Beijing Fake Market Spree!
Today I am back in Beijing, China bargaining at the silk market for all the top brands! Brands such as Supreme, Dolce & Gabbana, Balenciaga, Jordan, Moncler and much more! So come along and let's kill it!
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Chengdu - Louis Vuitton Store
Chengdu - Louis Vuitton Store
Here Is China 3/3 - 221583-07 | Footage Farm
Footage Farm is a historical audio-visual library. The footage in this video constitutes an unedited historical document and has been uploaded for research purposes. Some viewers may find the archive material upsetting. Footage Farm does not condone the views expressed in this video.
For broadcast quality material of this clip or to know more about our Public Domain collection, contact us at info@footagefarm.co.uk
Continued... Homes, newly constructed residential apartments; department store & shopping. Fashion models & cloth, buying dress, escalator in store.
11:58:25 Public health nurses treating young children. Nationalist flags & teacher, classes. Women at blackboard & children at desk outdoors gesturing shape of characters to learn writing. CUs. Martial arts training of boys in uniforms in street w/ wooden swords.
11:59:29 Large swimming pool, men diving & in pool. Young Chinese in soda fountain; in library; art museum. Ext. ornate temple w/ carved lion, college students talking, CU.
12:00:13 Map of China, w/ Japan & graphic of its 1937 attack. People running in street w/ belongings in bundles, carts, car & trucks. Woman carrying child.
12:00:51 Explosions of bombs; refugees. People hiding in caves. Destroyed mud brick buildings; collapsed bridge. People picking thru wreckage. Crowd of people moving thru street by barbed wire barricade. Old woman falls. Crowd of women & children eating rice.
12:02:29 Refugees walking, various locations. Riding train. Leaving passenger train, registering for Cooperatives. Working outside caves (Yenan /Yennan / Yunnan), spinning w/ hand cranked wooden machine for army blankets. Men in long line carrying heavy loads on shoulder poles. Factory, manufacturing guns. Men & women working in cooperative workshops. Loom; women sewing blankets; moving canvas for shipment. Heavily loaded cart.
12:04:43 Packaging & boxing first aid supplies. Red Cross loading truck w/ supplies. Nurses working w/ wounded. Man on crutch w/ injured leg across yard & up stairs to work w/ other wounded weaving nets & bags, other goods for war effort.
12:05:28 Pan over large crowd, VO “The faces of fighting China, good comrades for us to have in this gigantic war we fight in Asia & the Pacific.” Airmen pose & wave.
12:05:41 Gen. Chung Kai Shek leading other military up steps. Street scene of buses & people in Chungking, view from top of hill to river over rooftops. Damaged building from bombs & people moving thru crowded streets. People climbing & descending wide steps. End music clipped short.
Chengdu | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Chengdu
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
You can find other Wikipedia audio articles too at:
You can upload your own Wikipedia articles through:
The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
Chengdu (Standard Mandarin: [ʈʂʰə̌ŋ.tú] (listen)), formerly romanized as Chengtu, is a sub-provincial city which serves as the capital of Sichuan province, People's Republic of China. It is one of the three most populous cities in Western China, the other two being Chongqing and Xi'an. As of 2014, the administrative area houses 14,427,500 inhabitants, with an urban population of 10,152,632. At the time of the 2010 census, Chengdu was the 5th-most populous agglomeration in China, with 10,484,996 inhabitants in the built-up area including Xinjin County and Deyang's Guanghan City. Chengdu is also considered a World City with a Beta + classification according to GaWC.The surrounding Chengdu Plain is also known as the Country of Heaven (Chinese: 天府之国; pinyin: Tiānfǔ zhi Guó) and the Land of Abundance. Its prehistoric settlers included the Sanxingdui culture. Founded by the state of Shu prior to its incorporation into China, Chengdu is unique as a major Chinese settlement that has maintained its name (nearly) unchanged throughout the imperial, republican, and communist eras. It was the capital of Liu Bei's Shu during the Three Kingdoms Era, as well as several other local kingdoms during the Middle Ages.It is now one of the most important economic, financial, commercial, cultural, transportation, and communication centers in Western China. Chengdu Shuangliu International Airport, a hub of Air China and Sichuan Airlines is one of the 30 busiest airports in the world, and Chengdu Railway Station is one of the six biggest in China. Chengdu also hosts many international companies and more than 12 consulates. More than 260 Fortune 500 companies have established branches in Chengdu.
