Program in East Asian Studies

Faculty:

Alister Inglis, Program Director, Professor of Modern Languages and Literatures
Denise M. Horn, Associate Professor of Political Science and International Relations and Women’s and Gender Studies
Shirong Luo, Associate Professor of Philosophy
Niloufer Sohrabji, Associate Professor of Economics

Overview:

The major in East Asian Studies (EAS) is designed to provide students with knowledge and understanding of East Asia, a region that has become increasingly significant in the post-Cold War era. Students acquire this knowledge by studying an East Asian language as well as courses in other disciplines that may include art history, economics, film studies, history, literature, philosophy, political science, religion, and sociology.

The major prepares students for further growth beyond college along a variety of paths, such as graduate study, careers in education, employment abroad or in business and institutions specializing in East Asia, and service within and to the Asian American community.

A minor in East Asian studies allows students to enhance their major academic program with an understanding of the history, politics, and culture of East Asia. A minor may consist of, but does not require, language courses.

 

Departmental Honors:

Honors in East Asian Studies requires a minimum GPA of 3.67 for EAS courses in addition to a grade of A or A- for the senior term-paper; i.e., the paper produced as part of the course work for either EAS 390 or EAS 350.

The number of credits transferred from study abroad or other institutions and applied to the major shall not exceed 16 (four courses).

Asian Studies (BA) Program Requirements


Students must take five elective courses from the AS curriculum, including at least one of either HIST 201, HIST 202, or HIST 206. No more than three courses may be taken in any one department.

Language Courses (16 semester hours)

Students are required to study either 1) a single East Asian language for four sequential semesters, or 2) two East Asian languages for two semesters each. Courses taken to fulfill this part of the requirement cannot also count among the five electives from the EAS curriculum.

Students who enter the Program with at least an intermediate knowledge of an Asian language may, in special cases pending the Director’s approval, complete four additional courses from the EAS curriculum.


AS Curriculum (20 semester hours)

ART 252Arts of China and Japan

4

EAS 216Asian American Cinema

4

CHIN 214Contemporary Chinese Cinema

4

CHIN 201Intermediate Chinese I

4

CHIN 202Intermediate Chinese II

4

CHIN 245Advanced Intermediate Chinese

4

CHIN 246Advanced Intermediate Chinese II

4

CHIN 250Masterpieces in Chinese Literature

4

CHIN 260Chinese Calligraphy

4

CHIN 320Reading Chinese Newspapers

4

ECON 222Comparative Economies of East Asia

4

HIST 201Dynamics Japanese History

4

HIST 202Asia to the Eighteenth Century

4

HIST 203Power & Culture: East Asia

4

HIST 204Japanese Culture: Gender, Family and Society

4

HIST 206Rise of Modern China

4

HIST 207Gender, Family and Society in Modern China

4

HIST 362Reform and Revolutions in Asia

4

HIST 364Rape of Nanjing

4

JAPN 201Intermediate Japanese I

4

JAPN 202Intermediate Japanese II

4

JAPN 245Composition and Conversation

4

JAPN 320Newspaper Kanji and Translation

4

JAPN 325Japanese Fables and Onomatopoeia

4

PHIL 133Asian Philosophy

4

POLS 220International Organization and Law

4

POLS 225International Politics of East Asia

4

POLS 245MPolitics of Newly Industrialized Countries

4

SOCI 267Globalization

4

SOCI 270South Asia, People & Power

4

Capstone Cross-Cultural Experience (8 semester hours)

 

1. Study abroad, community-based or independent learning. To encourage cross- cultural experience, students complete for semester hours through either study abroad or community-based learning within an Asian American community. Students should have adequate language preparation and a significant portion of coursework completed before undertaking this experience. Thus, most students will satisfy this requirement during the junior or senior year. The precise timing will be decided in consultation with the student’s advisor. Alternatively, the student may undertake an independent study with an AS faculty member that would culminate in a research paper on a topic of the student’s own design.

2. Integrative Seminar. Successful completion of either AS 390 or, when not offered, an alternate course is mandatory for all students in the major. In this seminar, the student will produce either a research paper or some form of creative work associated with a special interest. The nature and scope of the project will be collaboratively determined with the seminar instructor and/or their advisor. HIST 364 and 362 may be undertaken in lieu of the Seminar for 2020-22.


EAS 349Directed Study

4

EAS 350Independent Study

4

EAS 370Internship

Variable