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Home > Projects > Events > Past Events
Past
Events : 2008, 2007, 2006, 2005, 2004, 2003, 2002, 2001, 2000
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October
14-18, 2001
Held at Beijing, P.R. China
Encounters
and Dialogues |
| Co-sponsored
by the Institute of World Religions of the Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences, P.R. China and
The Ricci Institute for Chinese-Western Cultural
History, University of San Francisco
This
scholarly and international conference, to be
held on the 400th anniversary of Matteo Ricci’s
arrival in Beijing, will examine and review
historical and cultural encounters and dialogues
between China and the West in late Ming and
early Qing dynasties through presentations and
discussions.
The
goal of the conference is to promote research
on primary resources in Chinese-Western cultural
history and to increase awareness for preservation
of historical and cultural relics. Subjects
may include history, art, language, science,
literature, theology and comparative analysis
of editions of scholarly works. Research works
are expected to be based on new studies of primary
source materials. Special emphasis is on the
historical and cultural encounters and dialogues
between Western missionaries and Chinese people.
(top)
Conference
program
Panel
I: Diplomacy and mission before 1800
This panel offers a close look at the pre-1800
history of commercial and diplomatic relations
between China and Western countries. By examining
specific commercial or diplomatic cases, the
panelists will offer a fresh perspective as
to how circulation of goods and knowledge affected
the relationship between China and the West,
especially the China mission. Panelists are
also encouraged to examine how the above circumstances
affected later Western imperialistic rhetoric
towards China.
Panel
II: Grassroots Exchanges in Local Contexts
This panel focuses on micro-historical studies
of local Christian communities in China in the
late Ming and early Qing period. By discussing
how the "Teachings of the Lord of Heaven" spread
in selected locations, scholars will examine
the diversity, local nature as well as the national
integration of the China mission. Panelists
are also encouraged to explore how Christianity
fits in the local religious landscape of China's
different regions.
Panel
III: Presenting the Message
This panel discusses how language and literary
forms developed in the context of inter-cultural
transmission, and how the missionaries, their
converts, and the Chinese people at large dealt
with traditional and new ideas through Chinese
literary genres or grammatical features in the
Chinese language, and how interactions took
place in both directions, East and West.
Panel
IV: Religion and Science: Organic Project and
Chinese Responses
This panel will examine how the interplay of
religion and science worked both from the Western
and Chinese viewpoints during the late Ming
and early Qing period. Panelists are asked to
explore issues such as the association of Aristotelian
philosophy or science with revealed religion
as introduced by the Jesuits, as well as the
ways Chinese emperors, courtiers, literati and
other commoners understood the relationship
between Western science and religion.
Panel
V: Artistic Paradigms and Practices
This panel explores how cultural exchanges took
place in art in the late Ming and early Qing
period. Panelists are encouraged to reconstruct
not only the historical and material circumstances
of production, but also the cultural meaning
in Chinese and Western artifacts and practices
in the areas of aesthetics, perspective, optics,
and so on, with special attention to the workings
of the social networks of art.
Panel
VI: Preserving Memory: Collections on Chinese-Western
Relations
The focus of this panel is on the archival preservation
of historical documents. Panelists will present
the contents and history of some of the collections
and materials in different depositories and
discuss their significance for the study of
the Chinese-Western relations.
Panel
VII: Constructing Memory: Historiographical
Issues
This panel will explore how scholars and officials
in China and the West until the early 20th century
studied the encounters and dialogues in the
late Ming and early Qing periods, historiographical
strategies and methodologies they employed in
their research and the results and impact of
their approaches have been in the study of Chinese-Western
cultural history.
For
inquiries in the Chinese language contact:
Institute of World Religions of the
Chinese Academy
of Social Sciences
5 Jianguo Mennei Street Beijing 100732, P.R.
China
Tel: (86-10) 6513-8521 Fax: (86-10) 6522-1532
For inquiries in other languages, contact the
Ricci Institute (top)
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April
25, 2001
5:30pm
- 6:30pm, Reception follows
University of San Francisco
Lone Mountain Campus, Room 100
San Francisco, CA 94117
Home Afar:
The Life of Jewish Communities in Shanghai during
WWII |
Please
join the USF Center for the Pacific Rim and
its Ricci Institute for a free public lecture
by Dr. Peter Vamos on the life of Jewish Communities
in Shanghai during WWII.
