* All sessions will be held in Wilson Hall (WH)
Friday, October 21, 2005
Registration 5:30 – 8:00 PM (University Club) Reception 6:00 – 8:00 PM (University Club) Welcome remarks:
Neville Jiang, Co-Chair, Local Organizational Committee
Eric Bond, Chair of Economics Department, Vanderbilt University
Meng-Yang L. Li, TECRO
Yu-Long Ling, President, AACS
Saturday October 22
7:00 - 8:00 AM
AACS Board Breakfast Meeting (Centennial A, Holiday Inn)
8:00 - 8:50 AM Opening Address (WH 103) Introduction: Ping Wang, Washington University in St. Louis Speaker: Been-Lon Chen, Deputy Director of Institute of Economics, Academia Sinica, and National Taiwan University
9:00 - 10:30 AM Session One
Panel  1A :  Planting the Seeds of Revolution:  Modern Educators and China’s Revolutionary Transformation, 1910-1949 (WH 112) Organizer:  Elizabeth Littell-Lamb, St. Bonaventure University
Chair:  Christopher Reed, Ohio State University
“The First Generation of Chinese Communists and the Hunan First Normal School” by Liyan Liu, Georgetown University
“Partners in Revolution:  The YWCA, Christian Socialists, and Shanghai Leftists in 1930s China” by Elizabeth Littell-Lamb, St.
Bonaventure University
“From Students to the Leaders of Local Guerrilla Warfare:  Teachers’ Schools and Communist Reemergence in 1930s China”
byXiaping Cong, University of Houston
Discussant: Robert Culp, Bard College
Panel  1B:  Society and Politics in Contemporary China (WH 113) Organizer:  Program committee
Chair:  Wen-Hui Tsai, Indiana University-Purdue University at Fort Wayne “From TASS to CNN Style:  What Changed Chinese National TV News Reporting” by Xi Chen, Virginia Polytechnic University
“A Deductive Study of Liberal Democratization in China” byTodd West, University of Georgia
“Intellectual-State Relations in Contemporary China” by Chow Bing Ngeow, (Northeastern University
“A Study of the Emotional Health of China’s City Migrant Children”
by Yanyin Chen, University of Nottingham Discussant:  Tsai Wen-Hui, Indiana University-Purdue University at Fort
Wayne
Panel 1C:  Economic Development and Cultural Change in China
(WH 115)
Organizer:  Ping Wang, Washington University in St. Louis
Chair:  Ping Wang, Washington University in St. Louis
“Migration, Development, and Persistent Inequality in China” by
Neville Jiang, Vanderbilt University
“An Expectancy Model of Chinese-American Differences in
Conflict Avoidance” by Ray Friedman, Vanderbilt University
“Share Issue Privatization in China:  1994-2003” by Sheng Xiao,
Vanderbilt University
“Shanghai, Inc.” by Donald Hsu, Dominican College
Discussants:  Kwang-wen Chu, California State University- Fullerton
Ping Wang, Washington University in St. Louis
Panel 1D:  Round Table on Constitutional Reform and Party
Politics in Taiwan (WH 121)
T.J. Cheng, College of William and Mary
George Chen, Augusta State University
Yeong-kuang Ger, National Taiwan University
Yung Ming Hsu, Academia Sinica , Taiwan
10:30 – 10:45 AM Coffee Break
10:45 – 12:15 PM Session Two
Panel 2A:  The Right to Survive, the Right to Strive--Among Chinese,
Then and Now (WH 112)
Organizer:  Linda H. Chiang, Azusa Pacific University
Chair:  Linda H. Chiang, Azusa Pacific University
“Women’s Status during the Era of the Taiping Kingdom (1851-1864):
A Controversy” by Linda H. Chiang, Azusa Pacific University
“Chinese Immigration, US Citizenship, and American Political
Thought” by Dan Palm, Azusa Pacific University
“Repression, Violence, and the Assimilation of Chinese-Americans”
by Joel Fetzer, Pepperdine University
“Child Poverty and Anti-Poverty Programs in Taiwan” by Walter
Kiang, Cal State University, Los Angeles
Discussant:  Jay C. Thompson, Ball State University