Thousands at anti-Japanese demos, Japanese shops attacked
++CLIENTS NOTE: SHOT 16 HAS EXPLETIVE WRITTEN ON MAN'S SHIRT
Shanghai
1. Hundreds of demonstrators, some on steps and bridge, shouting UPSOUND: Japanese pigs get out!
2. Closer shot of demonstrators standing on bridge
3. Demonstrators, shouting, and riot police in front of the Japanese consulate
4. Close-up riot police
5. Riot police and demonstrators in the street
6. Various of protestors throwing stones at Japanese restaurants, broken windows
7. SOUNDBITE (Mandarin): Vox pop, (first name not given) Tao, University Student:
We will attack the Japanese economy so that we can attack it's arrogance from its fundamentals, and cut off the arrogance of Japanese militarism.
9. SOUNDBITE (Mandarin): Vox pop, (first name not given) Lin, Company Worker:
This demonstration is an explosion of our emotions because we feel that recently there's something that has happened between China and Japan, we think that we can no longer stand for what the Japanese have done.
10. Demonstrators walking on the street
11. Girl on passing car waving Chinese flag
Tianjin
12. Anti-Japanese demonstrators in park
13. People holding anti-Japanese banners
14. T-shirt printed with photos of Chinese being killed by Japanese soldiers during the World War II
15. People holding sign: Boycutt (boycott) Japanese goods. Defend Nation Dignity!
16. Man shouting. He is wearing a white T-shirt printed with Fuck Japan
17. Hundreds of protestors in park
18. Protestors marching in the street with a anti-Japanese banners
19. Young woman shouting Boycotting Japanese goods!
20. Protestors marching with banners
21. Tilt from banner saying Defend Diaoyu Islands to man shouting Boycott Japanese goods!
22. Pan from the police trying to stop the protesters from marching to protesters
23. SOUNDBITE (Mandarin): Vox pop, (No name given) Senior Police Officer of Tianjin:
Your activities today have not been approved by the government and have actually damaged the good stable situation of the city and have affected the social order.
24. Protestors scuffle with the police
25. Protestors marching
26. Various of police positioned in front of a Japanese department store
27. Police leading away arrested
STORYLINE:
About 20-thousand anti-Japanese protestors gathered in Shanghai on Saturday, some stoning Japan's consulate and smashing cars and damaging buildings in a protest over Tokyo's pre- and World War II conduct and its bid for a permanent United Nations Security Council seat.
Japan filed an official protest, complaining that Chinese authorities failed to curb the violence.
Police in riot gear maintained a cordon around the consulate building. Some demonstrators still pelted the building with rocks and eggs.
Protestors smashed windows at more than twelve Japanese-style noodle shops and bars, many of them Chinese-owned.
A crowd of five-thousand marched from the City Hall to the consulate.
They carried banners saying in English, Say No to Japan in the Security Council and chanted Japanese pigs get out!
A sign outside the consulate said, Be Vicious Toward Japanese Devils.
In Tianjin, east of Beijing, about 2,000 protestors held a peaceful one-hour march, though at least one arrest was made.
Police announced to the demonstrators, most of whom were students, that it was an illegal demonstration and ordered them to disperse.
Fearful of possible attacks on Japanese commercial properties, heavy security was deployed around the Isetan, a Japanese department store in the city.
The Chinese government itself, is alarmed at a proposal to give a permanent Security Council seat to Japan, which it regards as a regional rival.
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Duran AuaCam China Beijing Oriental Plaza 1st Floor Video 201506xx
China Aquarium Fish Market - CRAZY
In China while on business I went to the China Aquarium Fish Market. It was crazy to see all of the insane fish that were available for purchase.
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Catch of the day! 325 kg fish lands in Chinese fishing nets
A monster fish weighing a back-breaking 325 kilograms was caught in the Heilongjiang River by local fishermen in the city of Fuyuan, northeast China’s Heilongjiang Province.
The 3-meter-long fish was identified as a female kaluga sturgeon and was bought by the local fishery department for further research over its biological characteristics.
