Sinologie

Aktuelle Veranstaltungen / Current Events

18th Taiwan Documentary Film Festival: 13 - 14 December

Acclaimed documentary film maker and Golden Horse Award winner Tsai Tsung-Lung 蔡崇隆 is the invited guest director of the ERCCT's Taiwan Documentary Film Festival 2024, that will take place on December 13  to 14. Acclaimed documentary film maker and Golden Horse Award winner Tsai Tsung-Lung 蔡崇隆 is the invited guest director of the ERCCT's Taiwan Documentary Film Festival 2024, that will take place on December 13  to 14, at Kino Atelier. The festival programme this time centers on the issue of migrant workers in Taiwan, a topic that looms large in Tsai Tsung-Lung's work. The headliner of this year's festival thus is his film on the case of a Vietnamese migrant worker who got into trouble with the police: "Miles to Go Before I Sleep", distinguished 2022 by the most prestigious film award in the Chinese speaking world, the Golden Horse.

The programme in detail:

Friday, December 13, 2024

14:00 – 14:20 Opening ceremony 開幕儀式
14:20 – 15:30 See You, Lovable Strangers 再見可愛陌生人
15:30 – 15:40 Break 
15:40 – 16:00 Contextualising Talk by Dr. I.  Cockel (fromerly, Isabelle Cheng)(Portsmouth)
16:00 – 17:30 And Miles to Go Before I Sleep 九槍 (Warning: contains images of physical violence!)
17:30 – 17:55 Discussion with Director Tsai Tsung-lung
17:55 – 18:15 Break and Free Pretzel 
18:15 – 20:00 Feature Film: The Abandoned 查無此心 (Tseng Ying-Ting)

Saturday, December 14, 2024

10:30 – 11:40  Out/ Marriage 失婚記
11:40 – 12:10 A Different Journey Home 尋鄉異旅 
12:10 – 14:00  Lunch break 午飯
14:00 – 14:45 Who cares? 長照喘息聲 
14:45 – 15:30 Discussion with Director Tsai Tsung-Lung
15:30     Closing Ceremony 閉幕儀式

All films are shown in Chinese with English subtitles.

The festival takes place at Kino Atelier, Vor dem Haagtor 1, 72070 Tübingen and starts on Friday, December 13, at 2 pm (14 Uhr).
Tickets for the five documentary films are 8,- EUR. 
Entrance to the feature film “The Abandoned” is free. 

The ERCCT is grateful for the generous support from the Taipei Representative Office in the FRG Munich branch office.

GCS Colloquium Winter 2024/25

Join the Chair of Greater China Studies for a inspiring winter semester, with vibrant discussions on state-of-the-art research projects and insights on the region.

You can download the programme here.

Blockseminar von Prof. Tseng Yen-fen

Labour Migration to and from Taiwan

Prof Tseng Yen-fen vom Department of Sociology at National Taiwan University, Taipei, ist als Gastwissenschaftlerin am European Research Center on Contemporary Taiwan (CCKF-ERCCT) in Tübingen, und wird am Dienstag, Mittwoch, Donnerstag, 18. – 20. Juni 2024, ein Blockseminar unterrichten mit dem Titel:
Labour Migration to and from Taiwan

Der öffentliche Gastvortrag am 19. Juni ist Teil des Seminar-Programms!
Genauer Seminartermin: 
Dienstag bis Donnerstag,   18. – 20. Juni 2024: 9 – 18 Uhr, Do. 9 – 14 Uhr
Ort der Veranstaltung ist Raum 135 des CCKF-ERCCT, Keplerstrasse 2, 1. OG. 
Das Seminar wird mit 4 bzw. 8 ECTS-Punkten kreditiert und steht allen Masterstudierenden der Studiengänge M.A. Sinologie/Chinese Studies und M.A. Politik und Gesellschaft Ostasiens offen. 
Schriftliche Voranmeldung bitte bis zum 20.05.2023 an stefan.braig@uni-tuebingen.de
 

