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Association for Asian Studies

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Association for Asian Studies (AAS) is a scholarly, non-political and non-profit professional association focusing on Asia and the study of Asia. It is based in Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States.

The Association provides members with an Annual Conference (a large conference of 3,000+ normally based in North America each spring), publications, regional conferences, and other activities.

History

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Shortly after World War I, the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS), with the support of the Rockefeller Foundation, gave Mortimer Graves a mandate to develop Chinese studies.[1] Kenneth Scott Latourette would recall in 1955 the "people of the United States and those who led them knew little of the peoples and cultures of the Far East" and that was "in spite of political, commercial and cultural commitments in the region and of events which already were hurrying them on into ever more intimate relations."[2] Graves worked with Arthur W. Hummel, Sr. of the Oriental Division of the Library of Congress, the Institute of Pacific Relations, the Harvard-Yenching Institute, the American Oriental Society, as well as with colleges, universities, and museums. [1] Twenty-eight people attended the first meeting of the planning group, which was held at the Harvard Club in New York in 1928, and further meetings were held over the next decade. In 1936, the group began publishing the Far Eastern Bibliography. On 6 June 1941 the Far Eastern Association was formed and issued The Far Eastern Quarterly as its organ, with Cyrus Peake as Managing Editor. [3] The Quarterly survived the war with the financial help that Kenneth W. Colgrove obtained from Northwestern University.[4] [5]

After the war, an organizational meeting of some 200 people was held at Columbia University on April 2, 1948, following the annual meeting of the American Oriental Society, to which many of the Far Eastern group belonged. The Constitution of the new group was drafted by Edwin O. Reischauer, Woodbridge Bingham, and Earl H. Pritchard. [6] The Association's inaugural president was Arthur W. Hummel, Sr. [4]

In 1956, the organization was renamed to the Association for Asian Studies to expand its scope to cover all areas of Asia, including South and Southeast Asia.[7] Attendance grew from 200 for the organizational meeting in 1948 to 605 at the first annual meeting in 1949 and to 2,434 in 1963.[8]

The organization was further restructured in 1970, when four elective area Councils were formed, representative of each of the four areas of Asia: South Asia (SAC), Southeast Asia (SEAC), China and Inner Asia (CIAC) and Northeast Asia (NEAC). The councils were formed so that each area of Asia could have a proportionate voice in the Association and on the Board of Directors. In 1977, a Council of Conferences (COC) was established both to co-ordinate the regional conferences held by the Association and to discover ways to better serve the needs of Asia studies scholars in various parts of the United States. Area library organizations have been formed for South Asia (CONSALD), South East Asia, and East Asia (CEAL).

Background and controversies

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World War II brought many academics into the government, some in the active military and some in the Office of War Information or the Office of Strategic Services, both of which were intelligence agencies which used academic disciplines and scholarly forms of analysis. When the war was over, political scientists, historians, and social scientists continued to be concerned with contemporary affairs. The Far Eastern Association reflected an Area studies approach, geographically grounded division of labor, rather than by academic discipline, with the association subdivided into East Asian, Southeast Asian, and South Asian Studies. (In the late 20th century, the field of Central and Inner Asia was added.) The Ford Foundation provided money and co-ordination to area studies centers, which, in turn, supported the AAS.[9]

Some members were critical. Bruce Cumings, writing in the Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars, charged that for the AAS to participate in this way of funding scholarship on Asia led to confusing academic research and government intelligence work. He further argued that the areas studies approach in general emphasized contemporary social science theory, not the classic approaches of Oriental studies, which used philology and studied ancient civilizations. Cumings called that an "implicit Faustian bargain."[10]

In the 1960s, some members agitated for the AAS to express opposition to American involvement in Vietnam. AAS President William Theodore de Bary called for the organization to take a position on the war that was "nonpolitical but not unconcerned." The active opposition to the war was left to the much smaller Committee of Concerned Asian Scholars.[11]

Annual conference

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Each spring, the Association for Asian Studies (AAS) holds a four-day conference devoted to planned programs of scholarly papers, roundtable discussions, workshops, and panel sessions on a wide range of issues in research and teaching, and on Asian affairs in general. The 2013 Conference was held in San Diego; Philadelphia (March 27–30, 2014); Chicago (March 26–29, 2015); Seattle (March 31–April 3, 2016); Toronto (March 16–19, 2017); Washington, D.C. (March 22–25, 2018).

