Distinguished Lecture Podcasts: Prof Qin Hui & Prof Yuri Pines

For those who missed the February or March 2016 Distinguished Lectures by Professor Qin Hui, Tsinghua University and Professor Yuri Pines we are pleased to provide these podcasts.

Prof Qin Hui: “Confucian Values and English Constitutional Monarchy: Historical Routes of China’s Modernization”

Prof Yuri Pines, “Empire without Emperors? Rethinking Aspects of China’s Modernisation”

SYNOPIS FOR PROF QIN HUI

When “cultural differences” and “civilizational clashes” are popular discourses in our intellectual thinking today, it is hard to imagine Confucian values have any affinity with Western democratic values and institutions. When Chinese Confucian scholar/officials first encountered the West in the latter half of the 19th century, however, they identified Western institutions such as English Constitutional Monarchy as very much representing Confucian values—in its true and authentic sense.

This lecture will highlight the enthusiastic embrace of Western democratic institution by a host of late Qing Confucian scholar/officials, from the first Chinese ambassador to Britain Guo Songtao (1818-1891) to Zhang Shusheng (1824-1884), a powerful Qing official whose will was for China to adopt Western democratic policy as the “foundation” for a Confucian state. They saw, for instance, the “loyalty” the English people expressed towards their Queen/King was most sincere precisely because they were detached from power. Indeed, the decency of the English constitutional monarchy ignited the dormant “ancient Confucianism” in these late Qing Confucian scholar/officials who allied themselves with Western democratic institutionalism to fight against the age-old enemy of Confucianism: the notorious and cruel dictator the First Emperor of Qin (260-210 BC).

But there was also a strong force in modern Chinese history that yearned for the wealth and power of the nation through a modern-day First Emperor facilitated by an alliance of the traditional “Legalist” thought and radical authoritarian ideology from the West. Confucianism, in any case, had not been in that company.

Prof Qin HuiProfessor Qin Hui 秦晖 is Professor of History at Tsinghua University, China. His research has covered several fields in economic history, social history and history of ideas. He has published more than twenty books including Fields and Garden Poetry and Rhapsodies (田园诗与狂想曲), Ten Treatises on Tradition (传统十论), Out of the Imperial System (走出帝制), Common Baseline (共同的底线), Issues and Isms (问题与主义), Revelations from South Africa (南非的启示).

SYNOPIS FOR PROF YURI PINES

China’s republican revolution of 1911 is overwhelmingly considered – notwithstanding ongoing debates over its nature, course, and outcomes-a necessary and positive step on the country’s path toward social and political “modernization.” Yet if viewed in the context of traditional Chinese political culture, the haphazard abolition of the millennia-old monarchic form of rule appears as less prudent. In this talk Prof Pines addressed the short and long-term repercussions of China’s transformation from a monarchy into a republic and reassessed its political and cultural consequences. This renewed analysis of the advantages and disadvantages of China’s abolition of monarchic rule may be of interest to historians of traditional and modern China and also of some relevance to those concerned with China’s ongoing attempts to redefine its cultural image.

yuriBorn in Kiev, Ukraine, in 1964 Yuri Pines works at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His research focuses on political thought of pre-imperial (pre-221 BCE) China and on the political culture of imperial China. He is also involved in studies of political, social, and religious history of pre-imperial and early imperial (Qin) China and of early Chinese historiography.

Spring Term language classes – week 1 underway

Join one of our friendly classes this Spring term with our excellent teachers from Fudan University in Shanghai. With up to 20 different levels of language courses running Monday to Thursday evenings from 6pm till 8pm there should be a class to suit you.  Beginner level classes run each evening so book now to start learning.

All classes start w/b 18 April 2016 and take place in the Confucius Institute for Scotland at Abden House, 1 Marchhall Crescent, EH16 5HP.

Hello

If you are unsure what level of class might best suit you please get in touch with us. We will arrange a meeting with one of our teachers the week before classes start to assess the best class for you.

Click here for full details of the courses on offer from April-June 2016.

If you have any questions do get in touch. Call on 0131 662 2180 or email otherwise simply register online for the course you want to take.

