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International
Conference on "East West Identities :
Globalisation, Localisation and Hybridisation"
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General
Information
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Conference
Programme
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Conference Archive
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| Date |
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26-27
February 2004 |
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| Venue |
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Lam
Woo International Conference Centre,
Hong
Kong Baptist University |
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| Organised
by |
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David
C. Lam Institute for East-West Studies &
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Wing
Lung Bank International Institute for Business Development,
Hong Kong Baptist University
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| Rationale
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Globalisation
and internationalisation have multiplied and accelerated
inter-cultural, inter-ethnic, and inter-religious encounters,
intentionally or not. In a world where time and place are
increasingly compressed and interaction between East and West,
North and South, grows in density, numbers, and spread,
East-West studies has gained a renewed mandate. Over the past
few decades, advances in transportation and communication have
resulted in dramatic increases in the flow of capital, ideas,
goods, people, and information between East and West. As a
result of increased exposure, East to West and West to East,
new modes of awareness are resulting in new but complex
concepts of who "I", "we" and
"they" are. These new senses of identity are
revealed in contemporary literature, in feature films and
television dramas, in "pop culture" and through
educational media in school classrooms. Not enough is known
about how local identities become internationalised, and how
international influences become localised, and thus requires
us to re-think the politics of identity formation. Always
careful not to essentialise or reify things, including
identities, much new theoretical ground can be gained by
paying attention to the tendency of identities to hybridise,
to mix and combine, to transform themselves, depending on
contingencies and circumstances.
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| Objectives
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To
further our comparative understanding of how
evolving and hybridising identities - concepts of self and
other - are articulated, expressed and shared through various
media in Asia and in the West; to ascertain the extent of
"internationalisation" of individual, group and
national identities; to examine how foreign goods, ideas, and
self-concepts are "localised" when they take root in
soil far from their origins. The
conference aspires to re-think a mix of old and new ideas in
social theory: globalisation, identities, hybridity and
hybridisation, transnationalism, disapora, and
overdetermination. The
conference organisers plan to publish selected papers
from the conference in an edited volume.
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| Themes
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| Media
of Expression/Representation |
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1.
Cinema/TV:
including creative works of entertainment and
documentaries, focusing on portrayal of "self",
"other" and "self as other".
2.
Pop
Culture: music, commercial
advertisements, fashion, cartoons, etc., as they relate to
questions and models of identity among youth in an
increasingly commercialised, diversified and hybridised urban
environment.
3. Literature/Language:
including prose and poetry, written in Asian and Western
languages, published in Asia and overseas, embracing identity
issues such as "self", "other" and
"self as other" (self-awareness of expatriates and
immigrants).
4.
Education:
focusing on formal and informal, intended and unintended,
models of identity and citizenship, portrayals of national
identity in the context of internationalising societies in
textbooks, audiovisual teaching materials, and
school-sponsored student activities.
5. Internet
and Email: focusing on the ways
in which identity is transmitted, constructed and interpreted
in virtual space. Does our concept of self remain stable when
we communicate via the Internet and email, or do we alter
this, consciously or unconsciously?
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| Disciplinary
Perspectives |
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6. Sociology,
Anthropology, and Psychology
7. Geography,
History, and Political Science
8. Arts
and Humanities
9.
Business and Economics
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(as of December 7, 2003)
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| Abstract
Submission
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The
deadline for abstract submission has already passed on October
15, 2003. |
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Presenters
should submit full papers to the Conference Secretary by January
26, 2004.
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| Organisers |
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David
C. Lam Institute for East-West Studies (LEWI)
LEWI
is an academic consortium hosted by Hong Kong Baptist
University (HKBU), a public-funded institution with a
Christian heritage. With its mission to promote intercultural
dialogue, the Institute has a global membership of 28
universities and has established research programmes on three
continents: The Western Pacific Rim-China Research Programme
at Swinburne University of Technology, Australia; the North
America-China Research Programme at Simon Fraser University,
Canada; and the Europe-China Research Programme at Hong Kong
Baptist University.
Wing
Lung Bank International Institute for Business Development
(IIBD)
IIBD,
also hosted by HKBU, was established in 1993 and named in
recognition of the steadfast support and generosity of Wing
Lung Bank. Its objective is to facilitate growth and
development of international business activities
and to promote international business education in countries
represented by member universities through the cooperation and
joint ventures of its various members. The Institute seeks to
provide knowledge and information appropriate to global
business development, making full use of modern networking
technologies.
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| Conference
Co-Chairs
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For
information about the academic programme, please contact the
conference co-chairs Prof.
Jan Walls (jwalls@sfu.ca), Simon
Fraser University, or Dr. David Hayward (dhayward@groupwise.swin.edu.au),
Swinburne University of Technology.