The kaluga is a large predatory sturgeon only found in the Heilongjiang River basin. The species, thought to be the largest freshwater fish in the world, is believed to be prehistoric, having existed for over 130 million years. The genre is listed as critically endangered, having been fished to near extinction for its valuable roe.
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Chengdu | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
00:04:12 1 Name
00:06:30 2 Logo
00:06:51 3 History
00:07:00 3.1 Early history
00:08:27 3.2 Imperial era
00:11:52 3.3 Modern era
00:17:10 4 Geography
00:20:32 4.1 Climate
00:23:24 4.2 Administrative divisions
00:24:14 5 Cityscape
00:25:20 5.1 Ancient fortress wall
00:26:10 6 Demography
00:27:13 7 Culture
00:27:30 7.1 Literature
00:28:47 7.2 Fine art
00:29:15 7.3 Religion
00:33:49 7.4 Education
00:34:20 7.5 Theatre
00:35:20 7.6 Language
00:35:51 7.7 Culinary art and tea culture
00:37:05 7.7.1 Teahouse
00:37:41 7.7.2 Hot Pot
00:38:17 7.8 Mahjong
00:39:31 7.9 Rural tourism: Nong Jia Le
00:40:34 7.10 Customs and festivals
00:40:43 7.10.1 Grand Temple Fair
00:41:22 7.10.2 Lantern Festival
00:41:54 7.10.3 Dujiangyan Water Releasing Festival
00:42:31 7.10.4 Huanglongxi Fire Dragon Festival
00:43:10 7.10.5 South China Snow and Ice Festival
00:43:51 8 Home of the giant panda
00:47:25 9 Main sights
00:47:34 9.1 World natural and cultural heritage sites
00:47:45 9.1.1 Mount Qingcheng
00:48:48 9.1.2 Dujiangyan Irrigation System
00:49:30 9.1.3 Sichuan Giant Panda Sanctuaries
00:51:24 9.2 Culture of poetry and the Three Kingdoms
00:51:35 9.2.1 Wuhou Shrine
00:52:43 9.2.2 Du Fu thatched cottage
00:53:43 9.3 Ancient Shu civilization
00:53:52 9.3.1 Jinsha Ruins
00:54:48 9.3.2 Golden Sun Bird
00:55:47 9.3.3 Sanxingdui Museum
00:56:28 9.4 Buddhist and Taoist cultures
00:56:38 9.4.1 Chengdu Daci Monastery
00:57:17 9.4.2 Wenshu Monastery
00:57:49 9.4.3 Baoguang Monastery
00:58:32 9.4.4 Qingyang Taoist Temple
00:59:17 9.5 Featured streets and historic towns
00:59:28 9.5.1 The Wide and Narrow Lanes
01:00:09 9.5.2 Jinli
01:01:09 9.5.3 Huanglongxi Historic Town
01:02:04 9.5.4 Chunxi Road
01:02:42 9.5.5 Anren Historic Town
01:03:37 9.5.6 Luodai Historic Town
01:04:35 9.5.7 Du Fu Thatched Cottage
01:05:10 10 Economy
01:09:03 10.1 Electronics and IT industries
01:13:18 10.2 Financial industry
01:16:18 10.3 Modern logistic industry
01:17:37 10.4 Modern business and trade
01:19:17 10.5 Convention and exhibition industry
01:20:33 10.6 Software and service outsourcing industry
01:21:48 10.7 New energy industry
01:23:27 10.8 Electronics and information industry
01:24:16 10.9 Automobile industry
01:25:31 10.10 Modern agriculture
01:26:10 10.11 Defense industry
01:26:53 10.12 Investment
01:27:46 10.13 Industrial zones
01:28:22 10.14 Real estate
01:30:42 11 Transport
01:30:51 11.1 Air
01:34:01 11.2 Railway
01:36:34 11.3 Metropolitan expressways
01:39:04 11.4 Coach
01:39:57 11.5 Highways
01:40:38 11.6 Chengdu Metro
01:41:28 11.7 Bus
01:42:04 11.8 River transport
01:43:13 12 Education
01:44:02 12.1 Colleges and universities
01:46:16 12.2 International schools
01:47:00 12.3 Major secondary schools
01:47:50 13 Consulates
01:48:25 14 Sports
01:48:34 14.1 Football
01:50:10 14.2 Tennis
01:52:47 14.3 Overwatch
01:53:12 14.4 Multi-sport events
01:53:37 14.5 Major sports venues
01:55:26 15 International Relations
01:55:36 16 See also
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
Listen on Google Assistant through Extra Audio:
Other Wikipedia audio articles at:
Upload your own Wikipedia articles through:
Speaking Rate: 0.7877789661958547
Voice name: en-US-Wavenet-E
I cannot teach anybody anything, I can only make them think.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
Chengdu (Chinese: 成都; Sichuanese: Cengtu UK: , US: , Standard Mandarin: [ʈʂʰə̌ŋ.tú] (listen)), formerly romanized as Chengtu, is a sub-provincial city which serves as the capital of the Chinese province of Sichuan. It is one of the three most-populous cities in Western China, the other two being Chongqing and Xi'an. As of 2014, the administrative area housed 14,427,500 inhabitants, the largest in Sichuan, with an urban population of 10,152,632. At the time of the 2010 census, Chengdu was the fifth-most populous agglomeration in China, with 10,484,996 inhabitants in the built-up area including Xinjin County and Deyang's Guanghan City. Chengdu is considered a World City with a Beta + classification, according to the Globalization and World Cities Research Network.Chengdu is located in ...