HSK Exam 02 Dec 17-online registration by 2 Nov

Registration is now open for the Decemer HSK Exam Diet.  The registration deadline for the online exam is Thursday 2 November.  The online exam has a later deadline of Thursday 16 Nov 2016.

We recommend that  only candidates who are proficient in using a keyboard to input characters should apply for the online exam.

For more information on the HSK and HSKK and to register please visit our main HSK page here.

Win a trip to Shanghai in Writing/Photography Contest

Have you been to China? Did you visit Shanghai?  Even if you have only read a book about Shanghai or China, you can still can take part in a writing or photography contest to win a trip to China.

Shanghai Get Together is the 4th Writing and Photography Contest run by Shanghai Library which offers first and second prize winners the opportunity to win a trip to China.Third prize winners will receive specially made gifts.

Applications for this contest is now open to people from overseas. Simply submit a short article or photograph (or both) to share your impressions, experiences and stories.

This competition is run by Shanghai Library. For entry requirements and detailed information, please visit Shanghai Library web page here.

Shanghai Library provide our Institute with a selection of books on an annual basis under their Window of Shanghai programme.  In previous competitions we have had a third prize winner!

Good Luck!

city scene

Office closed for Good Friday 19 April 2019

Please note that our office will be closed for a summer break, from 02 – 06 August. We will re-open on Monday 09 August.

Our Autumn term will start from 27 September. Full timetable can be found HERE.

Asian Studies Seminar: Philip Clart, 12 February 2019, 6-8pm

The second Asian studies seminar series of this semester take place on Tuesday 12 February in Project Room (1.06), 50 George Square, University of Edinburgh, EH8 9JU

In the Taiwanese context, divination refers to a set of different techniques for obtaining supernaturally sourced knowledge, ranging from simple yes and no answers revealed by the dropping of so-called divination blocks to extended dialogues between humans and deities through the services of an entranced spirit-medium. This presentation introduces a new database of records, spanning from the early 19080s to the present, of questions posed by believers to the deities of a central Taiwanese spirit-writing cult, and of the answers received by them. I will endeavour to demonstrate how such primary data can be used to study folk beliefs and their social contexts.

Philip Clart is Professor of Chinese Culture and History at the University of Leipzig, Germany. He received his Ph.D. in Asian Studies from the University of British Columbia, Canada, in 1997; prior to coming to Leipzig he taught at the University of British Columbia (1996-1998) and at the University of Missouri-Columbia (1998-2008). He is the editor of the Journal of Chinese Religions and co-editor (with Elisabeth Kaske) of the monograph series Leipziger Sinologische Studien. His main research areas are popular religion and new religious movements in Taiwan, religious change and state/religion relations in China, as well as literature and religions of the late imperial period (10th-19th c.). His monographs include Han Xiangzi: The Alchemical Adventures of a Daoist Immortal (University of Washington Press, 2007) and Die Religionen Chinas (Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2009). He has edited or co-edited Religion in Modern Taiwan: Tradition and Innovation in a Changing Society (University of Hawai‘i Press 2003), The People and the Dao: New Studies of Chinese Religions in Honour of Daniel L. Overmyer (Institute Monumenta Serica, 2009), Chinese and European Perspectives on the Study of Chinese Popular Religions (Boyang Publishing, 2012), Religious Publishing and Print Culture in Modern China: 1800-2012 (De Gruyter, 2015), and Hundert Jahre Ostasiatisches Institut an der Universität Leipzig (Leipziger Universitätsverlag, 2016).

All Welcome!

 

China’s Mobile Library takes to the road

Interest in the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland’s (RZSS) two giant pandas, Tian Tian and Yang Guang, extends well beyond Edinburgh Zoo’s home base in Corstorphine.

The pandas are here on a ten year loan and during their extended stay in Scotland, Sandie Robb, Senior Education Officer for RZSS has developed a much lauded outreach programme for Scottish schools. This year, our Institute, is working  to extend the reach of her work through a special programme of CPD and pupil education. As part of the overall ‘Beyond the Panda’ programme, Sandie Robb is now travelling around the country taking the ‘China Mobile Library’ to schools not only in the central belt but to the the Highlands and,the Islands as well as the Lowlands and Borders.

