Recent News

Flyer for "Electric Design: Light, Labor, and Leisure in Prewar Japanese Advertising" featuring Gennifer Weisenfeld from Duke University on 2/24 at 4-5:30Pm

Inaugural Koichi Takashima Lecture: Gennifer Weisenfeld

Please join us for our Inaugural Koichi Takashima Lecture on Wednesday, Feb. 24 at 4:00 PM PST! Featuring the electrifying Gennifer Weisenfeld (Duke University) on “Electric Design: Light, Labor and Leisure in Prewar Japanese Advertising.”
This talk explores the industry’s important cultivation of a nascent consumer market for electrical goods in the prewar period, & the role of graphic design & advertising in aestheticizing, visualizing, & commodifying the seemingly transformative social powers of electric energy.
Flyer for "Eulogy for Burying a Crane: Monument, Landscape, and Calligraphy in Sixth Century China" featuring Professor Lei Xue on 1/28 from 5-6PM

Visiting Lecture on Chinese Calligraphy by Prof. Lei Xue

poster for professor xue's talk

On Thursday, January 28, 2021, at 5:00pm (Pacific Time) Prof. Lei Xue of Oregon State University will deliver a lecture on the mysterious Yihe ming 瘞鶴銘 (Eulogy for Burying a Crane) and its significance to the history of Chinese calligraphy. The talk is coordinated with Prof. Peter Sturman’s “Chinese Calligraphy” course (Chinese / Art History 134K) but open to all. Please join us via Zoom at tinyurl.com/eulogycrane.

The talk is sponsored by the UCSB Confucius Institute.

Essay excerpt from "Of Admonition and Address: Right-Hand Inscriptions (Zuoyouming) from CuiYuan to Guanxiu" by Thomas J. Mazanec

New faculty publication on poetic address (Thomas Mazanec)

Professor Thomas Mazanec‘s article on the topic of poetic address in medieval China has been published in the 38th issue of Tang Studies. It will be of interest not only to specialists in Chinese literature, but to anyone interested in lyric theory or the poetics of inscriptions.

“Of Admonition and Address: Right-Hand Inscriptions (Zuoyouming) from Cui Yuan to Guanxiu.” Tang Studies 38 (2020): 28–56. PDF.

Abstract

This essay traces the development of the right-hand inscription (zuoyouming 座右銘) from its birth in the second century CE through its culmination as a complex literary subgenre in the tenth. Over the course of these eight centuries, right-hand inscriptions were used by some of the most prominent poets of their respective eras, including Cui Yuan 崔瑗 (77–142 CE), Bian Lan 卞蘭 (ca. 230), Zhi Dun 支遁 (314–366), Bai Juyi 白居易 (772–846), and Guanxiu 貫休 (832–913). These writers used the subgenre to advocate for many different kinds of wisdom, often reflecting intellectual trends of their times. The inscriptions underwent a process of literarization, meaning they became more deeply embedded in a self-consciously literary tradition. By the end of this process, with the poet-monk Guanxiu, the temporal spectrum of address (past-present-future) comes to dominate the others. Poetic address, in this subgenre of verse as in shi-poetry 詩, comes to focus more on the literary tradition itself than the poem’s immediate readership.

Professor Mazanec has also written about the story behind the article on his personal website. See here for more: http://tommazanec.com/blog/2021/01/20/article-on-poetic-address-published-in-tang-studies/.

 

Korea Foundation logo

Department Awarded Korea Foundation Grant To Help Establish Korean Studies Professorship

We are thrilled to announce that the Department has been awarded a five-year grant from the Korea Foundation to support the establishment of a tenure-track professorship in Korean Studies! This new position will help expand our growing offerings in Korean, including both language and content courses.

More details to follow in the coming year.

Fabio and Rory instruments

Fabio Rambelli’s Music Featured in The Current

Prof. Fabio Rambelli in The Current on “Neo Arche,” his collaborative digital album with ancient instruments used in Gagaku, the 1,000-year-old music of Japan’s Imperial Court:
“I think that the music we were able to create and its sound is pretty amazing — soothing and sometimes solemn but also full of depth and energy,” Rambelli said. “We wanted to use the ritual sensibility and solemnity of Gagaku but set it in a more introspective and domestic environment, something that would sooth and reinvigorate at the same time.”