Come to find out what SHKCA is all about! We'll have an informal
introduction and games for members to get to know each other and the
club. There'll be food!
Excursion to Ocean Beach. Celebrate the Moon Festival over dinner
in San Francisco. Afterwards we'll go to Ocean Beach to enjoy moon
cakes around a bonfire.
September
18: Beijing Punk Rock
Speaker: Anna-Sophie Loewenberg
Location: 160 Dwinelle
Time: 8pm
Description:
Screening of the documentary "China Pirates" followed by music
and discussion.
Anna-Sophie Loewenberg is a journalist and documentary filmmaker.
She has written for San Francisco and international publications such
as Beijing Scene Magazine,
BUST,
Giant Robot and Pacific
Time radio on KQED. She also plays in a punk rock band, HUNBOT,
in San Francisco and started Bieniu,
a girl-fronted punk rock band in Beijing.
"China Pirates" is a short documentary about China's black-market
media trade in pirated and saw-gash CDs, tapes and DVDs. Based
on footage taken during her five years (1996-2001) of living and working
as a journalist and punk rocker in Beijing, Anna-Sophie follows young
musicians from Beijing punk bands Hang
on the Box, Cold Blooded Animal and Brain
Failure, and documents how pirated media has been shaping an entire
generation of Chinese youth culture.
September
25: Ethnic Cultural Reflections in Dance
Speaker:Professor
Kaiwen You and the coordinators of the Chinese Dance Decal Class.
Location: 258 Dwinelle
Time: 7-8pm
Description:
Chinese culture comprises of 56 distinct ethnic groups. For centuries,
the cultures, lifestyles, and perspectives of Chinese minority groups
have been illustrated and expressed through the use of such art forms
as dance and music. By studying their dance forms we can learn much
about the distinctive lifestyle and culture of these ethnic groups.
We will be presenting some of the dance forms of the Han people,
the ethnic Chinese who make up the majority of China's population,
and the Uighur people, who are predominately Muslim and live in Xinjiang
Autonomous Region along the Silk Road.
Professor You has had more than thirty years of international performance
experience, and twenty years of professional experience teaching and
choreographing Chinese ethnic folk dances and ballet at the Beijing
Dance Academy and at the Hong Kong Academy of Performing Arts. He
has won numerous international awards for teaching and choreography.
He is currently an instructor for the San Francisco Chinese Folk Dance
Association as well as at various other venues in the South Bay.
Yu Hua was born in 1960 in Zhejiang, China. He finished high school
during the Cultural Revolution and worked as a dentist for five years
before beginning to write in 1983. He has published three novels,
six collections of stories, and three collections of essays. His work
has been translated into French, German, Italian, Dutch, Spanish,
Japanese, and Korean. In 2002 Yu Hua became the first Chinese writer
to win the prestigious James Joyce Foundation Award. His novel "To
Live" was awarded Italy's Premio Grinzane Cavour in 1998, and "To
Live" and "Chronicle of a Blood Merchant" were named two of the last
decade's ten most influential books in China. "To
Live" was made into an award-winning film by acclaimed director
Zhang Yimou.
Professor Andrew Jones is in the Department
of East Asian Languages and Cultures, specializing in modern Chinese
literature and sonic culture. He recently translated Yu Hua's "Chronicle
of a Blood Merchant" into English. He will be talking about
the book, his translation work and modern Chinese literature.
October 9:
Games Night
Location: 246 Dwinelle
Time: 7 pm
Description:
Take
a break from midterms and homework and play some Chinese games!
SHKCA will be hosting a games salon. Games will include
Mahjong
Chinese card games
Chinese chess
Go (Weiqi)
If you don't know how to play, there will be experts on hand who will
be happy to teach you the rules.
October 16:
Film: Conjugation (DongCi Bian Wei)
Location: 174 Barrows
Time: 7-8.30pm
Description:
Conjugation is a drama set in the aftermath of the June 4th 1989
incident in Tiananmen Square. A young couple are trying to set up
house together, without official permission. Everyone in their circle
is heavily affected by the protests and the aftermath – one
person is still missing – and they deal with it in different
ways: throwing away an academic career for a small business, leaving
for studies in the USA, rebelling at a factory. The film incorporates
a great deal of poetry from the contemporary writer Haizi (who killed
himself in March 1989).
In Mandarin with English subtitles.
October
30: Movie Night: Shaolin Soccer
Location: 205 Dwinelle
Time: 7pm
Description:
Come enjoy snacks while watching the recent Hong Kong comedy/martial
arts film, "Shaolin Soccer".
Monday November 3: Beijing Punk Rock Comes to Berkeley!
Pan Xiaoyan is a daughter of journalist and had dreamed of being
a reporter and writer since her childhood. She fulfilled her dream
when, armed with a journalism degree from Fudan University, she joined
Baosteel Daily, a major daily newspaper in Shanghai, as a reporter
in 1997. She won several national awards for her coverage of the life
of women workers who were laid-off when the out-dated state industries
collapsed.
In 2000, she helped launch the business journal SmartFortune, which
is the first magazine to focus on Human Resource Management in China.
She is currently its vice editor-in-chief. Xiaoyan's first book, Office
Politics, was published in Beijing this year.
Xiaoyan is interested in media management, especially the difficulties
associated with striking a balance between news ethics and market
incentives. She is also interested in religion, ethnicity and press
freedom.
Zhang Ping, an 11-year veteran of newspaper journalism in China,
was the former editorial department director of Southern Weekend,
widely considered the most ardent voice for social justice and political
reform in China. Before that, he was with the Chengdu Economic Daily,
the first market-oriented publication in the country.
Zhang Ping is interested in getting a thorough understanding of the
potential role that journalism could play in the modernization process
that transforms a developing and oppressed society. He is also interested
in literature and history.
Wednesday
November 19:The Banker's Honor: Shanghai in the 20th Century
Description: Professor Wen-hsin
Yeh from the Department of
History will talk about the connection between wealth and
respectability. The financial elite of Shanghai in early 20th
century had a particularly hard time earning respect because their profession
was often associated with compromises with foreign interests —
the betrayal of patriotism in an era of colonial power and international
warfare. In the 1990s, Chinese bankers regained the honor they had lost
in the 1940s. The talk will focus on the rise and fall of the social
and political fortunes of Chinese bankers.
Saturday December
6: Dim Sum and Asian Art Museum
Location: TBA
Time: TBA
Description:
Enjoy dim sum in San Francisco followed by a visit to the newly
opened Asian Art Museum.