Mobile Library

In January, Fife school, Milton of Balgonie Primary, was the first in 2016 to welcome Sandie and her ‘panda box’.  The contents of the box include games, jigsaws and other activities to stimulate learning and classroom discussion. The materials introduce age appropriate Chinese language elements.

The first two months of the year have seen the Mobile Library visit snowy Newtonmore for a period giving primary schools there and in Aviemore, Alvie, Kingussie and Gergask the chance to start to start to explore the habitat and habits of Giant Pandas.

Mobile Library

CPD sessions for teachers are also part of the package which ensure that staff within participating schools have the opportunity to derive maximum return from the progarmme.  There is also the option to buy a ‘Panda Box’ for a school to enable staff to continue to stimulate the pupils using the materials which, as well as being hugely enjoyed by the students, have been developed to match Curriculum for Excellence outcomes.

With East Dunbarton, East Ayrshire and Cambuslang also enjoying visits, the mobile library will be heading to more schools throughout the year.

For request a visit, or for more information and resources please visit the Beyond the Panda website.

 

Language Show Live SECC Glasgow: 11&12 March

The five Confucius Institutes of Scotland will come together to exhibit at the Language Show Live Scotland on 11 & 12 March at the SECC in Glasgow. Our stand no is 440.

With free educational seminars, language taster sessions, varied cultural activities and performances the exhibition will appeal to all those interested in language learning either professionally or personnally. Please visit the Language Show Live Scotland website for more information.

With around 100 exhibitors the show will give parents, pupils, teachers and anyone interested in language learning a great opportunity to find out what is going on in the languages field.

Coordinated by the Confucius Institute for Scotland’s Schools (CISS) which is based within SCILT in the University of Strathclyde, CISS staff have been working on the evolution of the exhibition as well as the programme of seminars and entertainment to ensure that Chinese language is well represented at the show.

Low Carbon Development, China 22 March 2016

Dr Yong Geng, Dean of the School of Environmental Science and Engineering at Shanghai Jiao Tong University will visit Edinburgh and deliver a morning lecture on 22 March 2016 at the Edinburgh Centre for Carbon Innovation. Dean Geng will briefly present the key findings of his research in the area of circular economy and low carbon development in order to identify possible opportunities for collaboration and partnership with colleagues in Scotland. 

This is a FREE event running from 08.30am-10.0am but places are limited.  For more details please contact Siobhan Dunn at ECCI.

Biography

Dr Yong Geng is a Dean of the School of Environmental Science and Engineering at Shanghai Jiao Tong University – one of China’s oldest and most prestigious universities. Shanghai Jaio Tong recently signed a Memorandum of Understanding to work with the University of Edinburgh. The agreement is the first of its kind between the two institutions. The relationship will create opportunities for partnerships drawing on the research expertise and innovation of Edinburgh’s School of Geosciences and the Edinburgh Centre for Carbon Innovation (ECCI). Dean Geng holds a doctorate in Chemical Engineering and is a Distinguished Professor in the School of Environmental Science and Engineering. He is the recipient of numerous and awards and honours and he sits on the boards of many international scientific committees and international journals.

Dean Geng will speak about his primary research area in the circular economy and low carbon development in China. This is a rare opportunity to hear one of China’s preeminent scholars in this area. If you would like to attend please register via the ling below or contact Siobhan Dunn at siobhan.dunn@ed.ac.uk.

DATE: 22 March 2016
TIME: 8:30am to 10:00am
VENUE: Edinburgh Centre for Carbon Innovation

Distinguished Lecture: Yuri Pines 17 March 6pm

Empire without Emperors?
Rethinking aspects of China’s “modernization”

China’s republican revolution of 1911 is overwhelmingly considered— notwithstanding ongoing debates over its nature, course, and outcomes—a necessary and positive step on the country’s path toward social and political “modernization.” Yet if viewed in the context of traditional Chinese political culture, the haphazard abolition of the millennia-old monarchic form of rule appears as less prudent.

