The Center for East Asian Studies (CEAS) is one of the most active interdisciplinary programs on the Stanford campus. A designated Department of Education Comprehensive East Asia National Resource Center, CEAS works with all schools, departments, research centers, and student groups to facilitate and enhance all aspects of East Asia-related research, teaching, outreach and exchange across the Stanford campus. Our vibrant M.A. degree program, active schedule of public lectures and colloquia, competitive student grants, and K-16 outreach programs provide Stanford and the greater peninsula community with a wealth of resources for research on and learning about East Asia.
Mailing Lists
CEAS Weekly Digest
A weekly email newsletter highlighting center events and announcements.
Graduate Student Announcements
Job postings, conference announcements and funding opportunities for graduate students across all disciplines with research interests in East Asia.
HORIZONS Alumni Newsletter
For Stanford alumni and anyone else wishing to keep up with current happenings in the Stanford East Asia community.
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News
CEAS Postdoc Publishes Article
Rebecca Corbett, Postdoctoral Fellow in Japanese Studies at CEAS (2013-2015), published "Crafting Identity as a Tea Practitioner in Early Modern Japan: Otagaki Rengetsu and Tagami Kikusha" in the U.S.-Japan Women's Journal.
Stanford Partners with Community Colleges to Internationalize Curriculum
How does a community college instructor begin to tackle a lack of global awareness exhibited by her students? She spends an afternoon at Stanford with leading faculty and experts, as well as other community college faculty, to discuss issues of importance to the global community.
Events
Wednesday, April 06, 2016
John Birch, China, and the Cold War
Terry Lautz
Tuesday, April 12, 2016
Digital Perspectives on Imperial Chinese Political History
Hilde De Weerdt
Thursday, April 14, 2016
Markus and Visus: Linking and Visualizing Data in the Chinese Humanities
Hilde De Weerdt
Friday, April 15, 2016
Atrocity-Spectacle: Cheju, Cinema, and the Idea of Unrepresentability
Steven Chung
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Intellectual History and Computing: Modeling and Simulating the World of the Korean Yangban
Javier Cha
Thursday, April 28, 2016
Visualization and Analysis of Korean Genealogical Data using Cytoscape
Javier Cha