Wednesday, June 1, 2016

Cultural Heritage Talk Series 2016 In Honor of Professor Tracey Lie-dan Lu: Rethinking the Origin of Food Production and Population Movements in Prehistoric China


Cultural Heritage Talk Series 2016 
In Honor of Professor Tracey Lie-dan Lu 

Rethinking the Origin of Food Production and Population Movements in Prehistoric China 
史前中國食物生產起源和人群移動的再思考 

Dr. Tianlong Jiao (Joseph de Heer Curator of Asian Art, Denver Art Museum, USA) 
焦天龍博士 (美國丹佛美術博物館亞洲部主任) 

*Conducted in English 英語演講* 
*Refreshments will be provided after the talk 演講後敬備茶點*

The study of the beginning of food production in prehistoric China has been dominated by the approach of searching for a single mark of the “origin” of agriculture, leading to infinite debates on many issues. A more reasonable and productive way to understand the economic pattern of this critical period is the level of food production. The concept of “Low-Level Food Production” offers a useful alternative perspective to investigate the economic changes as well as the population dynamics in early Neolithic China. 

在探索史前中國從採集到食物生產轉變的過程這一問題上,傳統的研究大都注重尋找或定義農業起源的單一界限,導致了在很多問題上的永無止境的爭論。而如果我們換一個角度,從食物生產水準的角度來研究這一轉變時期的經濟形態,將是一個更有效的研究方式。「低水準食物生產」這一概念提供了一個新的視角,可以更好地促進研究中國早期新石器時代的經濟形態和人群移動的發源。

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Dr. Tianlong Jiao is the Curator of Asian Art at the Denver Art Museum, USA. He is also an Affiliate Graduate Faculty at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, an Adjunct Chair Professor at Xiamen University and the Chinese University of Science and Technology. He received his Ph. D from Harvard University in 2003. He was the Head of Chinese Art Department at the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco from 2014-2015, Chief Curator of Hong Kong Maritime Museum from 2013-2014, the Chairman of the Department of Anthropology at Bishop Museum from 2006-2013. He also served as the Director of Shandong Archaeology Team in the Institute of Archaeology at Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. His research specialty is Chinese and Pacific archaeology and museum studies. He has conducted archaeological projects in mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Hawaii and central America. He also curated many museum exhibitions. His publications have explored a variety of issues including early food production, the Austronesian expansions, formation of states, ancient environment, archaeology of gender and style, maritime adaptation and maritime trade. He has authored/co-authored six books and more than eighty research papers both in Chinese and in English. His English book The Neolithic of Southeast China (Cambria Press 2007) was the winner of the 2007 Philip and Eugenia Cho Award for Outstanding Scholarship in Asian Studies.

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Date: 19 June 2016 (Sunday)
日期: 2016619()

Time: 4:30pm – 6:00pm
: 430分至6

Venue: LT1, 7/F, Mong Man Wai Building, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
: 香港中文大學蒙民偉樓七樓LT1演講廳

Enquiry: (Tel.) (852) 39439264, (E-mail) wschok@cuhk.edu.hk

: () (852) 39439264, (電郵) wschok@cuhk.edu.hk

Free admission. All interested are welcome. Please register on or before 8 June 2016 by filling the form: http://www.cuhk.edu.hk/ant/cchstalk2016.htm

費用全免,歡迎各位參與。有興趣者請於六月八日或之前填妥此表格:http://www.cuhk.edu.hk/ant/cchstalk2016.htm.



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