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Frances Wood on the Chinese intellectual community in UK, 1930’s-40’s
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WHAT: An RASBJ Zoom talk followed by Q&A
WHEN: July 22, 19:00-20:00 Beijing Standard Time.MORE ABOUT THE EVENT: “Mahjong in Maida Vale” was inspired by a study day in Oxford celebrating the writer and artist Chiang Yee, recalls Frances Wood who considers it a work in progress. She started to think about the Chinese intellectuals who came to the UK in the 1930s and 1940s, many of whom stayed on. A friend remembered sitting in a north London drawing room, eating sunflower seeds to the sound of clacking tiles as her mother played mahjong with three older ladies- the painters Fang Zhaoling and Zhang Qianying and the writer and artist Ling Shuhua. Why were they in the UK? How did they live? What did they eat? What happened to them?MORE ABOUT THE SPEAKER: After studying Chinese at the universities of Cambridge and Peking, Frances Wood worked as Curator of the Chinese collections in the British Library for nearly 30 years. She has written, amongst others, Blue Guide to China, Hand-Grenade Practice in Peking, Did Marco Polo Go To China?, No Dogs and Not Many Chinese: Treaty Port Life in China 1843-1943, The Silk Road, and The Diamond Sutra: the Story of the World’s Earliest Dated Printed Book.HOW MUCH: This event is free and exclusively for members of the RASBJ and of other RAS branches. If you know someone who wants to join RASBJ, please ask them to contact MembershipRASBJ on Wechat or email membership.ras.bj@gmail.com
HOW TO JOIN THE EVENT: Register before July 21 with your name and email address by clicking here:
https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJEof–prjsqHtMGTa9ACuKvtIs2viuH2QWc
After advance registration, you’ll receive a confirmation email with a login link and passcode; use them to log in 10 minutes before the talk.
JOIN OUR UPCOMING ZOOM TALKS:
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- August 5: Prof. Arne Westad on “The origins of reform and opening in China in the 1970s”
- August 26: Bizarre Beijing’s Jim Nobles on the Chinese Hungry Ghost Festival
- Sept 2: Prof. Rana Mitter on “China’s good war: how WWII is shaping a new nationalism”
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Event registration closed.
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