From: "Andrew Field" <shanghaidrew@GMAIL.COM>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Sunday, March 20, 2011 4:26 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: Texts for discussion at AAS
> H-ASIA
> Mar 20 2011
>
> Texts for discussion at AAS
> ******************************
> From: Yue Dong <yuedong@u.washington.edu>
>
> Dear colleagues:
>
> SESSION 466 (Saturday, April 2, 9:45AM-11:45AM Room 313B) at the  coming 
> AAS is organized as a text-reading workshop.  The texts to be  read are 
> two articles from Shen Bao in 1875 and 1878 on the changing  concepts and 
> practices of etiquette.  This session is open to  everyone.  If you are 
> interested in joining the reading and  discussion, please visit the 
> following websites for the texts.   Hardcopies of the texts will also be 
> provided at the session.
>
> https://catalyst.uw.edu/workspace/yuedong/20274/
>
> SESSION 466
> Saturday, April 2, 9:45AM-11:45AM Room 313B
>
> Roundtable:
> Making Texts Strange: On Deriving Meanings from Texts
>
> Chaired by Madeleine Dong, University of Washington
>
> Discussants:
> Dorothy Ko, Barnard College, Columbia University
> Hsiao-wen Cheng, University of Washington
> Cecily McCaffrey, Willamette University
> Dandan Chen, Wells College
>
> For historians, literary scholars and anthropologists, encountering a 
> text resembles meeting a stranger.  Even when the context is familiar,  a 
> written source conceals a wide range of meanings, interpretations,  and 
> signs. How do we approach a text which defies easy categorization? 
> Alternately, how do we retain a sense of "the strange" when reading a 
> familiar source? In this panel, we seek to problematize the reading of 
> historical texts through an examination of written sources which do  not 
> easily conform to the analytic categories of modern academic  disciplines. 
> We bring together five historians who work with a variety  of written 
> sources in different time periods to discuss two texts from  Shen Bao, 
> both on the changing concepts and practices of etiquette.   Our discussion 
> will focus on the following questions: How do different  genres of texts 
> produce meanings? What strategies do we employ to draw  meanings out of 
> texts? What kind of relationship do we establish with  texts and their 
> authors -- do we assume a position of authority, or do  we read as the 
> audience that the authors intended to address?  How do  we establish 
> dialogues with the authors, the texts, and their intended  audience?  In 
> posing these questions, we seek to promote dialogue  among scholars who 
> engage in textual analysis with the aim of  envisioning new modes of 
> interpretation and historical understanding.
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> Madeleine Y. Dong
> Chair, China Studies Program, Jackson School of International Studies
> Associate Professor of History and International Studies
> University of Washington
> Box 353650 Phone: 206-543-4999
> Seattle, WA 98195 Fax:   206-685-0668
> http://depts.washington.edu/history/directory/index.php?facultyname=D-34Dong
>
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