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Asian Studies

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Asian Studies News

Bomb Magazine Interviews Artist and Filmmaker Tiffany Sia ’10 about Her New Book, On and Off-Screen Imaginaries

Bard alumna Tiffany Sia ’10 thinks and works across text and film. Her newest book, On and Off-Screen Imaginaries, is a collection of six essays that grapple with the complexities of post-colonial experience. The first three essays focus on new Hong Kong cinema and examine the national security policies, censorship, surveillance that followed Hong Kong’s mass protests in 2019 and 2020. The second half of the book “abruptly drifts toward other geographies,” says Sia.

Bomb Magazine Interviews Artist and Filmmaker Tiffany Sia ’10 about Her New Book, On and Off-Screen Imaginaries

Bard alumna Tiffany Sia ’10 thinks and works across text and film. Her newest book, On and Off-Screen Imaginaries, is a collection of six essays that grapple with the complexities of post-colonial experience. The first three essays focus on new Hong Kong cinema and examine the national security policies, censorship, surveillance that followed Hong Kong’s mass protests in 2019 and 2020. The second half of the book “abruptly drifts toward other geographies, specifically the US, as I challenge how dominant Asian American aesthetics conceive of a falsely unified imaginary of Asia and its politics,” says Sia. She reimagines the work of Vietnamese American photographer An-My Lê in one essay and the work of Taiwanese filmmaker King Hu in another. “The essays trace a shift in my focus beyond Hong Kong––toward the ‘elsewhere’ sites of the Cold War, such as Vietnam, Taiwan, and even Lithuania and Turkey, in brief mention––and facile East-West tensions to illuminate a lattice of North-South tensions and their vexing histories and politics,” says Sia, who recently won the prestigious 2024 Art Baloise Prize, which carries an award of approximately $33,400.
Read the interview in Bomb

Post Date: 07-09-2024

Bard Students Win Honors for Chinese Calligraphy Works in National Expo

Under the guidance of Visiting Assistant Professor of Chinese Huiwen Li, five Bard College students, Timothy Weigand ’25, Lydia Lu ’26, Margo Ganton ’25, Jiyu Kwon ’26, and Yimeng Zhao ’26, were selected as finalists to exhibit their works of Chinese calligraphy in the National Chinese Expo of Student Works, an annual event organized by the American Academy of International Culture and Education (AAICE).

Bard Students Win Honors for Chinese Calligraphy Works in National Expo

Under the guidance of Visiting Assistant Professor of Chinese Huiwen Li, five Bard College students, Timothy Weigand ’25, Lydia Lu ’26, Margo Ganton ’25, Jiyu Kwon ’26, and Yimeng Zhao ’26, were selected as finalists to exhibit their works of Chinese calligraphy in the National Chinese Expo of Student Works. This annual event, organized by the American Academy of International Culture and Education (AAICE), aims to promote cultural understanding between the peoples of China and the United States and to help students become cultural ambassadors. The theme of this year’s expo was “The Joy of Chinese Language and Culture Learning.” The Bard College team was honored with a trophy, and professor Huiwen Li received a certificate of appreciation for their participation in the final exhibition.
See selected works by Bard students at AAICE

Post Date: 02-29-2024

Ian Buruma for New York Times Opinion: “The 17th-Century Heretic We Could Really Use Now”

“The Enlightenment philosopher Baruch Spinoza almost died for his ideals one day in 1672,” writes Ian Buruma, Paul W. Williams Professor of Human Rights and Journalism, in an opinion piece for the New York Times. In the United States in 2024, “in a time of book-banning, intellectual intolerance, religious bigotry, and populist demagoguery, [Spinoza’s] radical advocacy of freedom still seems fresh and urgent,” Buruma argues.