In this talk Professor Pines will address short- and long-term repercussions of China’s transformation from a monarchy into a republic and reassess its political and cultural consequences. A renewed analysis of advantages and disadvantages of China’s abolition of monarchic rule may be of interest to historians of traditional and modern China and also of some relevance to those concerned with China’s ongoing attempts to redefine its cultural image.

Professor Yuri Pines

yuriBorn in Kiev, Ukraine, in 1964 Yuri Pines works at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His research focuses on political thought of pre-imperial (pre-221 BCE) China and on the political culture of imperial China. He is also involved in studies of political, social, and religious history of pre-imperial and early imperial (Qin) China and of early Chinese historiography.

His major monographs include The Everlasting Empire: Traditional Chinese Political Culture and Its Enduring Legacy (Princeton, 2012); Envisioning Eternal Empire: Chinese Political Thought of the Warring States Era and Foundations of Confucian Thought: Intellectual Life in the Chunqiu Period (Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press, 2009 and 2002). His new study, The Book of Lord Shang: Apologetics of State Power in Early China is forthcoming in Columbia University Press, 2017.

For further details see http://www.eacenter.huji.ac.il/Pines and https://huji.academia.edu/yuripines

This Distinguished Lecture from Professor Pines will take place in Lecture Theatre 2 at the University of Edinburgh’s Business School from 6pm on Thursday 17th March.   Following on from the lecture and Q&A there will be a networking drinks reception.

No booking is required.

DiaoChan: The Rise of the Courtesan, Cumbernauld Theatre

Often called the Chinese Macbeth, DiaoChan is an epic story of lust, jealousy and revenge, taken from the ancient Chinese classic The Romance of the Three Kingdoms.

After the success of last year’s production of The Autumn of Han, Red Dragonfly Productions is delighted to return with another exciting theatre adaptation of a Chinese classic ‘DiaoChan: The Rise of the Courtesan’ at:

Cumbernauld Theatre, Kildrum, Cumbernauld, North Lanarkshire G67 2BN

On Saturday 5 March 2016, 7.45pm

http://www.cumbernauldtheatre.co.uk/events/diaochan-a-chinese-legend/

The play is performed in English and in colourful traditional Han costumes. It is also suitable for 12+. The show is entertaining and accessible, and has been well received by audiences so far, proving popular with English speaking theatregoers, students and academics, and Chinese communities.

‘A wonderful experience to explore the culture and traditions of ancient China through their own mythology, in a manner that will appeal to everyone.’ “British Theatre Guide on The Autumn of Han at Edinburgh Fringe Festival

Should you have any enquiries or would wish to get group tickets/discounts, please contact the Red Dragonfly Productions by email: mic.reddragonfly@gmail.com or mobile tel: 07833538318.

Visit their website at www.reddragonflyproductions.co.uk

We look forward to seeing you in Cumbernauld.

Asian Studies Seminar Series 2nd March

The second of the three Chinese Studies Research Seminars will take place on Wednesday, March 2nd 2016 in David Hume Tower, LG.08 from 17.00-19.00

Dr Sabrina Yu (Newcastle University)
Going Back to the Hometown: A New Root-searching Movement in Contemporary Chinese Independent Cinema

It has been critically recognised that there was a root-searching movement in the 1980s in China, immediately after the Cultural Revolution, firstly in literature, then in film, exemplified by some Fifth Generation Directors’ works. This paper aims to outline a new root-searching movement emerging in Chinese independent films in the past ten years or so.

It will scrutinise this new trend within its social, cultural and filmic context in contemporary China. The speaker will argue that this new root-searching movement is different from the previous one in that root-searching is not just a subject matter or a nostalgic sentiment, but also manifested as new film aesthetics and fresh approaches to filmmaking, which have been subtly changing the landscape of contemporary Chinese cinema. This new trend will also be discussed in relation to the challenges that independent filmmaking in current China is facing, such as the lack of financial support, the restrictions on exhibition and distribution and the scarcity of audience.

Third Talk 16th March 2016

The third talk of the series this semester will take place on March 16th and will be given by Dr Liang Hongling (University of Glasgow) on “The Enlightenment, Sino-French Institute and Tel Quel: Looking at Three Moments in Sino-French Knowledge Dynamics”.