Blockseminar von Prof. Huang Yu-Ling

Society, Law and Reproductive Medicine in Taiwan

Prof. Huang Yu-ling, Soziologin von der School of Medicine der National Cheng Kung University, Tainan, Taiwan, ist als Gastwissenschaftlerin am European Research Center on Contemporary Taiwan (CCKF-ERCCT) in Tübingen, und wird am Donnerstag, Freitag und Samstag, 20.- 22. Juni 2024, ein Blockseminar unterrichten mit dem Titel:
Society, Law and Reproductive Medicine in Taiwan
Genauer Seminartermin: 
Donnerstag bis Samstag,   20. – 22. Juni 2024: 9 – 18 Uhr, Sa. 9 – 14 Uhr
Ort der Veranstaltung ist Raum 135 des CCKF-ERCCT, Keplerstrasse 2, 1. OG. 
Das Seminar wird mit 4 bzw. 8 ECTS-Punkten kreditiert und steht allen Masterstudierenden der Studiengänge M.A. Sinologie/Chinese Studies und M.A. Politik und Gesellschaft Ostasiens offen. 
Schriftliche Voranmeldung bitte bis zum 05.06.2024 an stefan.braig@uni-tuebingen.de 
 

Frühere Veranstaltungen

Winter Term 2023/24

Greater China and Taiwan Colloquium

You can download the programme here.

Date Time Speaker and Topic Venue

Nov. 9

Thursday

6-8

pm

Prof. Alex Tan

Taiwan: The Party System of a Young Consolidated Democracy

Keplerstr. 2

SR 1.81

Nov. 27

Thursday

6-8

pm

Dr. Sheu Jyh-Shyang

Grey zone activities and asymmetric warfare - Taiwan's defence

dilemma

Keplerstr. 2

HS 001

Nov. 30

Thursday

6-8

pm

Dr. Di Qing

Transcultural exploration of Taiko: A comparative aesthetics study

between Europe and Taiwan

Keplerstr. 2

SR 1.81

Dec. 6

Wednesday

6-8

pm

Prof. Alex Tan

Exploratory study of party polarization: Taiwan in a comparative

perspective

Keplerstr. 2

SR 1.81

 

Dec. 7

Thursday

6-8

pm

Prof. Alex Tan

Taiwanese Youth Voting for Taiwan: Studying Identity Formation in

Taiwanese Youth and its Impact on Voting Patterns in Taiwan

Keplerstr. 2

SR 1.81

Dec. 14

Thursday

6-8

pm

Prof. Mark Thompson

The impact of China's rise on contemporary South East Asia

Keplerstr. 2

SR 1.81

Jan. 11

Thursday

6-8

pm

Prof. Lin Shu-Hui

Discourses in Taiwan Travel Literature during the Cold War Era

Keplerstr. 2

SR 1.81

Jan. 18

Thursday

6-8

pm

Dr. Lin Kai-Heng

Crafting Black Hands: Institutional Changes and Social Networks in

Skill Formation within Taiwan’s Machine Industry

Keplerstr. 2

SR 1.81

Jan. 25

Thursday

6-8

pm

Prof. Lin Shu-Hui

Cross-cultural Dynamics and Applications of Taiwan Travel Literature

Keplerstr. 2

SR 1.81

Jan. 31

Wednesday

4-6

pm

Dr. André Beckershoff

Social Forces in the Re-Making of Cross-Strait Relations: Hegemony

and Social Movements in Taiwan

Melanchthonstr.

36
SR 124

Feb. 1

Thursday

6-8

pm

Kuo Chao-Hsuan

The Child Rights in Taiwan’s Parenting Law

Keplerstr. 2

SR 1.81

 

ASC Conference 2023

The annual conference of the ASC (Arbeitskreis Sozialwissenschaftliche Chinaforschung, DGA) this year was hosted by Prof. Dr. Gunter Schubert, Chair of Greater China Studies, and took place on the 23rd and 24th  of November at the University of Tübingen. The agenda consisted of five panels covering the topics of 'International Political Economy and IR,' 'Digitalization and the (Chinese Party-)State,' 'Political Steering under Xi Jinping,' 'Local Politics and Central-Local Relations,' and 'Censorship and Surveillance.' These panels were chaired by Tobias ten Brink (Constructor University), Margot Schüller (GIGA), Björn Alpermann (University of Würzburg), Doris Fischer (University of Würzburg), and Ryanne Flock (University of Würzburg). In each panel, discussants presented and commented on the conference papers, which included two contributions from our PhD candidates, Abbey Heffer and Joachim Brinkmann, before participants engaged in lively discussions. Overall, the ASC Conference was characterized by timely papers that reflected the current important debates within social science research on China.