Ian Buruma for New York Times Opinion: “The 17th-Century Heretic We Could Really Use Now”

“The Enlightenment philosopher Baruch Spinoza almost died for his ideals one day in 1672,” writes Ian Buruma, Paul W. Williams Professor of Human Rights and Journalism, in an opinion piece for the New York Times. Buruma writes that, during Spinoza’s lifetime, his arguments for reason and intellectual liberty “were considered so inflammatory that his authorship had to be disguised.” Now, in the United States in 2024, “in a time of book-banning, intellectual intolerance, religious bigotry, and populist demagoguery, his radical advocacy of freedom still seems fresh and urgent,” Buruma argues.
Read More in the New York Times

Post Date: 02-20-2024
More Asian Studies News
  • Bard College Broadens Summer Engagement in China

    Bard College Broadens Summer Engagement in China

    Despite China’s status as a major world leader, few American students are returning to study abroad in China. Last semester, only about 700 US students were in China, compared to more than 11,000 prior to the pandemic. In opposition to this trend, Bard is expanding its engagement in China. 

    Malia Du Mont ’95, Bard’s Vice President for Strategy and Policy and the first person to earn a BA in Chinese from Bard, stated, “The US and China will play a major role in determining the future of the planet we share, so it is our responsibility as educators to create opportunities for young people from both countries to learn from each other. In the context of challenging political relations and the rise of artificial intelligence, we must strengthen our commitment to the humanities and nurture many forms of communication, including through music and the arts.”

    Underscoring the College’s commitment, President Leon Botstein returned to China in June to spend two weeks in the cities of Xiamen and Ningbo, where he conducted concerts and met with high school and university students and administrators. President Botstein also attended a concert in Ningbo conducted by Oscar-winning composer and Dean of the Bard College Conservatory of Music Tan Dun.

    In July, Bard College Conservatory of Music Director Frank Corliss taught for a week at the Shandong University of the Arts (SUA) in Jinan, concluding with a performance by the students and Corliss with members of the faculty and the director of SUA. The director of SUA, GQ Wang, is eager for continued visits by Bard Conservatory faculty and a trip by Graduate Vocal Arts Program Associate Director Kayo Iwama is planned for the coming academic year.

    Following the week in Jinan, Frank Corliss traveled to Changsha where he joined Bard Conservatory Dean Tan Dun and four percussion students of the Conservatory (Maddy Dethof, Jonathan Collazo BM/BA ’19, APS ’24, Estaban Ganem MM ’24; Arnav Shirodkar BM/BA ’24) for concerts with Tan Dun and the Changsha Symphony Orchestra. Tan Dun led the students and Frank Corliss in two of his pieces for voice, piano, and percussion ensemble, and in his recent arrangement of Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring for two pianos and percussion. The students, with the Changsha Symphony, also gave the premiere of a piece by Tan Dun “Noa Concerto” for four percussionists and orchestra. The students played on specially made replicas of ancient bronze bells recently discovered in Changsha. The week of concerts also included a performance featuring the Bard String Quartet: Bard Director of Asian Recruitment and Institutional Relations Shawn Moore BM/BA ’11, Fangxi Liu BM/BA ’16, Lin Wang BM/BA ’12, and Zhang Hui APS ’17.  There was also a panel discussion at the Changsha Symphony on Education and Music with Tan Dun, Frank Corliss, and Changsha Symphony President Wang Zhi.
     
    Bard Baltimore students visit Temple of Heaven in Beijing. Photo by Chelsea Nakabayashi
    Bard Baltimore students visit Temple of Heaven in Beijing. Photo by Chelsea Nakabayashi
    At a time when language instruction is being cut in many American high schools and institutions of higher education, Chinese language is offered throughout the Bard Early College network. This summer, student cohorts from both Bard High School Early College Baltimore (Bard Baltimore) and Bard High School Early College DC (Bard DC) traveled separately to China. From July 21 to August 5, Bard Baltimore students visited Baltimore's sister city of Xiamen, Maryland’s sister province of Anhui, and China’s capital Beijing as part of the Baltimore-Xiamen Sister City Committee 2024 Youth Ambassadors Program. Their two-week study tour included living and interacting with Chinese peers from local schools in Xiamen, cultural immersion experiences, and meetings with local leaders. They had the opportunity to visit cultural sites including Gulangyu Island (a UNESCO World Heritage site), Lingling Zoo (a local zoo where they saw two twin brother pandas), and Xiamen’s first mangrove-themed ecological coastal wetland park Xiatanwei. Their trip also included travel to the famous Yellow Mountains of Anhui Province and China’s capital Beijing, where they visited the Great Wall, Summer Palace, Temple of Heaven, as well as the US Embassy to attend a panel discussion on the career path of a diplomat.
    Bard Baltimore students visit the Great Wall of China. Photo by Chelsea Nakabayashi
    Bard Baltimore students visit the Great Wall of China. Photo by Chelsea Nakabayashi