Book prizes

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The AAS administers and awards a number of prizes:[12]

Publications

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  • The Bibliography of Asian Studies: Now an online database, the BAS is the single largest record of research and scholarly literature on East, Southeast, and South Asia written in Western languages. It comprises over 800,000 citations and can be electronically searched. Started as an annual section of the Far Eastern Quarterly edited by members in 1941, the BAS grew to an annual supplement produced by a specialized professional staff.[19] However, by the mid-1980s, gathering the burgeoning data and printing the increasingly thick volumes led to the annual editions falling several years behind. The Association determined to transfer BAS to an electronic database, incorporating all entries from the print volumes for the years 1971 to 1991 and entering new citations from 1991 onward.[20] It is considered the "standard bibliographical tool for Western language resources in the field of Asian studies" [21] and the "single most important record of research and scholarly literature on Asia written in Western languages."[22] It is compiled on the basis of "durable scholarly interest" [23]
  • Key Issues in Asian Studies[24]
  • Asia Past and Present: a scholarly monograph series covering all countries of Asia and all disciplines.[25]
  • The Journal of Asian Studies: The Journal of Asian Studies has been published quarterly since 1941, when it was founded as The Far Eastern Quarterly. JAS publishes multidisciplinary work on Asia, spanning the arts, history, literature, the social sciences, and cultural studies.
  • Education About Asia: Education About Asia (EAA) is a journal published three times a year which contains scholarly articles and practical teaching resources for secondary school, college, and university instructors, as well as for students, scholars, libraries, and others with an interest in Asia. Topics include anthropology, Asian studies, business and economics, education, geography, government, history, language and literature, political science, religion, and sociology. The complete run of the journal was put online for free access in 2014 [26]

Notes

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  1. ^ a b Linton (2017).
  2. ^ Latourette (1955), p. 5.
  3. ^ Pritchard (1963), p. 514.
  4. ^ a b Hucker (1968), p. 201.
  5. ^ Kenneth Colegrove, "Norman Dwight Harris, 1870–1958," The Journal of Asian Studies 18.2 (2011): 309-310.
  6. ^ Pritchard (1963), p. 517–518.
  7. ^ Pritchard (1963), p. 520.
  8. ^ Pritchard (1963), p. 522.
  9. ^ Berger (2003), p. 95–97.
  10. ^ Cumings, Bruce (1997), "Boundary Displacement: Area Studies and International Studies After the Cold War" (PDF), Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars, 29: 8, doi:10.1080/14672715.1997.10409695, archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-05, retrieved 2015-03-14
  11. ^ Berger (2003), p. 97.
  12. ^ "AAS 2018 Book Prize Winners | #AsiaNow". www.asian-studies.org. Archived from the original on 2018-01-27.
  13. ^ Bernard Cohn Book Prize
  14. ^ Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy Book Prize
  15. ^ Ramanujan Book Prize Competition
  16. ^ Benda Prize
  17. ^ https://www.asianstudies.org/grants-awards/book-prizes/kahin-prize/
  18. ^ Buchanan Prize
  19. ^ "History of the Bibliography of Asian Studies". Archived from the original on 2014-07-25.
  20. ^ The Bibliography of Asian Studies
  21. ^ The North American Coordinating Council on Japanese Library Resources "Bibliography of Asian Studies" http://www.nccjapan.org/eresources/guides/bas_guide_04-07.pdf
  22. ^ "Bibliographical Resources (Central Eurasian Studies)". 9 March 2010.
  23. ^ "Scope and Coverage of the Bibliography of Asian Studies". bmc.lib.umich.edu. Archived from the original on 25 July 2014. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  24. ^ Key Issues in Asian Studies
  25. ^ Asia Past and Present
  26. ^ Education About Asia

Sources and further reading

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