PANPAUAN PAN i PAUWO UW

Exploring Languages and Cultures of Asia.
Professor Władysław Kotwicz in Memoriam

The 3rd International Conference of Oriental Studies

Cracow, 15-17 November 2012

program updated

szczegóły/details

 

PROGRAM

 

15 November 2012, PAU, Sławkowska St. 17

1st floor, Large Auditorium

 

10.00     Registration

 

10.30     Opening: Jerzy Wyrozumski, Marek Mejor, Agata Bareja-Starzyńska

 

11.00    Charles Willemen (Songkhla): Remarks about the History of Sarvāstivāda Buddhism 

11.30    ElliotSperling (Bloomington): Further Considerations on the Parentage of Sde-srid Sangs-rgyas rgya-mtsho

 

12–12.30 Coffee, tea break

 

12.30     Vladimir Uspensky (St. Petersburg): The Status of Tibet in the Seventeenth – Early Eighteenth Centuries: A Mongolian Perspective

13.00     Anna Tsendina (Moscow): North Mongolian Manuscripts and Xylographs of XVIIth – Early XX Centuries on “Applied” Linguistics

13.30    Henryk Jankowski(Poznań):Altaic Hypothesis and Historical Contact Linguistics

 

14.00–15.00 Lunch break

 

15.00     Jerzy Bańczerowski (Poznań): Semantic Categories in Polish-Korean Translatology, with an Emphasis on Iterativity, Aspect, and Number

15.30     Setsuko Arita (Osaka): Conditionals and Modals in Japanese: ‘Settledness’ as an Interface between Tense and Modality

16.00     Szymon  Grzelak  (Poznań): Intra-sentential Discourse Markers in Japanese and Polish

16.30     Norbert Kordek (Poznań): On Some Quantitative Aspects of the Chinese Script

 

17.00–17.30 Coffee, tea break

 

17.30     Ali Granmayeh (London): Language and Common Cultural Heritage in Asia: Persian in Tajikistan, Afghanistan and Iran

18.00    Mateusz Kłagisz (Cracow): Oral Character of Middle Persian Literature

18.30    Concert

19.00    Reception

  

16 November, 2012, PAU, Sławkowska St. 17

1st floor, Large Auditorium

 

9.20      Minutes by the conveners

9.30      Kirill Alekseev (St. Petersburg): A New Source of J. Kowalewsky’s Work on “Mongolian-Russian-French Dictionary”

10.00    Jerzy Tulisow (Warsaw): Prof. W. Kotwicz’s Expedition to Mongolia and His Private Archive in Cracow

10.30    Osamu Inoue (Shimane): Materials Related to Mongolian Maps and Map Studies Kept at Prof. W. Kotwicz’s Private Archive in Cracow

11.00    Edward Tryjarski (Warsaw): A Half-Century Later: Following Władysław Kotwicz’s Turkic Footseps in Mongolia

 

11.30–12.00 Coffee, tea break

 

12.00    Andrzej Białas, Ewa Dziurzyńska: Opening of the exhibition “In the Heart of Mongolia. 100th Anniversary of W. Kotwicz’s Expedition to Mongolia in 1912” in the Archive of Science of PAN and PAU (Św. Jana St. 26)

 

13.30–14.30 Lunch break

 

14.30     Bat-Ireedui Jantsan (Ulan Bator): Problems in Research on the Wishing and Swearing Words in the Mongolian Language

15.00    Agnes Birtalan (Budapest):Kotwicz and Bálint on the Kalmyk Language 

15.30    Agnieszka Helman-Ważny (Hamburg): Manuscripts and Early Prints of the Tibetan Buddhist Canons

16.00    Thupten Kunga Chashab, Filip Majkowski (Warsaw):Notes on the Pander Collection of Tibetan Books kept in the Jagiellonian Library

 

16.30–17.00 Coffee, tea break 

 

17.00    Monika Zin (Berlin, Munchen): Was There Anything like a Gandharan School of Paintings?

17.30    Natalia Maksymowicz (Szczecin):Daily Life and Adaptation Strategies in Himalayan Dolpo: Continuity and Change

18.00    Emilia Róża Sułek (Berlin): All Hands on Deck. How the Pastoral Society Turns into the Caterpillar Fungus Collecting Machine

18.30    Katarzyna Golik (Huhhot): Tendencies in Learning Minority Languages in PRC on Example of Mongolian and Manchu

 

19.00 Reception

 

17 November 2012

 

9.00–11.00        A visit in the Jagiellonian Library to see the Tibetan Collection (upon earlier  registration only)

11.30–12.30      Discussion on the “Impact of Asian Studies in the Modern World” on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of the Committee of Oriental Studies of the Polish Academy of Sciences (PAU, Sławkowska St. 17)

 

13.00    Closing of the conference

 

13.30–14.30 Lunch