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| Conference
Secretariat |
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Miss
Jennifer Law, David C. Lam Institute for East-West Studies
(LEWI), Hong Kong Baptist University
Tel: (852) 3411-5217; Fax: (852) 3411-5128; Email: lewi@hkbu.edu.hk
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| Language
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The
official language of the conference will be English.
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| Venue
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The
conference will be held at the Lam Woo International
Conference Centre of our University. Located on the Shaw
campus on Renfrew Road, Kowloon Tong, the Centre houses
attractive meeting rooms with the latest audio-visual aids.
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| Accommodation |
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Participants
may stay at the Dr.
Ng Tor Tai International House (NTT) on HKBU's campus (Map
of HKBU Campus), which is next
door to the conference venue and within easy access to public
transportation, restaurants and shopping.
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| Registration |
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To
register for the conference and reserve accommodation at NTT
International House, please download and return the following
forms to the Conference Secretary by fax:
(852) 3411-5128 or email: lewi@hkbu.edu.hk |
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Conference
Registration Form
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NTT
International House Reservation Form
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International
Conference on East-West Identities:
Globalisation,
Localisation and Hybridisation
26th
to 27th February 2004, Hong Kong Baptist University
Conference
Programme
***
Each presenter will be given 15 to 20 minutes to speak, and
there will be at least 15 minutes of Q&A at the end of
each session.
Click
here
for a printer-friendly version.
DAY
1 - 26th February
| Venue: |
Room
NAB 209, Lam Woo International Conference Centre, Hong
Kong Baptist University (HKBU) |
| 09:00
- 09:15 am |
Opening
Ceremony
Professor Ng Ching Fai, President
& Vice-Chancellor, Hong Kong Baptist University |
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09:15
- 10:30 am
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Keynote
Speech
Speaker: Henry Steiner, Graphic Designer, Steiner and
Co.
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| 10:30
- 11:00 am |
Group
Photo and Tea Break |
| 11:00
am - 12:30 pm |
Plenary
Session:
"Globalisation, Localisation and
Hybridisation: Currents and Countercurrents"
Professor Zhang Longxi, Chair Professor,
Department of Comparative Literature and Translation,
City University of Hong Kong
Professor Chung Ling, Dean of Arts, Hong Kong Baptist
University
Professor Georgette Wang,
Dean of Communication, Hong Kong Baptist University
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| 12:30
- 02:00 pm |
Lunch
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| Venue: |
Room
DLB 802, 8th Floor, David C. Lam Building, HKBU |
Room
NAB 209, Lam Woo Int'l Conference Centre, HKBU |
| 02:00
- 03:30 pm |
Session
1:
Whither Hong Kong Identity? |
Session
2:
Cross-cultural Encounters in Global Business |
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Dr.
Michael DeGolyer
(Hong Kong Baptist University)
"Identity
in the Politics of Transition: The Case of Hong Kong,
'Asia's World City'" |
Dr.
Sikko Visscher
(Universiteit van Amsterdam)
"Always the Twain Shall Meet: Singapore's
Struggle with Identity" |
Dr.
Lam Wai Man
(The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
"Depoliticization
and the Politics of Citizenship in Hong Kong" |
Dr.
Heike Hermanns
(University of Glasgow)
"Economic
Opening and Cultural Changes: Views
from East Asia and Eastern Europe" |
Dr.
Thomas Tse
(The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
"Citizenship
Education in Hong Kong Schools:
Tension
among Localisation, Nationalisation and Globalisation" |
Ms.
Dorothy Yen and Dr. Bradley Barnes
(University of Leeds)
"Exploring
Dyadic Business-to-Business Relationships from the
Western and Eastern Perspectives" |
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Ms.
Merja Karppinen
(Helsinki School of Economics)
"East-West
Knowledge Creation Patterns" |
| 03:30
- 04:00 pm |
Tea
Break
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| Venue: |
Room
DLB 802, 8th Floor, David C. Lam Building, HKBU |
Room
NAB 209, Lam Woo Int'l Conference Centre, HKBU |
| 04:00
- 05:45 pm |
Session
3:
Mediating East-West Differences through Education |
Session
4:
Writing China: East-West Perspectives |
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Ms.
Zhou Jingqiong
(The University of Hong Kong)
"Globalization
and the Teaching of American Courses in Chinese
Universities" |
Dr.
Gillian Bickley
(Hong Kong Baptist University)
"For the Record and other Poems of Hong
Kong" |
Mr.
Eric Jabal
(University of Toronto)
"International
Schools Alumni Project (ISAP): Navigating the
'Multiple Worlds' of International School Alumni" |
Dr.
