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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Yan_YunxiangYan Yunxiang - Wikipedia

    Yunxiang Yan is a Professor of Social Anthropology and Director of the Center for Chinese Studies at UCLA. [1] He is known for his field work studies in Xiajia Village, Heilongjiang Province, which locates in the northeastern part of China.

  2. Aug 18, 2020 · Professor & Director of Center for Chinese Studies. Office: 366 Haines Hall. Email: yan@anthro.ucla.edu. Curriculum Vitae. View All. Biography. Unlike many of my academic colleagues, I followed a rather unusual path to become an anthropologist in the United States. I was born in Beijing, China.

  3. Interim Director, Center for Chinese Studies. Professor, Anthropology. Department: Department of Anthropology. 366 Haines Hall. 375 Portola Plaza. Los Angeles, CA 90095. Campus Mail Code: 155303. Phone: 310-267-4336. Fax: 310-206-7833. Email: yan@anthro.ucla.edu. Website. Keywords: China, Cultural Anthropology. SUBFIELD.

  4. Yunxiang Yan. Interim Director, Center for Chinese Studies Professor, Anthropology Department: Department of Anthropology 366 Haines Hall 375 Portola Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90095 Campus mailcode: 155303 Tel: 310-267-4336 Fax: 310-206-7833 yan@anthro.ucla.edu Website Keywords: China, Cultural Anthropology. SUBFIELD. Socio-Cultural Anthropology ...

  5. The flow of gifts: Reciprocity and social networks in a Chinese village. Y Yan. (No Title) , 1996. 1436. 1996. Private life under socialism: Love, intimacy, and family change in a Chinese village, 1949-1999. Y Yan. Stanford University Press.

  6. Jan 22, 2019 · US-China Today spoke with anthropology professor Yan Yunxiang from the University of California, Los Angeles. Prof. Yan has research interests in economic anthropology, social change and development, family and kinship, exchange theory, peasant study, and cultural globalization.

  7. Apr 1, 2014 · The chapters by Yan Yunxiang and Everett Zhang are perhaps the most profound accounts in this book. They rely on long-term research and consider multiple arguments that could be applied on their data. Yan’s “The Changing Moral Landscape” explores themes such as transformations in the value of filial piety