Monday, September 26, 2016
Asian clothing boutique Ehua Fashion now in Squirrel Hill.
Over the past year an Asian hair salon, an Asian KTV/karaoke/noraebang, and an Asian express mail shop have opened in Squirrel Hill, so an Asian clothing boutique sounds about right. Located at 5865 Forbes Ave. (map) in what was most recently a real estate office, Ehua Fashion opened two weeks ago and offers "Fresh, airy, on-trend styles." The Chinese owner says while only about 20% of the clothes are from Korea---with the others predominantly Chinese---the styles in general are Korean. The snapshots on its Instagram give an idea of its offerings, though they are generic images from Asian fashion sites.
Labels:
China,
Korea,
Pittsburgh
Two-day workshop, "The Everyday Politics of Digital Life in China", October 7 and 8 at Pitt.
The University of Pittsburgh will host a two-day workshop, "The Everyday Politics of Digital Life in China", on October 7 and 8.
Digital media, and the Internet in particular, have fundamentally and irreversibly changed daily life in the People’s Republic of China (PRC). However, current approaches to the politics of digital culture, which are often firmly based on examples from the West, largely fail to comprehensively address the multifaceted situations in digital-age China, whose unique and contradictory position between post-Socialism and neoliberal Globalism has remarkably complicated the contested relations between control and freedom, between the technological and the socio-political. To engage with these problems, this workshop brings together scholars from a wide variety of disciplines, including political science, law, film studies, communications, anthropology, and sociology, to broaden the theoretical and methodological scopes that may adequately address existing and emergent political questions regarding China’s burgeoning digital culture. The workshop examines how relatively ordinary occurrences, the everyday censorship of political or non-political content, the decision to circumvent the great firewall, posting a legal question online, or reading pollution-monitoring microblogs, creates China’s digital political culture in diverse and distributive manners. Engaging with both the macro-social and the microindividual, the papers in this workshop draw on a variety of methods including big data, interviews, surveys, archival research, close readings, and critical theory to interrogate digital political life in China, which is simultaneously rich and restricted, diverse and particular, connected and isolated.Presenters hail from nine different universities, including the University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon University, and the Friday and Saturday events will be held in the University Club at 123 University Pl. in Oakland (map).
Labels:
China,
Events,
Pittsburgh
Sunday, September 25, 2016
New Chinese movies L.O.R.D: Legend of Ravaging Dynasties (爵迹), I Belonged To You (从你的全世界路过) in Pittsburgh from September 30.
Two 2016 Chinese movies will play at the AMC Loews Waterfront theater from September 30: the stop-motion CGI film L.O.R.D: Legend of Ravaging Dynasties (爵迹) and the romance I Belonged To You (从你的全世界路过).
Labels:
China,
Events,
movies,
Pittsburgh
Friday, September 23, 2016
2016 Mid-Autumn Festival at Pitt, September 24.
The University of Pittsburgh's Chinese Student Association and Vietnamese Student Association will host the 2016 Mid-Autumn Festival on September 24. The free event runs from 5:00 pm to 8:00 pm in the William Pitt Union Assembly Room (map), and includes food and performances.
Labels:
China,
Events,
Pittsburgh,
Vietnam
Supercodex (live set) by Ryoji Ikeda, September 23.
Japanese artist Ryoji Ikeda will perform his Supercodex at the Wood Street Galleries (map) tonight at 10:30 pm, part of this month's Gallery Crawl and the introduction to the three-month Ikeda DATA.MATRIX exhibition. More information at the Facebook event page. Ikeda's DATA.TRON was at the Wood Street Galleries in 2013. Wood Street Galleries is located at 601 Wood St. (map).
Labels:
art,
Events,
Japan,
music,
Pittsburgh
Thursday, September 22, 2016
New Chinese movie I Belonged To You (从你的全世界路过) in Pittsburgh, from September 30.
The 2016 Chinese romance film I Belonged To You (从你的全世界路过) will play at the AMC Loews Waterfront theater from September 30. One theater provides a synopsis:
I Belonged To You is a romance omnibus of mini love stories adapted from Zhang Jiajia's best-selling internet "bedtime stories" novel of the same name. Chen Mo (Deng Chao), is known as the cheapest person in the whole city. Every day he will battle against DJ Xiao Rong (Du Juan). No one knows where their hate comes from. Chen Mo’s two little brothers, whether it is the silliest Zhu Tou (Yue Yun Peng) or the city’s most innocent Mo Shi Ba (Yang Yang), the three people all go on rampages daily, thinking that they can all live freely, but the result is that they all hit the greatest turning point of their lives. Chen Mo meets the mysterious Yao Yi (Zhang Tian Ai), Zhu Tou creates the worst wedding of all time, Mo Shi Ba experiences the saddest parting. These people’s lives reveal things little by little. Dreams, love, friendship all go far away. They have already lost their own paths, until they hear a voice from around the world.Tickets and showtime information is available on the theater's website. Also opening in Pittsburgh, at AMC Loews Waterfront, on the 30th is the 2016 Chinese computer-animated motion capture movie L.O.R.D: Legend of Ravaging Dynasties (爵迹). The theater is located at 300 West Waterfront Dr. in the Waterfront shopping complex in Homestead (map), across the Monongahela River from Greenfield, Squirrel Hill, and the rest of Pittsburgh.