William Butcher
(Hong Kong Baptist University)
"The
Tribulations of a Chinese in China: Verne and the
Orient" |
Dr.
Li Jun and Ms. Zhang Daling
(Lanzhou University)
"Oriental Western Culture and the Idea of a
University" |
Mr.
Jonathan Benda
(Tunghai University)
"The French Invention of Chinese
Rhetoric?" |
Mr.
Serge Dreyer
(Tunghai University)
"Students' Desired Identity and the
Teaching-Learning of Foreign Language
in Taiwan Universities" |
Mr.
Gene Mustain
(The University of Hong Kong)
"An American in China: Peter Hessler as Ho
Wei” |
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End of Day 1 ---
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DAY 2 - 27th February
| Venue: |
Room
DLB 802, 8th Floor, David C. Lam Building, HKBU |
Room
NAB 209, Lam Woo Int'l Conference Centre, HKBU |
| 09:00
- 10:30 am |
Session
5:
Cinema Now and Then, Here and There |
Session
6:
Migration and Mobile Identities |
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Dr.
Steve Fore
(City University of Hong Kong)
"Making
Do and Making Meaning: Cultural and Technological
Hybridity in Recent Asian Animation" |
Dr.
Siumi Maria Tam
(The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
"Coming
'Home': Reverse Adjustments among Hong Kong Emigrants
Returning from Australia" |
Dr.
Ramona Curry
(Fulbright Visiting Scholar, HKBU)
"Bridges
and Railings: Issues in the Early Cross-over U.S.
Marketing of Hong Kong Films" |
Professor
Filomeno V. Aguilar, Jr.
(Ateneo de Manila University)
"Long-Distance
Nationalists?
The Bounded Identities and Unbounded Politics
of Overseas Filipinos" |
Dr.
Sean M. Tierney
(Miles College)
"Hong
Kong Cinema and American Audiences: Cultural
Consideration of Appreciation and Appropriation" |
Dr.
Nan M. Sussman
(City University of New York)
"Identity
Shift as a Consequence of Crossing Cultures: Hong Kong
Sojourners and Re-migrants" |
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Professor
Lee Tain-Dow
(Kun Shan University of Technology) and
Ms. Liu Po-Chun
(Fu-Jen Catholic University)
"Local
Space / Global Consumption: Flaneur in Taipei Warner
Village"
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Mr.
Sammual Kwok-fu Wong
(University of Bradford)
"Chronic
Poverty and Identity Traps Among Chinese Migrants in
Hong Kong" |
| 10:30
- 11:00 am |
Tea
Break
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| Venue: |
Room
DLB 802, 8th Floor, David C. Lam Building, HKBU |
Room
NAB 209, Lam Woo Int'l Conference Centre, HKBU |
| 11:00
am - 12:45 pm |
Session
7:
Identity Formation and the Internet |
Session
8:
Local Reading of Images of Global Popular Culture |
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Dr.
Jeffrey Wilkinson
(Hong Kong Baptist University) and
Dr. Steven McClung
(Florida State University)
"Diverging
Media Convergence: Perceptual Differences Across
Cultures, Genders and Habits" |
Professor
Todd Holden
(Tohoku University)
"Global 'Career' and National Identity:
Developing Theory, Studying Japan" |
Dr.
Ashley Tellis
(The University of Arizona)
"Cyberpatriarchy:
Chat Rooms and the Construction of Man-to-Man
Relations in Urban India" |
Dr.
Anthony Fung
(The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
"Learning
Hong Kong's Body: Beauties, Beauty Workers and their
Identities" |
Dr.
Ai-Ling Wang
(Tamkang University)
"Cross-cultural
Exchanges through Electronic Discussion Group:
Exploring
Cultural Awareness and Audience Awareness" |
Dr.
Amy Lai
(Hong Kong University of Science and Technology)
"The
Reception of a Clairol Advertisement by Hong Kong TV
Viewers" |
Mr.
Oscar Bulaong Jr
(Ateneo de Manila University)
"On
the Globalisation of the Self: Internet Weblogs as an
Identity-forming Activity" |
Ms.
Rie Ito
(Tohoku University)
"Japan's 'Beckham Fever': Marketing and
Consuming a Western Idol" |
| 12:45
- 02:00 pm |
Lunch
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| Venue: |
Room
DLB 802, 8th Floor, David C. Lam Building, HKBU |
Room
NAB 209, Lam Woo Int'l Conference Centre, HKBU |
| 02:00
- 03:30 pm |
Session
9:
Global Business Practices and Strategies |
Session
10:
Hybridisation in Language and Religion |
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Dr.
Benjamin T. Tolosa Jr.