5 week/10 hour Calligraphy Course-with Chinese Proverbs: from 10 May

Take the chance to try your hand at the ancient Chinese arts of calligraphy and brush painting in a short five week/10 hour course taught by the Institute’s well known calligraphy teacher Chi Zhang.

Running every Tuesday evening from 10 May till 7 June this short course, focusing on Chinese characters, will introduce common techniques related to Chinese soft brushes and ink. Students will learn the basic strokes of Regular Style (Kai Shu), the radical parts and gain cultural understandings relating to the structure of Chinese characters.

Students can anticipate completing at least one piece of Chinese calligraphy artwork per class. The contents of this work could be a selected Chinese proverb or perhaps an ancient master’s quotation. Demonstration and plenty of personal attention will be provided during the class. This course is suitable for both beginners and advanced students.

There will be a maximum of 10 students in the class for which all materials are provided. The cost is £75 for 10 hours or £60 for concessions. Minimum enrolment of 5 is required to ensure the class goes ahead.

To book a place on this rewarding course please complete and return the registration form below along with your cheque payment made out to the University of Edinburgh.  Cash payment can be made at the Institute office

Spring2016-CalligRegFormHalfTerm

literature

HSK Online Registration closes next week 3 March

The registration deadline for the HSK March Online Exam will close on Thursday 3rd March 2016. Applicants should download, complete and return the registration form by this date.  For full details please see the HSK information section on our website.  The registration form is available here HSKapplformMarchExam2016 or on the HSK section of our site.

The next exam diet for HSK and HSKK (the oral component of the exam) will be Saturday 21 May.  Registration deadline for the offline May exam is Thursday 21 April while the online exam deadline is Thursday 5 May. The preparatory workshop will take place on Saturday 7 May.

For more details about HSK please visit the HSK information section on our website.

Chinese language teachers for Scottish schools – opportunity

The British Council’s Chinese Language Assistant programme for UK schools is now seeking applications.  If your school would like to secure a Chinese Language Assistant for the 2016/17 academic year please read on then apply via the British Council website by 31 March 2016.

Chinese language assistants work in UK schools to support an existing Mandarin provision or introduce the language and culture to students for the first time. Their role can be tailored depending on the requirements of the school – or indeed a group of up to three schools or further education colleges.  A short summary of the scheme is below.

  • You can employ a language assistant to work a minimum of 12 hours per week and a maximum of 18 hours per week.
  • It is not possible to offer a language assistant a lower allowance in return for fewer hours.

Thanks to support from Hanban, sponsor of the global Confucius Institute network, the cost to schools taking on a Chinese language assistant drop from £13.29 to only £7.20, the National Living Wage. This means the average annual costs for a Chinese language assistant working 12 hours per week for 41 weeks would be just under £3800 (inclusive of the £200 IHS fee).

Full details of the scheme are available on the British Council’s website.   Good luck!

Are you looking to work in China?

The British Council is now offering graduates the opportunity to work for ten months in universities and schools across China. But be quick – the application deadline is fast approaching! (21 February 2016)

Working as a language assistant is the perfect opportunity to spend time learning Mandarin, whilst developing invaluable transferable skills. Plus, you’ll get paid.

With teaching time limited to between 12 and 20 hours a week, being a Language Assistant gives you plenty of time to explore China and develop your language skills. Previous participants have made the most of this free time – by setting up their own business or even appearing on Chinese TV!

During your placement in China, you’ll get:

  • support from the British Council, with over 35 years’ experience working in China
  • on-going support from their partners overseas
  • a two-week induction course when you arrive, including language and culture lessons, to help you settle in and meet other language assistants
  • a free online TEFL course with practical tips to help you succeed in the classroom placement.

Salary and benefits

As a language assistant in China you can expect to be paid a comfortable salary every month. Your accommodation will be provided, flights are paid for and there is no programme fee to pay.

Eligibility

To be eligible you will need to:

  • be a native speaker of English
  • have graduated from university by the time you start your placement in August

To find out more and apply visit the website: www.britishcouncil.org/language-assistants/become/china.