Exclusive: CGTN reporter sees reopening of Cross-Harbor Tunnel
The Cross-Harbor Tunnel at Hung Hom, a traffic artery linking Hong Kong Island and Kowloon, reopened to traffic at 5:00 a.m. on November 27. More than 800 city workers from a number of local government departments spent 100 hours finishing the repair work after it was damaged during the recent riots, which caused the two-week closure. CGTN's reporter Tang Bo has more of the story from the spot.
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WWII - The Battle of China
The Battle of China is one of seven films in Frank Capra's Why We Fight 1940's series.
It explains why the Empire of Japan possessed such a strong interest in ruling the disparate lands of China. In an attempt to break the will of the Chinese people in one massive assault, Japan invades Nanking and massacres forty thousand civilians. The attack results in an opposite effect, galvanizing the Chinese resistance and unifying the separate lands into a single Chinese identity.
While the Japanese take control of all Chinese ports, hoping to cut off all resources from its victim, China's allies effectuate an engineering miracle. They construct the seven hundred mile long Burma Road over the mountains of Myanmar, and set up a constant caravan of trucks to ship food and materiel to the Chinese armies, keeping them alive.
Frustrated by their inability to conquer China, the Japanese turn their attention to the islands of the Pacific, and the United States.
Note:
1) Reformatted to 640 x 480 resolution and enhanced for better viewing
2) Note: This channel receives no revenue from 3rd party ads associated with this video.
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USA Patriotism!
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American Pride
Mere Chance (A greatest generation story)
USA Store ...
America and Military Themed Gifts and Collectibles
The Fake Watch Industry In China. Be Careful when buying a watch.
If you have any questions please email me at: NavSanya@gmail.com
The luxury Swiss watchmakers have always been an icon of modern sports brands of such standing, it is only natural that many will choose to make fake watches. It is not always easy to tell the difference between the original and a fake, especially if you’re not a watch expert and don’t know how to open the back of the watch to inspect its movement.
FAKE WATCH MYTH #1: Fake Watches are Lighter than Genuine Watches
Rubbish! Counterfeiters today easily make watches that are the same weight. How? Well, they are using the same ETA movements as the original manufacturers or second source copies. Therefore weight is no longer an acid test.
FAKE WATCH MYTH #2: It’s Not Complicated
You will read that complications never work on fake watches. It is true that in many cases they do not. But many luxury watches do not have any complications except date, which may work on a fake watch. Therefore, the complication test is usually not helpful in separating the fakes from the real.
FAKE WATCH MYTH #3: The Date Bubbles on Fake Rolexes Don’t Magnify Enough
It used to be that the “Cyclops,” the lens over the date on a Rolex did not magnify 2.5 times on a fake Rolex. That is not so difficult to fake anymore. I have seen many fake Rolex watches with the correct magnification. I would not depend on that as a litmus test.
