The following staffing arrangements for the University holidays on Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve will apply on 24 and 31 December 2015 respectively. Departments/units should arrange for skeleton staff to be on duty on these mornings to handle urgent matters and enquiries. Offices will be closed in the afternoon. Skeleton staff (Terms [B] or [C]) on duty on each morning will be given compensation off of half a day.
For essential service units such as the University Health Service, the University Library System, the operations team of the Information Technology Services Centre, the Security Office, the Transport Office, and the Estates Management Office, adequate workforce should remain on duty to provide basic services.
Source: CUHK Newsletter, no. 467 [19 November 2015],
http://www.iso.cuhk.edu.hk/ebook/index.html#ui=en&page=8&issue_id=1546&lang=en
Prof. YIP Hon Ming, Department Chair, will be on academic leave from 5 to 7 December and 10 to 12 December 2015. Prof. CHOI Chi Cheung will serve as the Acting Chair during her absence.
Prof. POO Mu-chou, Division Head, will be on annual leave between 8 and 11 December 2015. During his absence, Prof. YIP Hon Ming (8–9 December) and Prof. CHOI Chi Cheung (10–11 December) will serve as the Acting Division Head.
Twelve scholars from Australia, Singapore, Mainland China and Hong Kong were invited to present papers or act as moderators at the workshop. Participants exchanged views on themes relating to migration from South China to Shanghai, Taipei, Hong Kong and Singapore; and comparative study on Chinese migration.
Prof. Elizabeth LACOUTURE of the History Department, Colby College, was invited by the Department to present a lecture with faculty members and students.
Prof. LACOUTURE’s talk focused on the changes of Tianjin’s built environment and real estate market, and how these changes introduced new forms of local political participation based on property ownership. She also discussed property disputes between Chinese husbands and wives in Tianjin’s French Concession to illuminate how the 1929–31 Civil Code was enacted at the local level; how new legal concepts of individual property rights enabled the Chinese men living in Tianjin’s British Concession to build political power.
Prof. Wayne Shi Lun SOON of History Department, Earlham College, was invited by the Department to present a lecture with faculty members and students.
Prof. SOON’s presentation focused on the changing meanings and practices of blood transfusion and banking in modern China through the history and legacies of the first Chinese blood bank. Through investigating the attitudes of Chinese soldiers and civilians towards the blood bank, this presentation revealed the multiplicity of motivations underpinning society’s attitudes towards blood banking and donation. The talk also provided an alternative to the cultural emphasis of blood banking in non-western societies by drawing attention to socio-economic and technological concerns in biomedical practices.
Dr. KUO Mei-fen of the School of Historical and Philosophical Inquiry, The University of Queensland, was invited by the Department to present a lecture with faculty members and students.
Dr. LU Xun, Research Associate of the Department, presented a lecture to faculty members and students.
For decades, the Stilwell-Marshall-Romanus-Eastman account of wartime U.S.-China relations has dominated not only the English world but, curiously enough, Mainland China also. Underexplored was CCP’s seemingly minor share in the diplomatic triangle with Chiang and the U.S. During the talk, Dr. LU examined the relationship between the CCP and Stilwell, as well as the U.S.’s unwitting assistance to the Communists in several critical junctures during the Civil War.
Date : | 7-9 December 2015 (Monday – Wednesday) |
Time : | 9:00am – 6:00pm |
Venue : | LT3, Esther Lee Building, CUHK |
Language : | Putonghua/English |
Enquiry : | 3943 5936 |
Organiser : Centre for the Comparative Study of Antiquity, Research Institute for the Humanities, CUHK
Co-organisers : Department of History, CUHK; Department of Cultural and Religious Studies, CUHK; Centre for the Study of Religion and Chinese Society, Chung Chi College, CUHK
Sponsors : Fei Ngan Tung Buddhism and Taoism Society; Faculty of Arts, CUHK
Date : | 8 December 2015 – 31 January 2016 |
Venue : | Lobby Area, University Library Extension, CUHK |
Enquiry : | 3943 7306 |
The exhibition is jointly presented by the Philippine Consulate General in Hong Kong, Department of History and CUHK Library, CUHK.
Best wishes from the Department
Merry Christmas and a Prosperous 2016!
The newsletter will resume on 4 January 2016.
For teachers and students who have information to share with the Department,
please email your articles in both Chinese and English to chanfiona@cuhk.edu.hk by 4:00pm every Tuesday.