    Bard DC Chinese language students had the opportunity to visit China this summer too. They spent two weeks at Yunnan Normal University in the city of Kunming, taking language classes and enjoying local food, tea, traditional dance, and other cultural experiences such as a visit to the hot springs. Interacting with local Chinese students was a key part of the program for both the Bard Baltimore and Bard DC student groups.

    As part of the Chinese language program at the Bard College main campus, Bard undergraduate students from Annandale also went to China this summer, for an eight-week intensive at Qingdao University, which has hosted Bard’s summer immersion courses for over a decade. In addition to taking language classes, participants studied Kung Fu and painting, lived with a host family for one week, and conducted cultural tours in Beijing, Tai’an, and Qingdao.

    Post Date: 08-13-2024
  • Five Bard Language Students Accepted to the National Collegiate Chinese Honor Society

    Five Bard Language Students Accepted to the National Collegiate Chinese Honor Society

    Five Bard Chinese language students have been accepted to the National Collegiate Chinese Honor Society in 2024. Aliya Lindroth ’26, Clemente Esponilla ’26, Noa Doucette ’24, Sushila Sahay ’25, and Timothy Weigand ’25 were recommended for entry by Huiwen Li, visiting assistant professor of Chinese at Bard College and a member of the Chinese Language Teachers Association, USA (CLTA-USA). The National Collegiate Chinese Honor Society was founded to recognize the outstanding academic achievement of college students in learning Chinese as a second language, and aims to encourage continuous learning in the language, literature, and culture. It is sponsored by CLTA-USA, an organization founded in 1962 and dedicated to the study of Chinese language, culture, and pedagogy, which supports the establishment and maintenance of quality Chinese programs, K-16 articulation, teacher education and professional development, and is committed to providing leadership, scholarship, and service to its members and beyond.

    Post Date: 02-02-2024
  • Professor Soonyoung Lee Speaks with Forbes about the Growing Interest in Korean Language Study

    Professor Soonyoung Lee Speaks with Forbes about the Growing Interest in Korean Language Study

    Forbes magazine reports that the number of students enrolled in Korean language classes at US colleges and universities grew from 8,449 students in 2009 to 20,000 in 2021. The motivating force behind this shift is The Hallyu, or Korean Wave, in which global popularity of South Korean pop culture and entertainment has surged, as evidenced in the appeal of K-Pop music, Korean TV shows like Squid Game, and films like Parasite in America. Soonyoung Lee, visiting assistant professor of Korean literature, language, and culture at Bard College, has noticed the demographic in her Korean film and language classes changing away from a majority of Asian and Asian American students. “The enthusiasm for Korean pop culture has transcended ethnic boundaries, drawing in a diverse cohort of students. They are not just seeking to learn a language; they are immersing themselves in a cultural phenomenon that resonates with them on multiple levels,” said Lee.
    Read More in Forbes

    Post Date: 12-12-2023
  • Bard College Awarded Funding for a Visiting Assistant Professor Position in Korean Studies

    Bard College Awarded Funding for a Visiting Assistant Professor Position in Korean Studies

    Bard College is pleased to announce that it has received funding from the Korea Foundation to support the hire of Soonyoung Lee as a visiting assistant professor in Korean Studies for the 2023–24 academic year. This hire is the first step toward building a Korean Program at Bard. The hire is part of a broader effort to expand the Asian Studies Program—including the Asian Diasporic Initiative, begun in 2021, and Bard’s first-ever Korea Week in April 2022.
     
    “We are beyond delighted to receive the support of the Korea Foundation to begin offering Korean language and literature courses at Bard for the first time,” said Nathan Shockey, associate professor of Japanese, who worked together with Heeryoon Shin, assistant professor of art history and visual culture, to bring Korean courses to Bard. “This grant gives us the opportunity to meet the long-standing student interest in and demand for Korean Studies, and we are excited to continue growing Korean at Bard as part of our expansion of the Asian Studies program.”