Dr.
Peter Vamos is Research Fellow at the Center
for Advanced Holocaust Studies, U.S. Holocaust
Memorial Museum, Washington, D.C. and Lecturer
in Chinese Language and History at Karoli Gaspar
University, Hungary.
Sponsored
by the Kiriyama Chair for the Pacific Rim Studies
at the Center for the Pacific Rim and EDS-Stewart
Chair at the Ricci Institute for Chinese-Western
Cultural History
FREE
and OPEN to the Public. Reservations
recommended.
Call the USF Center for the Pacific Rim at 415-422-6357
E-mail: pacrim@usfca.edu
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March
2, 2001
8:30 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.
Lone Mountain Campus of USF, Pacific Rim Conference
Center (Rm LM 148)
2800 Turk St, between Masonic and Parker
Gateways
of Power: 21st Century Religion and Ritual in China, Tibet,
and Japan |
| Co-sponsored
byCenter for the Pacific Rim, Department of
Theology and Religious Studies, and the Ricci
Institute
A one-day symposium and reception honoring Peter
J. Coughlan, President, Kiriyama Pacific Rim
Institute focused on the ways in which some
of East Asia’s most long-lived religious
traditions are actively adapting to as well
as influencing both subtle and dramatic sociocultural
change.
This
unique event will not only bring together leading
scholars discussing the contemporary practice
of Christianity in China, Buddhism in Tibet
and Japan, and Shinto in Japan, it will also
give equal time to religious specialists from
each of these traditions. A Christian missionary,
a Tibetan-Buddhist lama, a Pure Land Buddhist
priest, and a Shinto priest will provide firsthand
perspectives on the state of religion and ritual
in their respective communities.
The
symposium's keynote speaker is Professor Catherine
Bell from Santa Clara University, a leading
specialist in the study of ritual practice and
theory. Following the presentations, ritual
performances from each of the traditions will
conclude the symposium, which is open to the
public and is sponsored by The Kiriyama Chair
for Pacific Rim Studies at the University of
San Francisco.
For
more information, please contact:
John
Nelson, Symposium Chair
Department of Theology and Religious Studies
University of San Francisco
San Francisco, CA 94117
Phone: 415-422-5093; Fax 415-422-5356; E-Mail:
nelsonj@usfca.edu.
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February
12, 2001
5:30 - 6:30 p.m.
USF Lone Mountain Campus, Room 100
Social
Change and Spiritual Development in China Today |
Free
Public Lecture presented
by
The Ricci Institute at the USF Center for Pacifc
Rim
Keynote
Speaker: Richard P. Madsen, Ph.D., Professor
of Sociology, University of California at San
Diego
China's
current pace of development brings opportunity
and disruption to every level of society. In
this crucible of change, personal commitments
and social values are being tested and refined.
These
challenges of modernization have stirred China's
soul. Today many in China actively affirm the
spiritual dimensions of their own lives. Intellectuals
and artists alike seek to strengthen their society's
value resources and moral sensitivities. Interest
increases in the wisdom traditions of classical
China and Christianity, as well as new religious
movements.
This
colloquium brings together a small group of
experienced resource persons, to begin a cross-disciplinary
conversation concerning spiritual development
in China today. Christianity in contemporary
China will be a significant, but not exclusive,
focus of discussion.
The
intent is (a) to share information currently
available from the several perspective represented
by the invited participants and (b) to move
toward establishing a network among scholars
and others, both in China and beyond, engaged
in the study of spirituality and spiritual/moral
development in contemporary China.
The
colloquium will begin with a public lecture
by Richard Madsen, Ph.D. of the University of
California--San Diego, scheduled for the late
afternoon. On the following morning, Professor
Madsen will join an invited group of twenty
colleagues for two working sessions, each consisting
of brief panel presentations and full group
discussion. The formal colloquium will end in
a luncheon meal. An informal research caucus
will meet briefly in an early afternoon session,
to discuss next steps in developing a network
among scholars interested in issues of spirituality
and spiritual/moral development in contemporary
China.
Reservations
recommended.
For more information, please contact the Ricci
Institute. (top)
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USF
Ricci Institute, 2130 Fulton Street, San Francisco, CA 94117
Tel. 415.422.6401, Fax. 415.422.2291, E-mail:
ricci@usfca.edu
Last updated:
June 4, 2008
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