EALC 1011Introduction to Traditional East Asian CivilizationsThe purpose of this course is to provide an interdisciplinary
introduction to the traditional cultures of China and Japan, which shaped
the East Asian world from early times to ca. 1650, the eve of sustained
contact with the West. We will study selected aspects of Chinese and Japanese
history, thought, religion, literature, and art. The focus will be on significant
developments and representative works, not on comprehensive coverage or
an excess of particularities. The first half of the course, through Friday,
March 7, will deal with China. The second half of the course, from Monday,
March 10 through the end of the semester, will deal with Japan.
Required texts:
LecturesLectures in this course are not a rehash or paraphrase of the readings. For the most part, they shall present new information and suggest new contexts related to the topic of the assigned reading. The identification quizzes will take place on lecture days. This is a 4-credit course. You should therefore expect to devote proportionately more time to it than for a standard 3-credit course. RecitationsThe recitation session you enrolled in is the only one you may attend.
These are small-group meetings of approximately 20-25 students, in which
you will assume an active role in discussing selected topics from the previous
week's lectures and readings. The position papers will be due on recitation
days.
Course Requirements and Grading
* - the lowest score in each will be dropped Quizzes will consist of short identification of key terms, taken from the lectures. These are 10 minute quizzes, scheduled on specific (lecture) dates, and are meant to help you focus on important concepts. Position papers will be due at recitations. These are one-page, typed short essays, based on one of the discussion questions that will be available to you by Thursday of the preceding week via the class listserv e-mail program or on Friday in class. Although you will write on only one of the questions, you should be prepared to discuss the other or others in your recitation section. Exam questions will consist of short identification problems and essays. No make-up quizzes, recitation papers, or exams will be given. The grading scale for exams is:
Ways to succeed in this course: If you follow the above four points, you should have no fear of the quizzes and exams. |