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CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
X-WR-CALNAME:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold Wa
 r
X-WR-TIMEZONE:Pacific Time (US & Canada)
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074041Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569418614
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251003
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074041Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569420663
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251004
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074041Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569421688
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251005
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074041Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569422713
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251006
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569423738
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251007
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569424763
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251008
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569425788
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251009
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569426813
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251010
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569428862
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251011
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569429887
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251012
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569430912
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251013
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569431937
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251014
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569432962
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251015
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569435011
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251016
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569436036
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251017
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569437061
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251018
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569438086
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251019
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569439111
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251020
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569441160
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251021
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569442185
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251022
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569443210
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251023
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569444235
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251024
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569445260
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251025
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569447309
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251026
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569448334
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251027
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569449359
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251028
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569450384
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251029
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569451409
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251030
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569453458
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251031
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569454483
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251101
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569455508
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251102
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569456533
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251103
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569457558
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251104
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569458583
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251105
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569460632
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251106
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569461657
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251107
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569462682
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251108
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569463707
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251109
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569464732
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251110
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569465757
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251111
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569466782
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251112
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569467807
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251113
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569468832
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251114
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569469857
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251115
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569470882
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251116
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569471907
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251117
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569472932
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251118
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569474981
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251119
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569476006
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251120
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569477031
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251121
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569478056
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251122
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569479081
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251123
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569481130
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251124
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569482155
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251125
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569483180
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251126
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569484205
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251127
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569486254
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251128
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569488303
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251129
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569489328
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251130
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569490353
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251201
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569492402
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251202
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569493427
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251203
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569494452
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251204
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569495477
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251205
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569496502
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251206
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569498551
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251207
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569499576
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251208
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569500601
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251209
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569501626
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251210
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569502651
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251211
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569503676
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251212
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569505725
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251213
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569506750
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251214
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569508799
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251215
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569509824
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251216
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569511873
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251217
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569513922
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251218
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569516995
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251219
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260516T074042Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_50914569519044
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251220
DESCRIPTION:The call “People of the World\, Unite!” was a story China o
 nce told itself. When the world was polarized\, the vision of global solid
 arity paradoxically prevailed in the People’s Republic of China during i
 ts Cold War isolation\, manifested in a myriad of media categories.\n\n“
 To the World” unveils the diverse and far-reaching multimedia campaign i
 n China. Drawing from the special collection at the East Asia library\, th
 is exhibition highlights how the regime propagated its international visio
 n inward to the domestic audience from the 1950s to the 1970\, and the int
 erplay of ideas and ideologies shaping China’s self-presentation and por
 trayal of other countries and ethnicities in the world.\n\nThis exhibition
  also contributes to a vibrant and expanding field of scholarship that has
  significantly advanced our understanding of China’s media in recent his
 tory. Scholars such as Andrew Jones\, Christine Ho\, and Jie Li have explo
 red the complexities of culture and history by integrating media and trans
  media\, encompassing text\, photography\, film\, visual art\, music\, and
  radio. The objects on display—multilingual editions of the Little Red B
 ook\, vinyl records\, English textbooks\, cartoon illustrations\, and so o
 n—serve as primary sources for understanding media and mediation in the 
 everyday realities of the bygone era. Thus\, the exhibition invites studen
 ts\, scholars\, and the broader public to reconsider the complexities of C
 hina’s media landscape and encourages newlines of inquiry.\n\nExhibition
  on view from September 22 to December 20\, 2025\n\n“To the World” is 
 curated by Yue Wu (PhD student\, East Asian Languages and Cultures) and Zh
 aohui Xue (Curator for the Chinese Collection)\, with consultation from Pr
 ofessor Ban Wang (William Haas Professor in Chinese Studies). The exhibiti
 on is generously sponsored by the Stanford East Asia Library.
GEO:37.429468;-122.167272
LOCATION:Lathrop Library\, East Asia Library\, Second Floor
SUMMARY:To the World: China’s Multimedia Campaign during the Cold War
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.stanford.edu/event/to-the-world-chinas-multime
 dia-campaign-during-the-cold-war
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