 

Greater China and Taiwan Colloquium - Summer Term 2023

Join us this summer term for fruitful discussions on the latest research! Regular colloquium sessions are held on Thursdays, 6-8pm c.t. at Wilhelmstr. 19 SR 001. Additional sessions are scheduled for Mondays. We will keep everyone posted about the latest schedule

Greater China and Taiwan Colloquium - Summer Semester 2023

May 4

Thursday

Lin Kaiyuan

Green Energy Transition and Peripheral City Development in China: toward a local Eco-developmental state

 
May 11
Thursday
Dr. Jens Damm
Contested and Negotiated Discourses: LGBTQI Issues in Taiwan’s Media
Wilhelmstr. 19, SR 001
May 22

Dr. Li Rongxin

Understanding Consultative Politics in China, Ideology, Democracy and Governance

Keplerstr. 2
SR 002

May 25

Thursday

Prof. Shen Hsiu-Hua

Infrastructuring Youth: the Chinese Government's mobilization of
Taiwanese young people

Wilhelmstr. 19, SR 001

June 5

Monday

Prof. Shen Hsiu-Hua

Kinmen as a Shifting Border

Keplerstr. 2
SR 002
June 22
Thursday
Prof. Chen Yi-Ling
From Globalizing Taipei to Refencing European Cities: Referencing as a politicalizing strategy in Taiwan’s urban development

Wilhelmstr. 19

SR 001

June 29

Thursday

Zhou Shunzi

Steering and Shirking Environmental Policy under Top-Level Design in Xi Jinping's China

Wilhelmstr. 19

SR 001

July 3

Monday

Daniel Davies
Ethnic Affinity, Proximity Voting and Indigenous Politics

Keplerstr. 2
SR 002

July 6

Thursday

Prof. Anne Sokolsky
A Diary of a Taiwanese Girl (1944): Imperialization, Language Edu-cation, and a Young Woman's Voice in Japanese Ruled Taiwan

Wilhelmstr. 19

SR 001

July 10

Monday

Wu Peng-Chi
臺灣彰化王功沿海的林希元祖信仰及其海洋觀念研究
Keplerstr. 2
SR 002
July 27
Thursday
Prof. Lee Po-Han
What's beneath ‘I'd rather not’? Disabled sexualities and crip ambivalence

Wilhelmstr. 19

SR 001

GCS Colloquium Summer 2021

China’s Political System in the Xi Jinping Era: Features, Trends and Developments

China’s Political System in the Xi Jinping Era: Features, Trends and Developments

Many observers have stated that China’s political system has seen considerable change since the beginning of the Xi Jinping era. But what exactly has changed, and to what effect? What are the most striking features of today’s political system, and what broader trends and developments within China’s elite strata and society at large do they embody? How successful is the system in generating stability and legitimacy? Does is allow for systemic evolution, and if so, in what direction? Or, are we facing an increasing ossification of the system that may lead to its eventual demise? This lecture series focuses on a number of relevant topics assessing the steering capacity of China’s political system in various policy fields, which is critical for the future development of China’s Communist regime and its “authoritarian resilience”. It is also an event to feature the “German school of China studies”.  

The lecture series is an online event via Zoom. It takes place on Thursdays from 12:30 to 1:45 pm (CET). Speakers shall talk no longer than 25-30 minutes, followed by 45-50 minutes of Q&A.

 

Sessions

 

April 29

A Disciplining Agency: The State in Xi Jinping China

(Prof. Dr. Thomas Heberer, Universität Duisburg-Essen)

Talk recording

 

May 6

Economic Steering in Xi Jinping China

(Prof. Dr. Doris Fischer, Universität Würzburg)

Talk recording

 

*CANCELLED* May 20

How to Ensure Cadres' Compliance? Cadres Management in Xi Jinping China

(Chen Xuelian, Central Compilation and Translation Office, Beijing)

 

June 10

Handling Social Protest in Xi Jinping’s China

(Prof. Dr. Christian Göbel, Universität Wien)

Talk recording

 

June 17

From Resilience to Consolidation: Judicial Reforms and Authoritarian Rule in Xi Jinping China

(Meng Ye, M.A., Universität Tübingen)

 

June 24

Xi’s Third Way: Illiberal Institutionalization

(Prof. Dr. Björn Alpermann, Universität Würzburg)

Talk recording

 

July 1

Building a „World Class Science System” in Xi Jinping China

(Dr. Anna L. Ahlers, MPI für Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Berlin)

Talk recording

 

Please register here to receive zoom link for all or any of the sessions and for event updates!

