Asian Studies Only
Google Custom Search
Asian Studies Center Logo- Round

Welcome to Michigan State University's Asian Studies Center

The Asian Studies Center (ASN), named a National Undergraduate Resource Center (Title VI NRC) since 2000 by the U.S. Department of Education, directs one of the largest, most diverse programs of education about Asia in the Midwest. Unlike comparable programs, ASN's is distinguished by its comprehensive attention to East, Central, South, and Southeast Asia in the design of its curriculum, focus of faculty research, and scope of outreach activities. Presently, the Center's ninety affiliated faculty represent disciplines from across the curriculum in teaching undergraduate and graduate students.

ASN began as Michigan State University's academic center for developing and coordinating Asia-related programs in 1962. During the Center's first decades, Asian Studies centered on students and faculty working in the East Asia regional area. From the 1960s to the 1980s, ASN's accomplishments received wide recognition and funding from the Social Science Research Council, the Luce Foudation, the Japan Foundation, the Korea Foundation, and other agencies.

In recent years, the Center has undergone a major transition as the curriculum, faculty research, exchange programs, and outreach activities have developed to embrace programs in places as diverse as India, Indonesia, Korea, and Nepal. Emblematic of this development is the growth of MSU's overseas linkages to dozens of locations throughout Asia today.

ASN's shift toward an all-Asia emphasis reflects the university's growing internationalization. Two-thirds of MSU's foreign students and over half of the university's 1200 foreign scholars come from Asia and nealry 2,000 undergraduates are Asian-Pacific Americans. The changing domestic demographics and the increase in students and scholars from Asia have created demands for an Asian Studies curriculum relevant to new needs and experiences reflecting the university's genuinely multicultural quality.

Silk Road to Clipper Ship:
Trade, Changing Markets, and East Asian Ceramics

May 3, Saturday - August 1, Friday
First floor, Kresge Art Center, MSU

This exhibition, organized by the University of Michigan Museum of Art, covers over 1000 years of Chinese porcelains to illustrate the important role of foreign trade and changing domestic markets in stimulating Chinese potters to continually reinvent their repertoire of shapes and decorative techniques. The exhibition traces the exchange along the Silk Road during the Han dynasty; porcelains made for domestic use, foreign exchange and imperial families. For more information, see the museum website: http://www.artmuseum.msu.edu/


Images above are © terragalleria and are used by permission.