Panel 2B:  Topics in Literature and Culture (WH 113)
Organizer:  Program Committee
Chair:  Yenna Wu, University of California, Riverside
“Knotted Cords:  China’s Earliest Writing System”
Bruce Jones, Dallas, Texas
“Matriarchy in the Early Han Dynasty and the Rise of Gungyang
Doctrine” by Francis Kai, Cupertino, California
“Re-evaluation of Yong-shi-shi (Poems on History):  A Case Study of
Hu Zeng’s Poems” by Yiya Lee, ChungYuan Christian University
“Modern Chinese Writers:  Zhang Xianliang and Yu Hua” by Yenna
Wu, University of California, Riverside
“Developing and Interconnecting Studio Art Programs at the China
Central Academy of Fine Arts” by Stephen Lane, Keio Academy of
New York
Discussant:  David Kenley, Elizabethtown College
Panel 2C:  Feng Shui and Health (WH 115)
Organizer:  Ping Wang, Washington University in St. Louis
Chair:  Catherine Yi-yu Cho Woo, San Diego State University
“Building Structure and Health” by Crystal Chu, San Diego State
University
“I-Ching Eight Tri-grams and Health” by Catherine Yi-yu Cho Woo, San
Diego State University
“Feng Shui Solutions for Good Health” by Lin Yun, San Diego State
University
Discussant:  Catherine Yi-yu Cho Woo,San Diego State University
Panel 2D:  Topics in Song Dynasty History (WH 121)
Organizer:  Peter Lorge, Vanderbilt University
Chair:  Peter Lorge, Vanderbilt University
Don Wyatt, Middlebury College
Hilde DeWeerdt, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Robert Foster, Berea College
Discussant:  Peter Lorge, Vanderbilt University
12:15 – 1:40 PM Luncheon (Lobby, WH)
1:45 – 3: 15 PM Session Three
Panel 3A:  Can China and Japan Ever Learn to Live in Peace? (WH
112)
Organizer:  James C. Hsiung, New York University
Chair:  Cal Clark, Auburn University
“China and Japan:  A Saga of Un-ending Rivalry” by Richard Chu,
Rochester Institute of Technology
“Sino-Japanese Economic Relations:  Conflict and Cooperation” by
Chu-yuan Cheng, Ball State University
“Law of the Sea and the China-Japan Disputes:  How to Determine
Who Owns What Part of the East China Seabed Oil/Gas
Deposits?” by James C. Hsiung, New York University
Discussants:  Yu-long Ling, Franklin College
Paul H.C. Tai, University of Detroit
Penal 3B:  Globalization and the Chinese Economy (WH 113)
Organizer:  Peter Chow and Program Committee
Chair:  Peter Chow, City University of New York
“A Cluster Analysis of FDI, China and the World, 1980-2001” by
Haitao Liang, CUNY Graduate Center
“An Investigation of Causal Relationships between Singapore, Hong
Kong and the US Capital Markets” by Wenlong Weng, Lehigh
University
“Globalization and its Influence on the Oil Trade:  The Case of
China’s Oil Importation” by Qiang Yan, University of Missouri-St
Louis
“Economic Networks, Regional Development, and Globalization” by
Chien-ju Lin, SUNY at Binghamton
Discussants: Jerry McBeath, University of Alaska Fairbanks
Kwang-wen Chu, California State University- Fullerton
Panel 3C:  Chinese Poetry Genre  (in Chinese) (WH 115)
Organizer: Ping Wang, Washington University in St. Louis
Chair:  Catherine Yi-yu Cho Woo, San Diego State University
“Guidance Poems” by Crystal Chu, San Diego State University
“Nature Poems” by Catherine Yi-yu Cho Woo, San Diego State
University
“Philosophical Poems” by Lin Yun, San Diego State University
Discussant:  Catherine Yi-yu Cho Woo, San Diego State University
Panel 3D:  Filial Piety and Family Relations in Chinese Philosophy
and Government (WH 121)
Organizers:  Tracy Miller, Vanderbilt University
Paul Goldin, University of Pennsylvania
Chair:  Phylis Lin, University of Indianapolis
“Confucian Government:  A Nation of Families” by Kenneth W.