(Ateneo de Manila University)
"Representation
of the Stock Market and Securities Research in The
Philippines and Global Financial Regularization" |
Professor
Brian Chan
(Hong Kong Polytechnic University)
"Hybrid Language and Hybrid Identity: The Case
of Cantonese-English Code-switching in Hong Kong" |
Dr.
Bradley Barnes
(The University of Leeds) and
Ms. Yu Qionglei
(Zheng Jiang University of Technology and Business)
"Investigating
the Impact of International Cosmetic Advertising in
China" |
Dr.
Maria Chik
(Hong Kong Baptist University)
"Role
of Humor in the Globalization-Localization of Identity
Formation" |
Mr.
Toby Yip
(Simon Fraser University)
"Consuming
Hybrid Cultural Images: Content Analysis of
Transnational Corporate Fast Food Advertisements in
Contemporary Hong Kong" |
Mr.
Chiou Syuan-yuan
(International
Institute for the Study of Islam in the Modern World)
"Building
Traditions for Bridging Difference: A History of
Islamic Dawa Movement of Chinese-Indoneisa Muslim in
East
Java" |
Professor
Jan Selmer
(Hong Kong Baptist University)
"Roadblocks and Drivers in the Localization
Process: The Experience
Of Western Business Firms in China" |
Professor
Ian Mabbett
(Monash University)
"East-West Identities and the Beginnings of
Buddhism"
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| 03:30
- 03:45 pm |
Tea
Break
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| Venue: |
Room
DLB 802, 8th Floor, David C. Lam Building, HKBU |
Room
NAB 209, Lam Woo Int'l Conference Centre, HKBU |
| 03:45
- 05:15 pm |
Session
11:
Glocal Popular Culture |
Session
12:
Beyond Globalisation: New Perspectives on Identities |
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Mr.
Chris Wood
(White Dog Creative Inc., Canada)
"Pi's
Passport: Policy and Diversity of Identity in Popular
Culture" |
Dr.
Ting Wai
(Hong Kong Baptist University) and
Mr. Wang Wen
(Lanzhou University)
"Beyond
Identity? Theoretical Dilemma and Historical
Reflection of Constructive International Theory" |
Dr.
Ho Wai Chung
(Hong Kong Baptist University)
"The
Impact of Localization and Globalization on Popular
Music In the Context of Social Change in Taiwan" |
Professor
Liu Lili and Ms. Bu Zhaoxia
(Nankai University)
"A
Thing Handed Down from History: Reconsidering the
Literature Since May Fourth" |
Ms.
Fang Lu
(Simon Fraser University)
"The
Influence of Globalization on Identity Formation of
the New Generation of Asian North Americans-A
Cross-cultural Reading of Amy Tan's 'Sagwa, the
Chinese Siamese Cat'" |
Dr.
Millie Creighton
(University of British Columbia)
"Changing
(Heart) Beats: From Japanese National Identity and
Nostalgia to the Taiko Rhythms of Citizens of the
Earth" |
| 05:15
- 05:30 pm |
Tea
Break
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| 05:30
- 07:00 pm |
Roundtable
Discussion (reports from 12 sessions) and Closing
Remarks
Chairs:
Professor
Jan Walls
Director, North America-China Research Programme,
Simon Fraser University and
Dr. David Hayward
Director, Western Pacific Rim-China Research
Programme, Swinburne University of Technology
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| 07:30
- 09:30 pm |
Conference
Dinner
Hosted by Professor Herbert H. Tsang, Academic
Vice-President, Hong Kong Baptist University
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---
End of Day 2 ---
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International
Conference on "East West Identities :
Globalisation, Localisation and Hybridisation"
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Conference
Archive
Video
Clip* (2 mins, Microsoft
media player is required)
*LEWI
would like to thank the Cinema & TV Department of
HKBU for the production of this video clip.
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Photographs
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Opening
Ceremony
Ng Ching
Fai
President
& Vice-Chancellor
HKBU |
Introduction
Chan Kwok
Bun
Director of
LEWI
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Presentation of
Gift
Henry Steiner
(left)
Ng Ching Fai (right) |
Keynote Speech
Question & Answer Session
Jan Walls (middle)
Henry Steiner (right) |
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Plenary
Session
Chan Kwok Bun (left
1)
Georgette Wang (left
2)
Chung Ling (right
2)
Zhang Longxi (right
1) |
Session
5
Ramona Curry (left
1)
Steve Fore (left
2)
Liu Po Chun (left
3)
Sean
M. Tierney (right 2)
Chen Ling (right 1) |
Session
8
Rie Ito (left
1)
Amy Lai (left 2)
Todd Holden (right
2)
Janet Scott (ri | | | | | | |