrons, Asian Archaeology
Published 11/04/13
Talk by David Zweig, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
Published 10/30/13
Talk by Shih-shan Susan Huang, Rice University
Published 10/23/13
Book talk by Donald Gross, Senior Associate of Pacific Forum CSIS
Published 10/23/13
Lecture and Performance of Guqin by Dai Wei, Shanghai Conservatory of Music
Published 10/21/13
A Talk by Yang Zhishui 揚之水 on 05/28/2013 Presented in Chinese
Published 06/05/13
This talk is part of the “China Beyond the Headlines” lecture series, generously supported by Mr. Stephen Lesser on May 21st, 2013.
Published 05/23/13
A talk by Luke Li, Tsinghua University, Beijing on May 20th, 2013.
Published 05/23/13
Natural Color and Philosophical Color: A Study on the Origin of the Theory of the Relation between Colors and Directions in China by Feng Shi (Institute of Archaeology, CASS) From the Lingguang Palace to the Wu Liang Shrine Some Traces of the Imperial Art from the Late Western Han and Early Eastern Han Periods by Miao Zhe (Zhejiang University)
Published 03/15/13
A talk on the results from the archaeological survey project on Lu City by Li Min.
Published 02/27/13
This podcast is presented in Chinese. In 2003 Teng Biao was one of the “Three Doctors of Law” who complained to the National People’s Congress about unconstitutional detentions of internal migrants in the widely known “Sun Zhigang Case.”
Published 02/27/13
The I Ching, or the Book of Changes, is an ancient Chinese text––perhaps the first written document in human history––and was originally used exclusively as an oracle. Three thousand years old, the I Ching is one of the most revered books in Chinese literature, and it has inspired the most eminent Chinese scholars throughout history.
Published 11/17/12
A podcast talk by Eric Zusman, Institute for Global Environmental Strategies (IGES), on climate change reform policy efforts in China.
Published 11/17/12
Professor Qin SHAO examines urban protestors and their evolving identities by exploring what was demolished in old neighborhoods and what, besides highrises, has risen in their ruins.
Published 05/24/12
A public lecture by Dr. Michael Lackner. The presentation will shed some light on possible precedents of this new form of diagrams and give an introduction into the multi-faceted functioning of diagrams on the basis of selected material.
Published 05/24/12