    Soonyoung Lee joins Bard from the University of California, Riverside, where she received her PhD in Comparative Literature and Foreign Languages in 2023. Professor Lee’s areas of research and teaching interests include contemporary Korean literature and film, Korean popular culture, East Asian film, Cold War studies, trans-Asian cultural studies, critical race theories, and postcolonial studies. She will teach courses on Korean literature, cultural history, and introductory courses to Korean language, including an online network course with Bard High School Early Colleges and the Open Society University Network (OSUN).

    The Korea Foundation is a nonprofit public diplomacy organization established in 1991 to promote awareness and understanding of Korea, and to enhance goodwill and friendships throughout the international community. To date, the Korea Foundation has established 156 professorships in 99 universities across 18 countries.


    Post Date: 08-23-2023
  • Ian Buruma for Bloomberg: “Was Trump or Brexit the Bigger Mistake?”

    Ian Buruma for Bloomberg: “Was Trump or Brexit the Bigger Mistake?”

    Polling shows the British people and Americans are coalescing around the idea that Brexit and Trump were, respectively, mistakes for each country. When it comes to long-lasting impact, however, in Ian Buruma’s view, it’s no contest which is worse. “While Brexit and the election of Trump caused severe shocks to both Britain and the US, it looks like the damage of Brexit will be worse and last longer,” writes Buruma, Paul W. Williams Professor of Human Rights and Journalism, for Bloomberg. Poor leadership is, in the long run, easier to recover from than a disastrous referendum, he writes, as the latter “cannot be easily undone.” For the United States, “as long as [Trump] does not return for another term in 2024, much of the damage he did can probably be undone.” With Brexit, no matter the change in leadership, “most people in Britain will be worse off and the country will continue to lag behind its neighbors for the foreseeable future.”
    Read More in Bloomberg

    Post Date: 12-20-2022
  • Five Bard College Students Win Prestigious Gilman International Scholarships to Study Abroad

    Five Bard College Students Win Prestigious Gilman International Scholarships to Study Abroad

    Five Bard College students have been awarded highly competitive Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarships by the U.S. Department of State. Gilman Scholars receive up to $5,000, or up to $8,000 if also a recipient of the Gilman Critical Need Language Award, to apply toward their study abroad or internship program costs. The recipients of this cycle’s Gilman scholarships are American undergraduate students attending 452 U.S. colleges and represent 50 U.S. states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. These Gilman Scholars will study or intern in 81 countries through October 2023.
     
    Written Arts major Havvah Keller ’24, from Montpelier, Vermont, has been awarded a $4,000 Gilman scholarship to study in Valparaíso, Chile, on CEA’s Spanish Language and Latin American Studies program at Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso, for spring 2023. “Receiving this scholarship means that I will be able to fulfill my dream of studying Spanish in total immersion, living with a local family in an art-filled, exuberant city, and studying Latin American and Chilean poetry and literature, as well as many other subjects such as Latin American history, Indigenous dances and arts of the Mapuche people, and making international friends of all backgrounds. I am eternally grateful to Gilman for helping me plant the seeds which will open many incredible doors for me in my life this spring, and beyond,” said Keller.
     
    Philosophy and German Studies joint major Bella Bergen ’24, from Broomfield, Colorado, has been awarded a $5,000 Gilman-DAAD scholarship to study at Bard College Berlin for spring 2023. “The Gilman Scholarship allows me to pursue studying abroad in Berlin, Germany. I have never left the country despite a deep desire to do so, and the Gilman Scholarship helps me finally accomplish this goal. As a joint major in Philosophy and German Studies, my studies and language proficiency will both benefit greatly from my time in Germany. Ich freue mich auf Berlin,” said Bergen.
     