FAKE WATCH MYTH #4: A Genuine Movement Means a Genuine Watch
Have you heard that movements on fake watches are never the same? How wrong that is. Most watch brands today buy their movements from ETA, the world’s largest supplier of mechanical movements. The counterfeiters can now buy Chinese or Japanese reproductions or indeed actual ETA movements from secondary sources. Take a look below at how similar reproduction movements look. Which of below is authentic and which is fake? They look pretty similar, don’t they?
FAKE WATCH MYTH #5: Don’t Look a Gift Horse in the Mouth
There is no such thing as a free lunch, right? The conventional wisdom is that gifts of luxury watches are fakes. Well, this may be close to the truth. But real watches are inherited and sold. If we all go around scrapping inheritance gifts, it may be an expensive error. This is hardly a definitive test for telling genuine finds from imposters.
FAKE WATCH MYTH #6: All the Watches on Craig’s List are Fake
Is this a myth? Probably not, honestly. I can’t recommend looking on Craig’s List for a luxury watch.
Twenty years ago the fakes were really fake. You could look at a watch and really quickly determine it was trash. Not anymore. As manufacturers add counterfeit measures, the counterfeiters copy them. Today we have super fakes that take experience and knowledge to detect.
Japanese specialists help in the search for survivors, bodies
SHOTLIST
1. Pan right from crane to debris at quake site
2. Wide of destroyed vehicle on road side
3. Pan right of destroyed buildings
4. Close-up of debris of collapsed building
5. Close-up of broken television
6. Collapsed building
7. Close-up of room inside collapsed building
8. Wide of Japanese rescue team at quake site
9. Close-up of Japanese rescue team member watching crane operating
10. Japanese rescue team member speaking on loudspeaker to another member operating crane
11. Pan right from crane to crane lifting rubble
12. Close-up of crane lifting rubble
13. Tilt-down from collapsed building to crane operating at site
14. SOUNDBITE: (English) Takashi Koizumi, Leader of Japanese Relief Team:
We have to use first very heavy machines to take off these stones and big logs and after that we have to use our hands very, very carefully to take off these things.
15. Wide of family of earthquake survivors
16. SOUNDBITE: (Mandarin) earthquake survivor, Vox pop:
My daughter and my grandson died when the building collapsed.
17. Mid of family walking by their collapsed apartment building
18. Wide of survivors eating in tent
19. Rescue tents
20. Set-up shot of earthquake survivor Zhong Li-Xian eating breakfast
21. SOUNDBITE: (Mandarin) Zhong Li-Xian, earthquake survivor:
I saw my flat shaking up and down during the quake.
22. Wide of boy lying in tent
23. Wide of people queuing for water
24. People getting water
25. Close-up of bucket being filled with water
26. Various street scenes with damaged buildings and debris
STORYLINE:
Rescuer workers in China held out hope of finding more survivors on Saturday, nearly five days after a powerful earthquake ravaged western Sichuan province, and authorities prepared for the daunting task of housing and feeding (m) millions left homeless.
A group of Japanese workers found two bodies of a 70 day-old baby and his mother under the rubble of a collapsed building in the city of Qingchuan on Saturday, AP Television reported.
The 31 Japanese workers arrived on Friday - the first foreign rescue team allowed in the country.
The Japanese squad hopes to put their experience at removing people from buildings destroyed by earthquakes back home to full use in hard-hit southwest China.
We have to first use heavy machines to take off these stones, and after that we have to dig with our hands carefully to take things, Chief Leader of the Japan Relief Team Takashi Koizumi told AP Television on Saturday.
Qingchuan is located 250 kilometres (155 miles) northeast of the epicentre of the earthquake, and 400 kilometres (249 miles) to the north of the provincial capital Chengdu.
The mountainous area is largely ethnically Tibetan and was the site of unrest in March and April, when pro-Tibetan protests erupted.
The death toll from the earthquake in the Qingchuan county was 1,879 on Friday, local disaster emergency officials said.
AP Television footage showed the Japanese team at work among the rubble and survivors eating in relief tents and receiving water in Qingchuan city on Saturday.
One of the survivors described what she saw when the earthquake struck.
I saw my flat shaking up and down during the quake, Zhong Li-Xian told AP Television.
After days of refusing foreign relief workers, China accepted offers from four countries to send in rescue teams, the first from regional rival Japan.
Hours after saying that it would accept the Japanese rescue team, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement that specialist crews from Russia, South Korea, and Singapore would be welcome as well.