Holloway, Florida Atlantic University
“Why is Yang Gong a Filial Son?  The Connections between Filiality
and Righteousness in Early Medieval China” by Keith Knapp, The
Citadel
“Filial Piety and its Discontents:  The Ancient and Modern Debates”
by Thomas Radice, University of Pennsylvania
Discussant:  Paul Goldin, University of Pennsylvania
3:15 – 3:30 PM Coffee Break
3:30 – 5:00 PM Session Four
Panel 4A: The Anti-Secession Law of China (WH 112)leftist
Organizer:  Yu-long Ling, Franklin College
Chair:  David Dean, CCK Foundation
“The Making of China’s Anti-Secession Law:  Its Complex
Significance and Hidden Implications” by James C. Hsiung, New
York University
“The Economic Effect of the Anti-Secession Law on the U.S., China
and Taiwan” by John Stevens, Franklin College
“Cross-Strait Relations after the Anti-Secession Law:  The Taiwan
Perspective” by Yeong-kuang Ger, National Taiwan University
“Impact of the Anti-Secession Law on Political Development in
Taiwan” by Thomas Bellows, University of Texas at San Antonio
Discussant:  Yu-long Ling, Franklin College
Panel 4B:  Topics in Modern Chinese History (WH 113)
Organizer:  Program committee
Chair:  Richard Chu, Rochester Institute of Technology
“An Examination of Emperor Daoguang’s ‘Seeking Peace’” by Alice
Dong, York University
“The Political Functions of the Southern Capital of Ming China” by
Jun Fang, Huron University College
“When Soldiers and Students Collide:  Militarists and the May Fourth Movement in Guizhou, 1916-1921” by Peter Worthing, Texas
Christian University
“Cooperation against Competition:  Daxing and Yuhua Cotton Mills in Crisis, 1931-1937” by Juanjuan Peng, Johns Hopkins University Discussant:  Richard Chu, Rochester Institute of Technology
Panel 4C: Multifaceted Chinese Language:  Influence from Outside and Its Intrinsic Characteristics (WH 115)
Organizer:  Xiamin Liu, Vanderbilt University
Chair:  Xiamin Liu, Vanderbilt University
“Two Mandarins” by De-an Swihart, University of Memphis
“Buddhist Influences on Chinese Language” by Yong Chen, Vanderbilt University
“Does Chinese have Singular and Plural Markers?” by Xiamin Liu, Vanderbilt University
Discussant:  Tracy Miller, Vanderbilt University
Panel 4D: Chinese Medicine (WH 121)
Organizers:  Yu Shyr and Xiao-Ou Shu, Vanderbilt University
Chair:  Yu Shyr, Vanderbilt University
“China-US Cooperative Epidemiologic Studies of Cancer” by Bill Blot, International Institute of Epidemiology & Vanderbilt University “Soyfood and Women’s Health” by Xiao-ou Shu, Vanderbilt University “Tea and Cancer Prevention” by Gong Yang, Vanderbilt University Discussant:  Wei Zheng, Vanderbilt University
5:10 – 6:00 PM Plenary Session (WH 103) Introduction: Tracy Miller, Vanderbilt University
Speaker: Dorothy Ko, Columbia Universit y
6:30 – 9:00 PM AACS Annual Banquet and Keynote Speech (Golden Coast Restaurant)
Keynote: 8:20 – 9:00 PM
Introduction: Yu Shyr, Vanderbilt University
Speaker: Stanley Kao, Deputy Representative, TECRO
Sunday October 23
7:15 - 8:30 AM
AJCS Editorial Board Meeting(Chancellor’s Room, Holiday Inn)
8:30 – 10:00 AM Session Five
Panel 5A: National Integration and the Open Door:  Problems in China’s Developmental Experience (WH 112)
Organizer:  Edwin Pak-wah Leung, Seton Hall University
Chair:  Edwin Pak-wah Leung, Seton Hall University
“Bilingualism, Language Policy, and National Integration in China, 1949-1983” by Edwin Pak-wah Leung, Seton Hall University
“The Revival of Drug Crimes in China since the Open Door” by Helen Xiaoyan Wu, University of Toronto
“Advertising in China since the Open Door:  Visual Culture and Visual Expressions” by Luding Tong, Marietta College Discussant:  David Kenley, Elizabethtown College