You can also download this flyer of summary information Become a Language Assistant in China.

5 Week Calligraphy Character Class – May & June2016

Many people are fascinated by the beauty of Chinese calligraphy and brush painting. Sign up for this five week course and start to learn, not only the artistic skills required when working with a brush pen and ink, but also the underlying philosophy of balance and harmony.

calligraphy

The five week course is suitable for beginners and more advanced practitioners.  Beginners will be introduced to the history of Chinese calligraphy and the techniques required to use Chinese soft brushes and ink. Students will  learn the basic strokes of Regular Style (Kai Shu), and gain cultural understanding relating to the structure of Chinese characters. Students will be expected to complete at least one piece of Chinese calligraphy artwork for each class. The contents might be a Chinese proverb or an ancient master’s quotation. Each student will receive personal attention from the teacher, as well as to see teachers’ demonstration during the class.

Students who have already developed the basic skills will be given more specific tuition to assist in further development of their artistry.

This class will run from 18.00-20.00 every Tuesday evenings from 10 May to 7 June within the Confucius Institute for Scotland.  To check if places are available please call 0131 662 2180 or email.  The price for the five week course is £75(£60) inclusive of all materials used and handouts.

Please note that this course require a minimum number of enrolments. Normally class which do not reach 5 students this will be cancelled no later than 7 days before the class due to start.

To register please download and complete this form: Spring2016-CalligRegFormHalfTerm

Meantime, please enjoy this video showing Chi Zhang at work where you will also see some of the brush painting artwork made by his students.

Chinese New Year celebrations for Year of the Monkey

As the Year of the Monkey approaches celebrations are being planned around the world. This 15 day festival starts with the new moon on the first day of the lunar month and ends 15 days later with the Full Moon.  In China, the festival is really all about family but with such a large diaspora the Chinese community will come together in a variety of ways and places to mark this, the largest of all the Chinese festivals.  You can read about some of the traditions of this 15 day period here and here.

Closer to home, Universities, Confucius Institutes, community groups and civic society are planning a range of celebrations to mark the arrival of the Year of the Monkey.

  • The University of Edinburgh will celebrate the Lunar New Year in the Debating Hall of Teviot Row Students Union on 4 February from 18.00-20.00.
  • From noon till 4pm on Platform 2 at Waverley Station on Friday 5th February drop by to try out a range of Chinese crafts, get a temporary tattoo, create your own Chinese lantern and if you are lucky, catch a lion dance or a rendition of a Chinese love song.
  • On Saturday 6th February the quadrangle of Edinburgh City Chambers will reverberate to the sounds of both Scottish bagpipes and Chinese Drums as the Lord Provost’s Chinese New Year celebrations kick off at noon. Following on from the Pipes and Drums of George Watson’s College, both a Dragon and Lion dance will take place in the quad before invited guests head into the City Chambers for more entertainment and a reception.
  • Our own Institute will host its annual Chinese New Year party in Abden House on Friday 12th from 18.00-20.00 featuring games, crafts, prizes, karaoke and of course a taste of delicious jiaoazi. In the quieter corners there’s a chance to try out some Chinese crafts, Chinese Chess or even Mah-jong.  And if we are lucky with the weather the evening will end in the garden with the release of some Chinese Sky Lanterns. Booking essential.
  • 12th February is also the date when Glasgow’s Confucius Institute welcomes in the New Year at Hunter Halls in an evening of celebration of traditional Chinese culture.
  • Tuesday 23 Feb will see Heriot-Watt students and guests will mark the Chinese New Year with a concert featuring the Heriot-Watt Chamber choir and musicians from Tianjin University of Finance and Economics.

But if there are no tickets left or you don’t feel like heading out into whichever storm may be raging,curl up on Sunday 7th Feb from noon till 4pm when you can watch a live stream of the China’s most popular evening of TV – China Central Television’s Spring Festival Gala.  Running from 8pm till midnight Beijing time, viewers here should be able to watch or simply search for CCTV Spring Festival Gala live stream.

