Spotlight All
- In the contemporary world, most of us move from one place to another and experience placelessness, the difficulty of building deep knowledge of and relationship with the specific culture or place we migrated to. Today nomadic culture and lifestyle
- The CU community is pleased to welcome American-Syrian composer and pianist Malek Jandali to campus on Monday, September 29. Jandali, whose visit to CU includes both a lecture and an evening concert, uses his art to highligh the atrocities in the
- On Friday, September 19, Professor Yoshikazu Kawaguchi will be at CU to address fundamental issues in effective Japanese language teaching, including such aspects as teaching Japanese phonetics, teaching kanji, and engaging students in communication
- The Center for Asian Studies is holding a Meet & Greet for CU students, faculty, and staff who are interested in Asia on Thursday, September 18, at 4:30 p.m. Join us at Innisfree Poetry Bookstore & Cafe on the Hill for an afternoon of
- Are Indian women seen as passive victims or agents of change? Please join this roundtable discussion of professors and students for a lively conversation on how Indian women are represented (or misrepresented) in Western media as we discuss popular
- The Center for Asian Studies welcomes all those who are interested in undergraduate scholarships to Japan or in taking the Japanese Language Proficiency Test. Join Susan Schmidt of the American Association of Teachers of Japanese (AATJ) on
- Caste, a social-economic-cultural-religious construction has ruled the Indian minds for over three thousand years and have gradually been institutionalized. Caste continues to serve as the fabric of Indian society, co-existing with modernity and a
- We are pleased to announce that Consul General Dong Man Han of the Consulate of the Republic of Korea in San Francisco will be at CU on Thursday, September 4 to discuss the current state of the Korean peninsula, including South Korean economic
- The Center for Asian Studies extends a hearty welcome to all new and returning CU students, faculty, and staff. We hope you had a great summer and are looking forward to another great semester here at the ÀÏ¾ÅÆ·²è.This fall, we
- Professor Padmatso of Southwest Nationalities University and Holly Gayley of the CU Religious Studies Department are co-presenting the first Luncheon Series lecture of the Fall 2014 semester, entitled "Non-Violence as a Shifting Signifier on