GCS Colloquium Winter 2020/21

The World in Crisis Mode: Fighting, hedging and utilizing the corona pandemic in Greater China and Asia

When human-to-human transmissions of a new coronavirus were first reported in January 2020, few people – most probably within China and its near-by periphery – could have foreseen the scale of the crisis that would soon follow. Within two months, a local outbreak of infections in the city of Wuhan in Central China turned into a pandemic, sending political systems worldwide into crisis-mode and redefining the complex web of international relations. The coronavirus crisis has revealed the strength and weaknesses of political regimes across Greater China and (East) Asia as each developed their own specific strategies to fight the virus. At the same time, the crisis arguably accelerated existing trends in international relations, most notably the increasing competition for global power between the U.S. and China. 

 

This colloquium takes stock of the political and social repercussions of this pandemic in Greater China and (East) Asia. It focuses particularly on the role of China as the major factor shaping regional and international relations and explores the dimensions of regional and global political change accelerated by the pandemic’s impact.

This lecture series is organized as a luncheon seminar via Zoom. It is an online event that takes place on Thursdays from 12.30 to 13.45. Speakers are supposed to talk no longer than 25-30 minutes, followed by 45-50 minutes Q&A. 

Please follow the links to the individual sessions for detailed information and registration. 

12 November 2020:
How may the pandemic affect political trust in China?
Li Lianjiang, Hong Kong

19 November 2020:
The pandemic and Hong Kong’s political survival
Malte Kaeding, Surrey

26 November 2020:
The governmentality of anti-epidemic politics in Taiwan
Gunter Schubert, Tübingen

3 December 2020:
Still catching up or already looking back? How the Corona pandemic changed South Koreans' view of the West
Lee You Jae, Tübingen

17 December 2020
Japan-China relations during the coronavirus crisis
Chris Hughes, LSE

14 January 2021
Covid-19 - a litmus test for Southeast Asian regionalism
Jürgen Rüland, Freiburg

21 January 2021:
COVID-19 Response in China and East Asia: Unhealthy Populism and Healthy Authoritarianism?
Mark Thompson, Hongkong

4 February 2021
Crisis outfall: the demise of US-China relations
Eberhardt Sandschneider, Berlin

11 February 2021
The European Union’s search for geopolitical space in the era of Covid-19
Hans-Jürgen Bieling, Tübingen

18 February 2021
Chinese perspectives on a world in turmoil
Gudrun Wacker, Berlin

 

Greater China and Taiwan Colloquium - Summer 2024

The Greater China and Taiwan Colloquium of the summer semester 2024 featured great talks and presentations on a wide range of fascinating topics: 

SpeakerDateTopic
Lorenzo AndolfattoMay 13In between Nature and the Nation: Defining National Parks in Taiwan, 1933–1972
Jens DammMay 29China and Germany Relation since 2021: Between Continuity and Increasing Confrontation
Alexandre GandilJune 3Taiwan beyond its own Strait: Assessing Taipei’s sovereignty claims over the South China Sea from below
Liang Chia-YuJune 3Status Sacer: To Propose an International Relations Theory from Taiwan's Structural Marginality
Huang Yu-LingJune 10Gender, Culture, and Reproductive Medicine: Comparative Research of Regulatory Logics, Clinical Care, and (Non)Anonymity Donation of Assisted Reproductive Technologies
Huang Yu-Ling June 12A sociological analysis of gamete donation regulations and experiences in Taiwan
Tseng Yen-FenJune 19Increase in immigration without settlement: How Taiwan skills-based immigration policy institutionalizes temporariness of skilled migrants
Tseng Yen-FenJune 20Settlement intention among white-collar migrants in Taiwan
Vivien MarkertJune 26The Chinese Muslim Diaspora in Cairo: Reserch Notes
Lin Ya-YinJuly 1The Typologies of China’s Cognitive Warfare: Data Analysis of Three Taiwan Strait Military Drills 2022–2023
Lai Yu-HsuanJuly 15Regional Development and Hedging Strategies: The Impact of Taiwan's New Leader
Guo JianfengJuly 15The Taiwan Issue in China-EU Relations
Gunter SchubertJuly 17Taiwan After the 2024 National Elections: Challenges Ahead