Distinguished Lecture Prof Qin Hui, Tsinghua, 10 Feb 6pm

Join us for the opening lecture in our 2016 Distinguished Lecture Series when prominent public intellectual Prof Qin Hui of Tsinghua University will consider “Chinese Culture and its Modernisation”.

Confucian Values and British Constitutional Monarchy:
Historical Routes of China’s Modernization

When “cultural differences” and “civilizational clashes” are popular discourses in our intellectual thinking today, it is hard to imagine Confucian values have any affinity with Western democratic values and institutions. When Chinese Confucian scholar/officials first encountered the West in the latter half of the 19th century, however, they identified Western institutions such as the British Constitutional Monarchy as very much representing Confucian values—in its true and authentic sense.

This lecture will highlight the enthusiastic embrace of Western democratic principles by a host of late Qing Confucian scholar/officials, from the first Chinese ambassador to Britain, Guo Songtao (1818-1891) to Zhang Shusheng (1824-1884), a powerful Qing official whose will was for China to adopt Western democratic policy as the “foundation” for a Confucian state. This group saw, for instance, the “loyalty” people expressed towards the Queen or King was most sincere precisely because the monarch was detached from power. Indeed, the decency of the British Constitutional Monarchy ignited the dormant “ancient Confucianism” in these late Qing Confucian scholar/officials who allied themselves with Western democratic practice to fight against the age-old enemy of Confucianism: the notorious and cruel dictator the First Emperor of Qin (260-210 BC).

But there was also a strong force in modern Chinese history that yearned for the wealth and power of the nation through a modern-day First Emperor facilitated by an alliance of the traditional “Legalist” thought and radical authoritarian ideology from the West. Confucianism, in this instance, was a notable exception.

Prof Qin HuiProfessor Qin Hui 秦晖 is Professor of History at Tsinghua University, China. His research has covered several fields in economic history, social history and the history of ideas. He has published more than twenty books including Fields and Garden Poetry and Rhapsodies (田园诗与狂想曲), Ten Treatises on Tradition (传统十论), Out of the Imperial System (走出帝制), Common Baseline (共同的底线), Issues and Isms (问题与主义), Revelations from South Africa (南非的启示

Please note that this talk will take place in Chinese.

Wednesday 10th February 2016
18.00-19.30
Lecture Room 2, University of Edinburgh Business School, 29 Buccleuch Place, EH8 9JS

ALL WELCOME, NO BOOKING REQUIRED

Chinese Studies Seminar Series 27 Jan 16

This semester there are three Chinese Studies seminars planned the first of which will take on Wed 27th January

January 27 17:00-19.00
Dr Marjorie Dryburgh (University of Sheffield)
Visual Histories of a Northern City: In Search of a People’s Past

This talk will take place in the University of Edinburgh 50 George Square, Lecture RoomG.02.

The second talk of this semester is outlined below.  Further info on venue and time will be confirmed nearer the date.

Wednesday, March 2  Time and Venue TBC
Dr Sabrina Yu (Newcastle University)
Going Back to the Hometown: A New Root-searching Movement in Contemporary Chinese Independent Cinema

It has been critically recognised that there was a root-searching movement in the 1980s in China, immediately after the Cultural Revolution, firstly in literature, then in film, exemplified by some Fifth Generation Directors’ works. This paper aims to outline a new root-searching movement emerging in Chinese independent films in the past ten years or so. It will scrutinise this new trend within its social, cultural and filmic context in contemporary China. I argue that this new root-searching movement is different from the previous one in that root-searching is not just a subject matter or a nostalgic sentiment, but also manifested as new film aesthetics and fresh approaches to filmmaking, which have been subtly changing the landscape of contemporary Chinese cinema. This new trend will also be discussed in relation to the challenges that independent filmmaking in current China is facing, such as the lack of financial support, the restrictions on exhibition and distribution and the scarcity of audience.

The venue and time for the  final talk in this semester’s Chinese Studies  seminar series will take place on Wednesday, March 16.   It will be given by Dr Liang Hongling (University of Glasgow) on “The Enlightenment, Sino-French Institute and Tel Quel: Looking at Three Moments in Sino-French Knowledge Dynamics”.