    Art History and Visual Culture major Elsa Joiner ’24, from Dunwoody, Georgia, has been awarded a $5,000 Gilman-DAAD scholarship to study at Bard College Berlin for spring 2023. “The Gilman scholarship will enable me to study the subject of my dreams, sound art, in the city of my greatest fantasies, Berlin, Germany. With the scholarship, I plan to explore the role of sound in identity formation and develop my skills as a deep listener, eventually returning to America with the strongest ears in the world and, perhaps, the sharpest mind,” said Joiner.
     
    Art History and Visual Culture and Film Studies joint major Sasha Alcocer ’24, from New York, New York, has been awarded a $5,000 Gilman-DAAD scholarship to study at Bard College Berlin for spring 2023. “As a first-generation American, I am incredibly honored and humbled by the support from the Gilman scholarship to pursue this unique opportunity to learn from and connect with like-minded international students and Berlin-based creatives. Having grown up in New York City, I’ve always been interested in artistic communities and cultural history, therefore Berlin could not be a better place to be immersed in for my studies abroad,” said Alcocer.
     
    Asian Studies and GIS joint major Kelany De La Cruz ’24, from Bronx, New York, has been awarded a $5,000 Gilman scholarship, in addition to a $5,000 Fund for Education Abroad (FEA) scholarship and a $5,000 Freeman ASIA scholarship, to study in Taipei, Taiwan, on the CET Taiwan program for spring 2023. “To me these scholarships mean encouragement to follow my academic and professional dreams because I would not have been able to study abroad without them,” said De La Cruz.
     
    Since the program’s establishment in 2001, over 1,350 U.S. institutions have sent more than 36,000 Gilman Scholars of diverse backgrounds to 155 countries around the globe. The program has successfully broadened U.S. participation in study abroad, while emphasizing countries and regions where fewer Americans traditionally study. 
     
    As Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said, “People-to-people exchanges bring our world closer together and convey the best of America to the world, especially to its young people.”
     
    The late Congressman Gilman, for whom the scholarship is named, served in the House of Representatives for 30 years and chaired the House Foreign Relations Committee. When honored with the Secretary of State’s Distinguished Service Medal in 2002, he said, “Living and learning in a vastly different environment of another nation not only exposes our students to alternate views but adds an enriching social and cultural experience. It also provides our students with the opportunity to return home with a deeper understanding of their place in the world, encouraging them to be a contributor, rather than a spectator in the international community.”
     
    The Gilman Program is sponsored by the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA) and is supported in its implementation by the Institute of International Education (IIE). To learn more, visit: gilmanscholarship.org
    Read more

    Post Date: 12-20-2022

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2025 Past Events

  • Tuesday, May 6, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, May 6, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, April 29, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, April 29, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, April 22, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, April 22, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, April 15, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, April 15, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Friday, April 11, 2025 
    Preston Theater  7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Inspired by real events occured in the People's Republic of China, A Touch of Sin 天注定 (2014) weaves together four distinct stories to reflect on the growing social inequalities, corruption, and moral erosion in contemporary Chinese society as a result of its rapid modernization. The film's director, Jia Zhangke, is one of the most renowned contemporary Chinese filmmakers and known for his documentary-style realism and focus on the lives of marginalized and working people. Snacks and light refreshments will be served. 

  • Tuesday, April 8, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, April 8, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Wednesday, April 2, 2025 
    By Luwei Wang, Ph.D. Candidate
    University of Wisconsin, Madison

    Olin Humanities, Room 102  5:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
    The imagination of surveillance cameras and the digital media as “compound eyes” is a dominant motif in contemporary Chinese critical and cultural production. This concept resonates deeply within Chinese visual culture and film, where the compound eye functions as both a technological reality and a symbolic structure. In this talk, I examine this intersection through Xu Bing’s experimental art film Dragonfly Eyes (2017). My analysis focuses on Xu Bing’s distinctive approach of repurposing the found surveillance footage, through which he subverts traditional power dynamics, and transforms the surveillance apparatus into an object of critical reflection. By defamiliarizing audiences from the machine vision they have grown accustomed to, the film disrupts the neutrality of digital seeing. In doing so, it prompts reflection on deep-
    seated anxieties in the digital age—including the takeover of visual representation by digital media, the alienation from lived experience, the obsession with achieving a totalized and comprehensive replication of reality, and the estrangement from nature. I argue that Dragonfly Eyes fundamentally engages with these concerns by constructing an intricate relationship between surveillance footage, webcam recordings, the film’s protagonists, and the audience. Blurring the boundaries between viewing subject and object, the film positions its protagonists as both narrators and characters, oscillating between reality and fiction, observer and observed. Through this interplay, Dragonfly Eyes invites contemplation on the pervasive impact of digital surveillance and the shifting nature of visuality in the contemporary world.