Panel 5B:Society and Politics in Contemporary Taiwan (WH 113)
Organizer:  Program committee
Chair:  John Copper, Rhodes College
“An Inevitable Price?  Taiwan’s Democratic Transition and the
Breeding of Ethnic Hatred” by Chenghong Li, University of South
Carolina
“The Gender Gap and Political Participation in Taiwan” by Jenhei
Chen, NCNU, Taiwan
“Rural and Urban Dynamics in Taiwan’s New Wave Cinema” by Larry
Ling-hsuan Tung, Rutgers University
Discussant:  John Copper, Rhodes College
Panel 5C:  Grandparents and Grandchildren (Undergraduate
Research Presentations) (WH 115)
Organizer:  Cheng-Hsien Lin, Texas A & M, Kingsville
Chair:  Chiung-Fang Chang, Texas A & M, Kingsville
“The Characteristics of Grandparents-Headed Households in
Hispanic and Asian American Families” by Margie Hernandez,
Texas A & M
“Patterns of Grandparenting for Mexican American and Chinese
American Families” by Bruce Robertson, Texas A & M
“Causes, Effects, and Prevention of Juvenile Delinquency” by Karen
Gafford, Texas A & M
“The Influences of Grandparenting on Hispanic and Asian American
Grandparents” by Jacinda Neighbor, Texas A & M
Discussant:  Ming-Hsiu Ho, Nan-Hua University, Taiwan
10:00 – 10:15 AM Coffee Break
10:15 – 11: 45 AM Session Six
Panel 6A: Real and Represented Architecture in Pre-Modern China
(WH 112)
Organizer:  Tracy Miller, Vanderbilt University
Chair:  Tracy Miller, Vanderbilt University
“Architectural Elements in Early Chinese Bronzes” by Ming-chorng
Hwang, Academia Sinica, Taiwan
“A Tomb with a View:  Pictures as Eulogy in Eastern Han Elite
Burials” by Hsin-Mei Agnes Hsu, Brown University
“Wooden Architectural Structure in Brick: A Case Study of Northern
Song Cupola-like Corbelled Dome Tombs” by Wei-cheng Lin,
University of Chicago
“Regional Style in Timber Frame Architecture of the 10-12th
Centuries” by Tracy Miller. Vanderbilt University
Discussant:  Tracy Miller, Vanderbilt University
Panel 6B:  China’s Foreign Relations (WH 113)
Organizer:  Program committee
Chair:  Vincent Wang, University of Richmond
“Nativism, Nationalism and China’s Diplomacy:  The Chinese Six
Companies and Late Qing Policy toward Exclusion 1848-1911”
by Yucheng Qin, University of Guam
“U.S.-China Competition in a New Arena:  The Middle East” by
Jennifer Chang, University of Maryland
“International Legal Regimes and Changing Perceptions of Equity:
WTO Accession and China’s Legal Norms in Historical
Perspective” by Cecily Hurst, Moore & Van Allen, Charlotte, North
Carolina
“‘The More, the Better?’ or ‘Three is a Crowd?’ – The Involvement of
the Third Party in Cross-Strait Dialogues” by Yisuo Tzeng,
George Washington University
Discussant:  Vincent Wang, University of Richmond
Panel 6C: Military Disasters in Chinese History (WH 115)
Organizer:  Peter Lorge, Vanderbilt University
David Graff, Kansas State University
Kenneth Swope, Ball State University
Peter Lorge, Vanderbilt University
The American Association
For Chinese Studies
47th Anniversary
Annual Conference
hosted by the:
Vanderbilt University
Department of Economics
October 21-23, 2005
American Association Vanderbilt University
for Chinese Studies
Secretariat
Department of Economics
R4/116  VU
Station
B
#351819
City College-CUNY 2301 Vanderbilt Place
New York, NY 10031  Nashville, TN 37235-1819
Tel: 212 650-8268 Tel: 615 322-2871
Fax: 212 650-8287 Fax: 615 343-8495
Conference grants from the Cultural Division of Taipei
Economic and Cultural Representative Office (TECRO) and
Vanderbilt University are gratefully acknowledged.

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