Labels:
China,
Events,
movies,
Pittsburgh
Wednesday, September 21, 2016
NAAAP PGH Asian American Women in Entrepreneurship Speaker Series: Leah Lizarondo, September 26.
The Pittsburgh chapter of the National Association of Asian American Professionals will host Leah Lizarondo on September 26 for the next in the Asian American Women in Entrepreneurship Speaker Series. From the Facebook event page:
Leah Lizarondo will be joining us as our next speaker in our series. Leah has been a rock star in the Pittsburgh startup scene. Here is some more info on her:The event will be held at the Allegheny HYP Club downtown (map) from 6:30 to 8:00 pm, and is free and open to the public.
Leah Lizarondo is Co-Founder and CEO of 412 Food Rescue. 412 Food Rescue works to eliminate hunger and promote a healthy environment by rescuing viable food about to go to waste and redirecting to nonprofits that serve those who are food insecure. 412 Food Rescue is an innovative approach to food recovery with rapid response reverse logistics model that utilizes technology to aggregate and automatically match food donors and beneficiaries. The organization works with a network of dedicated volunteers and deploys a scalable technology and replicable model designed to eliminate food waste at the retail level.
Leah received her Masters Degree in Public Policy from Carnegie Mellon University graduating with Highest Distinction and is an advocate for healthy food accessibility, food safety policy and sustainability. She has also trained at the Natural Gourmet Institute in New York City and received her Certification in Plant-based Nutrition from Cornell University. She began her career as a product manager in Southeast Asia, working in consumer packaged goods and technology before moving on to her passion in food and health advocacy. She has a track record of leadership in nonprofits in New York and Pittsburgh. She is interested in social innovation and technology and mines her experience launching startups as she works to establish 412 Food Rescue.
Leah is an active advocate for food, health and innovation in Pittsburgh. She is also the founder of The Brazen Kitchen, an award-winning blog and Pittsburgh Magazine weekly column. Leah is currently Editor-at-Large for NEXTpittsburgh, covering social innovation. Leah’s work has been featured in print and online publications including MSN’s Re:Discover Series, NPR, Oprah.com, GOOD Magazine online, and local media. The Brazen Kitchen won the 2013 National City & Regional Magazine Awards. Leah has delivered numerous talks in the field of food policy and innovation. In April 2014, she gave the TEDx Talk “Why the Farm Is Not Getting to the Table.” The video can be accessed on tedx.ted.com.
Labels:
Asian America,
Events,
food,
Pittsburgh
ACA Compliance Group hiring part-time Mandarin Chinese Language Email - Social Media - Document Analyst.
The Mt. Lebanon office of ACA Compliance Group is hiring an Email - Social Media - Document Analyst proficient in written and spoken Mandarin Chinese.
ACA Compliance Group, the leading regulatory compliance consulting firm in the U.S., has established an office in Pittsburgh dedicated to our electronic communication surveillance service line. Email Data Analysts search email archives for potentially problematic messages, identify regulatory risks, and draft reports outlining findings. The Email Data Analyst position offers flexible hours (a minimum of 16 per work week) and a pleasant working environment. Email Data Analysts receive extensive training regarding securities regulation and must be strong writers with the ability to quickly learn financial and legal concepts.Compensation starts at $20 per hour. More details available via the Indeed.com posting.
Labels:
China,
Jobs,
Pittsburgh
"Storytime: Chinese and English" at Carnegie Library in Squirrel Hill, September 28.
The Carnegie Library in Squirrel Hill will host the next "Storytime: Chinese and English" on Wednesday, September 28 from 6:00 to 6:30 pm.
Celebrate our city’s diverse culture as we explore new words through songs, action rhymes and stories in both English and Chinese. For children birth-5 years and their caregivers..The library is located at 5801 Forbes Ave. (map) and is accessible by buses 61A, 61B, 61C, 61D, 64, and 74.
Labels:
China,
Events,
Pittsburgh,
Taiwan
Tuesday, September 20, 2016
PittEd profiles alumnus Namgi Park and his impact on Korean education.
via 서울Pn
The University of Pittsburgh School of Education's online magazine, PittEd has <a href="https://app.education.pitt.edu/newsletter/pitted/article?id=89#.ZFPwDXbMI2w>a lengthy profile on Gwangju National University of Education President, and Pitt alumnus, Namgi Park (박남기)</a> and his contributions to the development of higher education in South Korea. <br />
Labels:
Korea,
Pittsburgh
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