  • Tuesday, April 1, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, April 1, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Friday, March 28, 2025 
    Preston Theater  7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    In the Mood for Love 花样年华 (2000) is perhaps the most acclaimed work of Wong Kar-wai, the renowned Hong Kong filmmaker, known for his distinctive and visually captivating style. Set in 1960s Hong Kong, the film tells the romance unfolding between two neighbors, Mr. Chow (played by Tony Leung) and Mrs. Chan (played by Maggie Cheung), who develop feelings for each other but never act on them. The film is considered a visual masterpiece and explores themes of longing, isolation, and intimacy, common in many of Wong Kar-wai's films. Snacks and light refreshments will be served. 

  • Tuesday, March 25, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, March 25, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, March 18, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, March 18, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, March 11, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, March 11, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Monday, March 10, 2025 
    Online Event  2:00 pm – 3:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
    CLICK HERE FOR THE LECTURE LINK!

    The talk will focus on the introduction of oracle bone inscriptions (OBI), the archaic Chinese used in Shang dynasty ca. 1600-1100 BCE, including the samples of inscriptions on ox bones and turtle shells and how to read them, even with a minimal knowledge in modern Chinese.  The talk will then explain the pivotal role of OBI in studying  the beginning of Chinese writing long before 1600 BCE, and in tracing the Chinese writing long after 1046 BCE till modern age.

    Kuang Yu Chen received his Ph.D. degree in chemistry from Yale University. He is Distinguished professor (emeritus) of chemistry and an adjunct Professor of east Asian Languages and cultures at Rutgers University in New Jersey. He has published over 120 papers in chemistry.  He is an elected fellow of AAAS (American Association for the Advancement of Science) for his work in chemistry, particularly polyamine biochemistry and cell aging, and molecular biology. His interests include humanities areas centered around Shang oracle bone inscriptions, genesis of pristine writings, and molecular archaeology. He has published over 50 articles in these areas. His book 商代甲骨中英讀本 Reading of Shang Inscriptions was published by Shanghai People's Publishing House in 2017. The book has been translated into French, Korean, and English. A Spanish translation is in the final phase of preparation. His other book 秦簡中英讀本 Reading of Qin Bamboo Slips was published in 2024. He was one of the keynote speakers at the first World Conference of Classics held in Beijing in November 2024.

  • Tuesday, March 4, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, March 4, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Thursday, February 27, 2025 
    Andrew Campana, Assistant Professor, Cornell University
    Olin Humanities, Room 102  5:00 pm – 6:30 pm EST/GMT-5
    This talk will draw from the just-published book, Expanding Verse, and look at experimental poetic practice in Japan over the last hundred years, focusing on poetry in engagement with cinema in the 1920s and Augmented Reality poetry in the 2010s. Drawing together approaches from literary, media, and disability studies, we will consider how poets push back against the new media technologies of their day, find new possibilities at the edge of media, and in so doing challenge dominant conceptions of both who counts as a poet, and what counts as poetry.

  • Tuesday, February 25, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, February 25, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, February 18, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, February 18, 2025 
    A talk by Soonyoung Lee
    Reem-Kayden Center Laszlo Z. Bito '60 Auditorium  5:30 pm – 6:30 pm EST/GMT-5
    This talk explores two prominent imaginaries of the future in South Korean science fiction: the dystopian visions portrayed in Netflix’s global hits such as Hellbound, All of Us Are Dead, and Sweet Home, and the radical futures articulated in women’s science fiction literature by authors like Kim Bo-young and Yun Ihyŏng. Netflix dramas employ horror and fantasy genres to critique societal issues such as class inequality, school violence, and systemic corruption, yet paradoxically normalize militaristic and Cold War ideologies. In contrast, South Korean women’s science fiction uses feminist and ecological frameworks to challenge established binaries while addressing Anthropocene crises and women’s lived experiences. Together, these narratives critique contemporary social structures and envision alternative futures, offering profound insights into the intersection of culture, politics, and imagination.
     

