Newsletter 2016

  • Dear Friends of CAS,Warm greetings on a chilly winter鈥檚 day here in Boulder! 2015 was a busy year in Asian Studies.Last Spring we partnered with the College of Media, Communication, and Information (CMCI); the Center for Media, Religion, and Society
  • Friends of Asian Studies Flatirons FundCAS is excited to announce a new opportunity available to help provide long-term support to CU students and programming. Contributions to the Friends of Asian Studies Flatirons Fund will create an endowment to
  • Miriam Kingsberg (History) received the 2015 Eugene R. Kayden Book Award and the Provost's Award for Faculty Achievement for her book, Moral Nation: Modern Japan and Narcotics in Global History (UC Press, 2013). The Kayden Award workshop in February
  • The Visual Resources Center (VRC) in the Department of Art and Art History was gifted the photo archives of late CU Professor Ronald Bernier. Two grants, from ArtStor and the Visual Resources Association Foundation, allowed them to
  • Last August, 86-year-old CU alumnus Akira Horie (MMktg 1954) visited CAS and CU to see what kinds of changes had occurred on campus since his last visit. In 1952, Horie was selected as a member of the first class of Japanese 
  • Dana Tang, B.A. in Chinese Language and Literature, Class of 鈥87, has just been made partner at Gluckman Tang Architects.NEW YORK, NY 鈥 Gluckman Mayner Architects, the firm with strong roots in the design of spaces for art, is changing its name to
  • Since completing my MA, which included Arabic study in Morocco, I have been working in the field of localization as a project manager. I am based in Chicago and am thrilled to work with various languages on a daily basis. I continue to teach and
  • Program for Teaching East Asia receives new funding, expands online programs and Korea offeringsThis year, TEA passes a milestone of 18 years of continuous funding as one of the five founding centers directing the National Consortium for Teaching
  • The Tibet Himalaya Initiative (THI) at 兔子先生传媒文化作品 celebrated the success of its inaugural semester with a graduate colloquium and reception in the Koenig Alumni Center on November 11, 2015. More than twenty-five graduate students, faculty, and
  • In 2015, CAS offered 39 public events. We helped to educate well over 1,600 people on Asia-related topics. We continued the theme of 鈥淢ediating Asia鈥 throughout the spring semester of 2015 and began 鈥淭ranscultural Asia鈥 in the fall. We would like to
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