|
Chinese Programs
The Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations offers undergraduate,
graduate, and — in conjunction with a special program in Comparative Literature — Ph.D. programs in Chinese.
Undergraduate Program
Graduate Program
Joint B.A./M.A. Program
Dual M.A. Program
Ph.D. Program
Undergraduate Program
The Department offers Bachelor of Arts programs in the following tracks:
Chinese Language and Civilization
Chinese Language and Literature
The Undergraduate Chinese Program manual provides detailed information about all aspects of the program. Before registering for specific courses, students should consult with the undergraduate advisor concerning placement in language classes. Additionally, we encourage students to broaden their career options through a double major, combining their language study with another field of interest.
Student may also elect to pursue a minor in Chinese. For details of the requirements for the minor consult the College of Arts and Sciences website .
For more detailed descriptions of all courses offered, see the Department's list of Undergraduate Courses.
For details of the East Asian Languages programs, consult the University of Colorado at Boulder Catalog.
Undergraduate Advisor
Professor Antje Richter
Humanities 235, 279 UCB
University of Colorado at Boulder
Boulder CO 80309-0279
(303) 492-7545
Antje.Richter@colorado.edu
Admissions
Office of Admissions
Regent Administrative Center 125
552 UCB
Boulder, CO 80309-0552
Tel.: (303) 492-6301. Fax: (303) 735-2501
| Top | EALC Home |
Graduate Program
M.A. Program
The M.A. program in Chinese is designed to offer students maximum general
exposure to the long sweep of Chinese literary history while also requiring
intensive study of some particular genre or period. Each of the program's
faculty members specializes in one or another of these periods and has
additional competence in a second period. The program is therefore truly
comprehensive in scope. An added extracurricular bonus for the program
is the fact that the Journal of the American Oriental Society and T'ang Studies are edited by members of the faculty. The department thus enjoys visibility as a national hub for publication.
Admission
Applicants for graduate work in Chinese literature are required to
submit two official transcripts of all previous academic work, a writing
sample, and three reports from references. All applicants are recommended
to take the G.R.E.; applicants for fellowships and scholarships, as well
as applicants for admission as provisional degree students, are required
to do so. Foreign applicants must submit results from a TOEFL exam, with
560 being a minimum acceptable score. All applicants should have an undergraduate GPA of at least 3.0. Applicants with a GPA of less than 3.0 but at or above 2.5 may be admitted provisionally.
Regular degree students must maintain at least a 3.0 GPA each semester
or summer term on all work taken, whether or not it is to be applied toward
the intended graduate degree. To graduate, a student must present at least
24 hours of coursework plus a thesis, or 30 hours of coursework without
a thesis, and pass the required examination. All courses counted toward the degree must be
completed at the 5000 level or above.
Curriculum
All entering students must take CHIN 5010 during their first year in
the program, plus whichever course of the literary-history sequence (5020/5030)
is offered that year.
Students planning to continue on to doctoral work in Chinese are encouraged
to begin acquisition as soon as possible of Japanese and one other language
of use in Sinological research. Reading knowledge of these two other languages
must normally be presented at the Ph.D. level, but the sooner one can make
use of them in one's own work the better. Prospective graduates must present
24 hours of approved coursework plus a Master's thesis. A student may,
with approval of the Director of Graduate Studies, present for graduation
30 hours of coursework without a thesis. All other requirements will still
apply.
All students will sit for a three-hour comprehensive written examination near the end of the semester before which they plan to receive the M.A. degree. A complete list of exam items is provided to all entering students.
Graduates of the program will have a firm foundation upon which to erect
the more specialized studies of doctoral work or a broad-based fund of
knowledge from which to draw in teaching about China. The scholarly discipline
of Sinology is an implicit subject of study in all courses in this program.
Students learn not only a body of literature but also appropriate
techniques of interpreting that literature.
For detailed descriptions of graduate courses offered, see the Department's list of Graduate Courses.
Scholarships and Financial Assistance
Applicants may compete for all appropriate Graduate School fellowships
(information available from the Graduate School). The Chinese program itself awards each year a number of fellowships and teaching assistantships. Applicants interested in a teaching assistantship – which normally involves instruction in the elementary or intermediate Mandarin language courses – should include with their application an audiotape containing a three- to five-minute monologue about themselves in Mandarin and a similar three-minute monologue in English.
Graduate advisor
Professor Terry Kleeman
Humanities 240, 279 UCB
University of Colorado at Boulder
Boulder, CO 80309-0279
(303) 492-4497
Terry.Kleeman@colorado.edu
| Top | EALC Home
|
Joint B.A./M.A. Program
The joint B.A./M.A. degree in Chinese/East Asian Languages recognizes the
need for master’s-level training upon entering the job market in a variety
of sectors that call for highly advanced proficiency in the Chinese language,
knowledge of the culture of China and its literature, and the skills acquired
by B.A. and M.A. graduates in the humanities: research, analysis, interpretation, translation, communication. The degree gives highly motivated B.A. students the opportunity to earn an M.A. degree using an accelerated undergraduate program in combination with a fifth year of study. Students must have an overall GPA of 3.25 to apply to the program and should have completed all of their MAPS/Core requirements by the end of their sophomore year. No GRE is required. Application is open only to CU-Boulder students. Students must complete a written application (available in the department office), which includes three letters of recommendation, at least one from a full-time member of the Chinese faculty, by September 1 of their junior year.
