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The Nanjing Massacre: 75 Years On
All info below from this link: http://www.capi.uvic.ca/events/nanjing-massacre-75-years
3 C+ W& P+ [5 n0 A; IThe Nanjing Massacre: 75 Years On/ b* E; r% f/ P" R
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Time: November 16, 2012
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# P9 N. T7 R! x. LNovember 17, 2012 # d$ Y, N/ b+ N
9:00am – 5:00pm & 7:00 – 9:00pm; f, }) z6 }. ?0 [& U8 k7 e
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Place: Harry Hickman Building,Rm 105
$ @' ~2 `1 Q% i& c9 TUniversity of Victoria Z6 y! W' K" p/ d1 l
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Free and open to the public.1 A! ]7 Q# S. U1 K6 x
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On December 13th, 1937, theJapanese Imperial Army entered Nanjing, theformer capital of the Republic of China. In the six weeks thatfollowed, thousands of civilians and soldiers died, their bodies found later inmass graves around the city. This year marks the 75th anniversary of the Nanjing atrocity.- y' H" d$ d* V; B& k, N' V. p
9 v m9 M% ]: {/ n, J9 WOnNovember 16 and 17, The Centre for Asia-Pacific Initiatives and the Departmentof Pacific and Asian Studies are holding a symposium on the Nanjing massacre. The symposium will look atthe events of 75 years ago, and examine what they mean today for China, Japan,Canada, and the Asia Pacific region.
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Full schedule:, I4 f9 A3 M1 q: D& |
) q; D3 f% {0 z5 }0 ZFriday, November 16th 7:30 pm: k9 D, U ~6 Y. e
University of Victoria
% X7 c M% m2 l- U" n5 N" bHarry Hickman Building, Rm 105, i. y& c# @$ r1 }+ T2 J
Lansdowne Lecture and Keynote Address:8 f6 n z* g4 p, V6 d$ [
Diana Lary, Professor Emerita, Universityof British Columbia# J3 w0 x6 T @) X
“Remembering the NanjingMassacre: the past that will not go away”! r* f$ J5 u C
) O/ s% |- W$ h" TSaturday, November 17th/ k- K1 z+ d, a( E* e2 Z
University of Victoria
% e; Y& N1 L. u* \ Harry Hickman Building, Rm 1053 o8 N1 \7 L# F* V
+ @$ p, X/ g2 ]5 }7 T" L9:00-9:15 am Welcoming Remarks- x* W0 T/ W# S6 b
Helen Lansdowne, Associate Director, Centre for Asia-Pacific Initiatives9 z- \* q$ I: [" k
Andrew Marton, Associate Vice-President International, University of Victoria
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1 O0 |( q, P Y$ u9:15-10:45 am Panel One: The Politics of Remembering) ]( {) w2 X/ u N
Chaired by: Desmond Cheung, SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of History,% n$ N! T5 g& Y5 p- C& R
University of Victoria: w) G6 L1 s4 U
Guoguang Wu, Departments of Political Science, History, University of Victoria
( g0 d$ z- v3 L1 M+ m6 w“Nanjing, Beijing, and Tokyo: Positioning the Memory of Nanjing in ContemporarySino-
2 e/ l5 ?; T3 T1 r( \; Z# DJapanese Relations”
& `, D/ ?5 [4 IKatsuhiko Endo, Department of Pacific and Asian Studies, University of Victoria7 H4 w% n1 q* [9 J' ^% Y$ [
“Is Today’s East Asia a Repetition of the 1930s?”6 t+ }" p& n# U7 } Z5 Y
Hugh Stephens, Executive-in-Residence, Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada andSenior( V9 V* d9 y8 v( Y' `2 i
Advisor, Time Warner
$ r/ b; R, R$ f/ j" c% C“Current Tensions and Historical Precedents. |2 x' q$ T! _* k& _
! ]: i: I$ K, ?* C6 b10:45-11:15 am Refreshment Break
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2 ]. b, C: V3 V+ C7 d11:15-12:30 pm Panel Two: Cultural Interpretations
6 [- D% s. r5 X. C% ]Chaired by: Helen Lansdowne, Centre for Asia-Pacific Initiatives, University ofVictoria1 Z0 W) J. C# K* P+ q# u+ a
Richard King, Department of Pacific and Asian Studies, University of Victoria8 W# _5 b4 V6 D; o! R% h1 a7 k0 ]# i
“Searching for Heroes in the Rubble: Nanjing 1937 in literature and film”. a/ `3 S- r* R( F, b0 g0 i* @
Timothy Iles, Department of Pacific and Asian Studies, University of Victoria
8 F3 T+ o- F7 D& D' a“Yasukuni Shrine: Forgetting and Remembering Nanjing: A report on a festivaland a protest”: \1 Y* h# h g% C6 C8 c' q
8 f6 h; q' ?) p6 {- i: M12:30-1:30 pm Lunch1 z: ~6 |9 {$ I. P
1:30-3:00 pm Round Table One: The Historiography of Nanjing1 I. D, L" t; @1 p6 I" `' c
Moderator andPresenter: Gregory Blue, Department of History, University of Victoria: Z! M. L* O5 q3 v
“Contemporary Western Reactions”
$ M4 H9 k i1 y+ b! t; }3 X jBob Tadashi Wakabayashi, Professor Emeritus, Department of History, YorkUniversity- i2 m4 R3 t+ U
“The Nanjing Atrocity: Three Points of Contention”
9 [' h/ O; j: _Timothy Brook, Department of History, University of British Columbia
- S0 M- [! A: V7 A“What Can You Do with a Massacre?”
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7 | Y. A& s( I2 q& H+ v" [8 Y+ m$ P3:30-5:00 pm Round Table Two: Asian Canadian Conversations+ A& P# s Z4 o5 }7 |/ o( q
Moderator: John Price, Department of History, University of Victoria4 A2 k0 N. g+ @! ^2 C4 B# q
Joy Kogawa, Honored Canadian poet and novelist, recipient of the Order ofCanada, author: M/ \; X1 N) z# ~
of Obasan
+ J6 H4 g! Q G4 V1 T1 hJoseph Wong, M.D.f, Founder and governor of the Yee Hong Centre for GeriaticCare and
+ l" F9 m8 E- m' w. xrecipient of 2005 Humanitarian Award3 B6 ~4 x, V3 y" p# c# p t5 k
( E ?/ P: A( e) w* l. g7 q) v3:00-3:30 pm Refreshment Break9 K& T4 i) V2 @+ k7 u
7:00-9:00 pm Film Viewing: Flowers of War (Directed by Zhang, Yimou)5 ?) O5 ?9 p* O% I9 x
Generous support has been provided by the President’s Office, University of Victoria
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