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Taikoo Hui Xmas 2014太古匯聖誕
說明
EARTHQUAKE AND TSUNAMI IN JAPAN 2011
Beijing airport (PEK): International arrival at the Terminal 3
Beijing Capital International Airport (PEK) is the main international airport serving Beijing. Beijing Capital added Terminal 3 in 2008 in time for the 2008 Summer Olympic Games, the second largest airport terminal in the world. It is also the second busiest airport in the world.
This video shows the arrival process at terminal 3. It also shows the resources than are available in the arrival area.
We also show the three transportation options to reach the city center: (1) the Airport Express which connects to the subway network; (2) buses that can take you to various places in the city (cheapest option); or (3) taxis.
The Airport Express operates from 06h21 to 22h51. The fare is 25RMB, payable in cash. You can also pay using the transportation card (Yikatong). The card can be purchased at the ticket counter of the Airport Express. Here is a map of the Beijing subway:
You can also watch our video on how to use the Beijing subway:
There are many buses that can take you to various places in Beijing. This is the most economical mode of transportation. The list of bus lines as well as their stops, fares and schedules can be found on the official airport website:
Taxis are the simplest way to reach your destination in Beijing. The fare to the center of the city is about 90 to 125RMB. Taxi drivers do not speak English. You need the name of your hotel as well as the address in writing in Chinese. This can usually be found on the hotel website. Taxis in Beijing use the meter. If your driver proposes a fixed rate, get out and take another taxi. In addition to the amount shown on the meter, you may have to pay the toll. Minivans are also available for larger families.
To search live China train schedule or book train tickets in China, please check china-diy-travel.com
Check our channel for our videos that will help you understand China travel:
Crossing a Street in Beijing
OK, Here I am, trying to cross a busy Beijing street with my coworkers. Insanity!!
Special Seminar: China in International Economic Law: New Horizons, 19 January 2018
Roundtable with Julien Chaisse, Professor, Faculty of Law, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Helena Chen, Head of Beijing Office and Partner, Pinsent Masons LLP, Vivienne Bath, Professor, Director of the Centre for Asian and Pacific Law, University of Sydney, Libin Zhang, Deputy Director of Peking University Energy Law and Policy Research Institute, and Partner of Broad & Bright. Moderators: Joanna Jemielniak, Associate Professor and Wen Xiang, Assistant Professor, University of Copenhagen. 19 January 2018, Faculty of Law, University of Copenhagen
Schindler scenic elevator at Baisheng Plaza Kunming Yunnan China
China Briefing: Chinese in Adelaide and the World
Presented in collaboration with the Migration Museum and University of Adelaide Collections, this special 'cultural musing' was an opportunity to reflect on and be inspired by the Sym Choon: Changing Fortunes in White Australia exhibition at the Migration Museum
The Speakers in order of appearance:
Dr Ning Zhang was born in China and came to Australia in 1985 as a student. Settled in Adelaide since 1989, she is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Asian Studies at the University of Adelaide, and Interim Director of the Confucius Institute, co-hosting this event. Dr Zhang is also an Ambassador of the OzAsia Festival, and was President of the Asia Pacific Business Council for Women, South Australia 2013 – 2015.
Amy Dale is a curator at the Migration Museum. She has previously worked at University of St Andrews, and Museums Galleries, Scotland, and has postgraduate qualifications in Museum Studies. Amy co-curated the exhibition Sym Choon: Changing Fortunes in White Australia with Natalie Carfora.
Dr Alfred Huang AM was born in Chengdu and grew up in Shanghai, Jakarta and Hong Kong. Having worked for 30 years as an engineer and senior manager in Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide, Alfred is probably best known for his three year term as the Lord Mayor of Adelaide; the first Chinese-born capital city Lord Mayor in Australia. Alfred has received an AM award for his contribution to the community and education, and was awarded an Honorary Doctorate degree by the University of South Australia. Dr Huang is a member of the UniSA Business School Advisory Committee and is a China Business & Cultural Adviser to the South Australian Government.
Russell Kelty is Associate Curator of Asian Art at the Art Gallery of South Australia. In 2015 he co-curated and co-edited the catalogue for Treasure Ships: Art in the Age of Spices exhibited at the Art Gallery of South Australia and Art Gallery of Western Australia