China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Berkeley Branstad opens first center to push for in US on study of Silk Road

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The University of California Berkeley has opened the first institutio­nalized center in the United States dedicated to the study of the Silk Road, the ancient trade route that linked China with the West.

Named the P.Y. and Kinmay W. Tang Center for Silk Road Studies, it was launched on April Terry 29 with Brans tad, a $5 million the nomineegif­t by nominee two forUS branches ambassador of the to family Chi id of ChineseChi­idh Americanh philanthro­pisthi Oscar Tang.

The benefactor­s are Tang and his wife, Dr Agnes Hsu-Tang, who are based in New York City, and Bay Area Berkeley alumni Nadine Tang and Leslie Tang Schilling, with their brother Martin Tang in Hong Kong.

Oscar Tang and his archaeolog­ist wife founded the Tang Center for Early China at Columbia University in 2015. In 2003, he founded the first Tang center for excellence in Chinese Humanities, the P.Y. and Kinmay W. Tang Center for East Asian Art at Princeton University in 2003.

Oscar Tang believes that the new Tang Center at Berkeley is “part of my family’s ongoing effort to enhance knowledge and understand­ing of the great Chinese civilizati­on and its relationsh­ip to the rest of the world,” according to a press release from the university.

The center will promote “the research and teaching of the material and visual cultures that flourished along the Silk Road and formed a bridge between the many economic epicenters of Eurasia and China. A better understand­ing of the Silk Road’s history will also help contextual­ize its emergent geopolitic­al significan­ce in the present time,’’ the press release said.

Sanjyot Mehendale, the center’s inaugural chair and a lecturer of Central Asian art and archaeolog­y at Berkeley, said the center will promote the multidisci­plinary collaborat­ion necessary for Silk Road research.

“It’s about coming together and poring over material from different sides,” she said. “You can’t just sit in your corner of expertise. You have to look at the art, you have to study the texts, you have to examine the archaeolog­ical remains, to build a bigger picture. The more we understand the history of the region, in particular Central Asia, the more it will resonate as a place, as cultures, as people,” she said.

The center will fund fieldwork and fellowship­s for faculty and students at excavation­s, museums and archives; organize conference­s and workshops to bring distinguis­hed scholars to campus to share recent discoverie­s and research; advance teaching on Silk Road topics; foster visiting scholar exchanges; support open-source publicatio­ns; and promote the training and outreach of K-12 teachers and community college instructor­s.

UC Berkeley is a natural site for a center dedicated to studying the Silk Road because it is home to a diverse group of scholars who are specialist­s in the languages, history, religions, intellectu­al and artistic traditions of the ancient civilizati­ons of China, Central Asia and the Near East, the university said.

 ?? PEG SKORPINSKI / UC BERKELEY ?? The P.Y. and Kinmay W. Tang Center for Silk Road Studies opened on April 29 at UC Berkeley. From left: Nadine Tang, Leslie Schilling, Sanjyot Mehendale, the center’s chair; Corinne Debaine-Francfort of the National Center for Scientific Research in...
PEG SKORPINSKI / UC BERKELEY The P.Y. and Kinmay W. Tang Center for Silk Road Studies opened on April 29 at UC Berkeley. From left: Nadine Tang, Leslie Schilling, Sanjyot Mehendale, the center’s chair; Corinne Debaine-Francfort of the National Center for Scientific Research in...

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