  • Tuesday, February 18, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, February 11, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, February 11, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Monday, February 10, 2025 
    A talk by Aliju Kim
    Olin Humanities, Room 102  5:30 pm – 6:30 pm EST/GMT-5
    Korean travel writings under Japanese colonial rule (1910–1945) are often interpreted as imperial propaganda, yet this narrative overlooks the subversive potential of decadence as a literary aesthetic in these works. This talk examines two examples of Korean travel writings that are set in colonial or semi-colonial cities, written around the Second Sino-Japanese War: Yi Hyosŏk’s Harbin (Haŏlbin), set in Harbin, and Chŏng Pisŏk’s This Atmosphere (I punwigi), set in Beijing. In these stories, the foreign cities present as disquietingly uncanny sites of identification and critique for the Korean travelers. Where Yi’s Harbin laments the loss of urban utopia, Chŏng’s This Atmosphere envisions a violent renewal through the city’s destruction. Together, these works show a resistance to the narrative of capitalist-imperial modernity as progress. Situating the texts within the broader goals of imperial propaganda, this talk highlights the imaginative possibilities that emerge through decadence.

  • Thursday, February 6, 2025 
    A talk by Soonyoung Lee
    Olin Humanities, Room 102  5:30 pm – 6:30 pm EST/GMT-5
    This talk explores two prominent imaginaries of the future in South Korean science fiction: the dystopian visions portrayed in Netflix’s global hits such as Hellbound, All of Us Are Dead, and Sweet Home, and the radical futures articulated in women’s science fiction literature by authors like Kim Bo-young and Yun Ihyŏng. Netflix dramas employ horror and fantasy genres to critique societal issues such as class inequality, school violence, and systemic corruption, yet paradoxically normalize militaristic and Cold War ideologies. In contrast, South Korean women’s science fiction uses feminist and ecological frameworks to challenge established binaries while addressing Anthropocene crises and women’s lived experiences. Together, these narratives critique contemporary social structures and envision alternative futures, offering profound insights into the intersection of culture, politics, and imagination.
     

  • Tuesday, February 4, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, February 4, 2025 
    Monica W. Cho
    Reem-Kayden Center Laszlo Z. Bito '60 Auditorium  5:30 pm – 6:30 pm EST/GMT-5
    This talk illuminates the troubling figure of the postwar yŏdaesaeng (female college student) in two short stories: Han Mu-suk’s “Abyss with Emotions” (Kamjŏngi innŭn simyŏn, 1957) and Son So-hŭi’s “The Sunlight of That Day” (Kunalŭi haetbitŭn, 1960). Yŏdaesaeng encapsulates the troubling memories of Japanese colonialism and the Korean War, as well as principles of the postwar ideologies within her youthful college-educated body in the two stories. I discuss the yŏdaesaeng by first historicizing her colonial progenitor, yŏhaksaeng (schoolgirl), to historically contextualize the Han and Son’s experiences as yŏhaksaeng. I also touch on how colonial writers have mobilized the yŏhaksaeng figure and their descent into madness as fictional representations of modernity and ethnonationalism. In examining Han and Son’s postwar yŏdaesaeng and their descent into madness as both an escape from censorship and as a method of radical resistance against patriarchy, this talk shows how postwar women writers reclaim the exploited figure of the yŏhaksaeng and their madness by rejecting the very use of national representation by focusing on yŏdaesaeng’s feminine desires and experiences. This kind of writing practice has allowed women writers to recuperate their own autonomy as writers, women, and yŏhaksaeng-pasts in the immediate postwar era.

  • Tuesday, February 4, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, January 28, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  6:00 pm – 7:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

  • Tuesday, January 28, 2025 
      Please join us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
    Kline, College Room  5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EST/GMT-5
    Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.

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Annandale-on-Hudson, New York 12504-5000
Phone: 845-758-6822
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