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2013
Conference on Biography in East Asia, 1400–1900
University of British Columbia, 2013
Principal Investigator(s): Adam Bohnet, King’s University College at the University of Western Ontario; Ihor Pidhainy, Marietta College; Leo K. Shin, University of British ColumbiaHeld at St. John’s College and the Institute of Asian Research at the University of British Columbia, the conference explored the different types of biography in East Asian countries from 1400 to 1900. Presenters challenged the traditional position maintained by past studies that the biography in China and Korea was simply a means to compartmentalize individual lives into pre-established moral categories. Papers and panel discussions examined the ways in which various standard biographies, public or private, treated their subjects. Ming Studies published a summary of the conference (2013, issue 68), and the research presented was collected in Representing Lives in China: Forms of Biography in the Ming-Qing Period, 1368-1911 (Cornell University East Asia Program, 2018).
Conference program: https://geissfoundation.us/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/JPGFWeb-3D-1a-ConfBioSchdl-16Feb14.pdf
Publication: https://eap.einaudi.cornell.edu/publication/new-representing-lives-china-forms-biography-ming-qing-period-1368-1911
2011
History with Chinese Characteristics: From Ming to Globalization
Center for Early Modern History, University of Minnesota, 2011
Held in honor of Edward “Ted” Farmer’s retirement from the University of Minnesota after 43 years of teaching, the two-day “mini-conference” covered a broad range of topics, including Chinese culture, Ming institutions, world history, and modern China.
2011
Ming Provincial Courts Conference
Colgate University, 2011
Principal Investigator(s): David Robinson, Colgate UniversityThe Geiss Hsu Foundation fully-supported and conducted the Ming Provincial Courts Conference, held at Colgate University in Hamilton, New York. Nine scholars from the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, China, and the United States presented papers and discussed the courts of imperial clansmen outside Beijing. Participants drew attention to their patronage of painting, religion, scholarship, as well as the courts’ social, economic, and military dimensions. Some papers delivered at the conference were published in Ming Studies Volume 12, Issue 65.
2006
Ming Taizu and His Times
Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2006
Principal Investigator(s): Chu Hung-lam, Chinese University of Hong KongThis conference examined the personality and career of Zhu Yuanzhang, founder of the Ming dynasty, posthumously known as Ming Taizu. Many political and social institutions as well as governmental practices introduced during his reign influenced the five remaining centuries of imperial China. Historians from China, England, France, Hong Kong, Korea, Japan, Singapore, Taiwan, and the United States presented papers. A selection of them were published in 2010 by the Chinese University Press as Ming Taizu’s Ideas on Statecraft and Their Implementation.
2003
Ming Court Culture
Princeton University, 2003
Principal Investigator(s): Princeton University, 2003Papers discussed at this conference, the first the Geiss Hsu Foundation supported, were published in Culture, Courtiers, and Competition: The Ming Court (1368–1644). Ed. David M. Robinson. Cambridge: Harvard University Asia Center, 2008.
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