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Discussion
to feature films, panels and special guests
By
Alex Roman
Daily Forty Niner
Discussion
panels, films and special guests will highlight the
Western Conference of the Association for Asian Studies
2000 on Friday and Saturday.
The
Cal State Long Beach department of Asian and Asian
American Studies is hosting the event at the Long
Beach Airport Marriott Hotel.
"This
will certainly be the largest regional conference
in the country this year," said Arnold P. Kaminsky,
program chairman. "The turnout reflects both
the reputation of the university and the quality of
people that have been working on it."
The
conference, which kicks off Thursday evening with
a poolside reception at the hotel, returns to CSULB
after 11 years. The campus previously hosted the event
in 1985 and 1989.
Among
the attractions for this year's conference are the
67 panel discussions that will be taking place over
two days.
"There's
a little something for everybody," Kaminsky said.
"We received tons of proposals and were very
selective. We didn't accept anything that didn't fit."
Topics
of the panels will range from discussions on Japanese
Buddhism (with Jeffrey Broughton, a CSULB religious
studies professor), to nuclear and security issues
in Asia (with six different representatives from Pakistan,
India, China, Korea, Japan and Southeast Asia), to
gender and sexuality in East Asia (with panel chair
Linda Pomerantz, from Cal State Dominguez Hills).
In
addition to the litany of Asian Studies scholars who
will be presenting panels, the conference is also
sponsoring 30 graduate students, allowing them to
lead panels for what is their first time.
"It
will be a good opportunity for people to interact
with each other and discuss certain issues,"
Kaminsky said.
"We
have community oriented panels and the cost for students
is $5 a day, so we hope a lot of people will be able
to come out and enjoy everything that's going on,"
he said.
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