European Association of Chinese Studies
The European Association of Chinese Studies (simplified Chinese: 欧洲汉学学会; traditional Chinese: 歐洲漢學學會; pinyin: Ōuzhōu Hànxué Xuéhuì; EACS) is an international scholarly association representing China scholars from Europe. It was founded in 1975 and is registered in Paris. The Association is governed by a Board and its daily activities are managed by its President, Secretary-General, and Treasurer. Conferences have been held biennially since 1976.
EACS Conferences
- 2018 - 22nd EACS Conference, Glasgow[2]
- 2016 - 21st EACS Conference, St Petersburg[3]
- 2014 - 20th EACS Conference, Braga[4]
- 2012 - 19th EACS Conference, Paris[5]
- 2010 - 18th EACS Conference, Riga ("Culture is a Crowded Bridge")
- 2008 - 17th EACS Conference, Lund[6]
- 2006 - 16th EACS Conference, Ljubiljana
- 2004 - 15th EACS Conference, Heidelberg
- 2002 - 14th EACS Conference, Moscow: “Chinese Traditional Civilization and the Contemporary World”
- 2000 - 13th EACS Conference, Turin (Torino): “The Spirit of the Metropolis”
- 1998 - 12th EACS Conference, Edinburgh: “Festivals - the Chinese at Work and at Play”
- 1996 - 11th EACS Conference, Barcelona: “China and the Outer world”
- 1994 - 10th EACS Conference, Prague (Praha): “Genius loci: Place, Region and Chinese Region-alism”
- 1992 - 9th EACS Conference, Paris: “Change-ment et idées de changement en Chine”
- 1990 - 8th EACS Conference, Leiden
- 1988 - 7th EACS Conference, Weimar
- 1986 - 6th EACS Conference, Turin (Torino)
- 1984 - 5th EACS Conference, Tübingen: “China - Present and Past“
- 1982 - 4th EACS Conference, Cambridge
- 1980 - 3rd EACS Conference, Zürich: “China: Continuity and Change”
- 1978 - 2nd EACS Conference, Ortisei - St. Ulrich: “Understanding Modern China: Problems and Methods”
- 1976 - 1st EACS Conference, Paris: “Popular and Official Traditions in China”
The conferences replaced the annual Junior Sinologues Conferences that had been taking place since 1948:
- 1972 - 24th JS Conference, Leiden (Noordwijkerhout)
- 1971 - 23rd JS Conference, Oxford
- 1970 - 22nd JS Conference, Stockholm
- 1969 - 21st JS Conference, Senegallia / Marcerata
- 1968 - 20th JS Conference, Prague [cancelled]
- 1967 - 19th JS Conference, Bochum
- 1966 - 18th JS Conference, Copenhagen-Humblebaek
- 1965 - 17th JS Conference, Leeds
- 1964 - 16th JS Conference, Bordeaux
- 1963 - 15th JS Conference, Torino
- 1962 - 14th JS Conference, Breukelen-Nijenrode
- 1961 - 13th JS Conference, Hamburg
- 1960- Moscow [cancelled]
- 1959 - 12th JS Conference, Cambridge
- 1958 - 11th JS Conference, Padua and Venice
- 1957 - 10th JS Conference, Marburg
- 1956 - 9th JS Conference, Paris
- 1955 - 8th JS Conference, Leiden (Oud-Poelgeest)
- 1954 - 7th JS Conference, Durham
- 1953 - 6th JS Conference, Rome
- 1952 - 5th JS Conference, Cologne (Köln-Wahn)
- 1951 - 4th JS Conference, Paris
- 1950 - 3rd JS Conference, London
- 1949 - 2nd JS Conference, Leiden
- 1948 - 1st JS Conference, Cambridge, London and Oxford
gollark: You were in the top 20 in your country in maths-related exams, no?
gollark: In general, yes.
gollark: Did you know? The ǂ boson is a type of Boson in the Standard Model. It is prohibited from existing by the laws of physics, but by using a complicated type of particle collider one can still create them using floating point errors. A Floating point accelerator was created by a team of Beniɲ scientists and used to successfully prove the existence of the ǂ boson. The decay exponential of the ǂ boson has base 0.. The ǂ boson has a mass of -65535 ðg, a spin of NaN RPS, no electric charge, and a tactile charge of lemon.
gollark: ¿¿¿
gollark: It's not even hugely minimal though. They have ridiculous special cases to patch over the lack of general solutions.
See also
- Braga Incident
References
- "The Conferences and Publications of the Junior Sinologues (1948-1972) and the European Association for Chinese Studies (1975-2004), in EACS Newsletter No. 32, June, 2004
- https://eacs2018.glasgow.ac.uk/
- http://www.eacs2016.spbu.ru/
- http://chinesestudies.eu/?p=432
- "XIXth EACS CONFERENCE – European Association for Chinese Studies".
- "XVII EACS Conference". 30 June 2014.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.