Requirements
The joint B.A./M.A. degree requires 147 hours (117 undergraduate and 30 graduate) of coursework, with grades of 3.0 or above in all degree courses and an overall GPA of 3.0. That is, one graduate course counts toward the B.A. as well as toward the M.A. Students are mentored by the undergraduate advisor in consultation with the graduate director and are encouraged to design a program that can be completed in five years.
Curriculum
Undergraduate Courses
Students complete requirements for the undergraduate Chinese degree,
but may substitute a graduate seminar on literature for one undergraduate
literature course.
Graduate Courses
CHIN 5010 Sinological Methods (required and taken in the fourth year)
and either Plan I or Plan II (thesis option). Students are strongly
advised to pursue Plan I; consent of both the undergraduate and graduate
director is required to take the thesis option.
Plan I
In Plan I, any nine of the following 5000-level courses (three taken in
the fourth year, six taken in the fifth year):
|
CHIN 5020 |
Methods of Teaching Asian Languages |
|
CHIN 5040 |
History of the Chinese Language |
|
CHIN 5050 |
Chinese Sociolinguistics |
|
CHIN 5060 |
Topics in Chinese Linguistics |
|
CHIN 5150 |
Theory and Practice of Literary Translation in Chinese |
|
CHIN 5160 |
Advanced Classical Chinese |
|
CHIN 5210 |
Ancient Prose |
|
CHIN 5220 |
Ancient Poetry |
|
CHIN 5280 |
Topics in Ancient Literature |
|
CHIN 5410 |
Medieval Prose |
|
CHIN 5420 |
Medieval Poetry |
|
CHIN 5430 |
Medieval Thought and Religion |
|
CHIN 5480 |
Topics in Medieval Literature |
|
CHIN 5610 |
Early Modern Prose |
|
CHIN 5620 |
Early Modern Poetry |
|
CHIN 5630 |
Early Modern Fiction |
|
CHIN 5680 |
Topics in Early Modern Literature |
|
CHIN 5810 |
Modern Literature |
|
CHIN 5820 |
Contemporary Literature |
|
CHIN 5880 |
Topics in Twentieth-Century Literature |
Plus any 4000-level or 5000-level course(s) from another department for which the student has the consent of the undergraduate advisor and the graduate director (maximum of 3 courses).
Plan II
For Plan II, any seven courses listed under Plan I (three taken in the
fourth year, four taken in the fifth year), and CHIN 6900 Master's Thesis
(6 credits).
Comprehensive examinations must be written in the second semester of
the final year; orals must be completed in the second semester of the final
year for those on Plan II.
Graduate advisor
Professor Terry Kleeman
Humanities 240, 279 UCB
University of Colorado at Boulder
Boulder, CO 80309-0279
(303) 492-4497
Terry.Kleeman@colorado.edu
| Top | EALC Home
|
Dual M.A. Program
Students admitted to the M.A. programs in the departments of
History, Religious Studies, or East Asian Languages and Civilizations
may apply to complete a second M.A. in one of the other programs. Such
degrees serve the needs of students who seek a truly interdisciplinary
experience among intellectually affiliated departments. Such dual M.A.
degrees require students to complete a total of 42 hours for the two
degrees; students must carefully chose a program of study in each
department so as to select three courses in each program that may be
double-counted toward the other degree.
You must consult with your primary advisor early in your M.A.
program about whether dual degrees are appropriate and feasible for
you. It is recommended that you take at least one course from the other
program during the first year of graduate studies and then consult with
the other program advisor about making formal application to that
program. It is also possible to apply to both programs from the outset by
making a separate application to each department, listing as your primary department the one in which you will write your thesis.
A methods course in each program is the only specific course requirement for the dual degrees. The sequence of courses for both programs will be individually structured by the student’s Ad Hoc Graduate Committee, which will consist of the primary advisor from each program and a third faculty member from either department with a specialization appropriate to the student’s interest.
The Ad Hoc Committee will meet toward the end of each academic year,
assessing the student’s progress and making a determination on the student’s continuation in the program.
Residency requirements are the same as for a traditional M.A. The
time frame for the dual degree program is four years (one year more than
for a single M.A.).
Dual degree programs may combine an M.A. Plan 1 (thesis track)
with a Plan 2 (non-thesis track) or a Plan 2 with a Plan 2. Students may
not combine a Plan 1 degree with a second Plan 1 degree, but they are encouraged to select interdisciplinary thesis topics. Thesis hours may not be credited toward either degree.
SAMPLE PROGRAM OF STUDY FOR THE DUAL M.A.
Modern Japanese Literature and
East Asian History
Primary Department:
EALC |
| JPNS 5010 |
Bibliography and Research Methods |
| JPNS 5020 |
Methods of Teaching Japanese |
| JPNS 6950 |
Thesis |
| JPNS 6950 |
Thesis |
|
| JPNS 5810* |
Modern Japanese Literature |
| JPNS 5820* |
Contemporary Japanese Literature |
| JPNS 5830* |
Readings in Modern and Contemporary Japanese Thought and Culture |
|
| HIST 5738* |
Early Modern Japanese History |
| HIST 5728* |
Modern Japanese History |
| HIST 6639* |
Readings in Third World History |
|
| HIST 5000 |
Historical Methods |
| HIST 5648 |
History of Modern Chinese Intellectual Thought |
| HIST 6546 |
Readings in Cultural History and Theory |
| HIST 5012 |
Graduate Colloquium in Modern European
History: 1789-1970 |
|
| * = course double-counted in the other department |
SAMPLE PROGRAM OF STUDY FOR THE DUAL M.A.
American Religions and American History
Primary Department: History |
| HIST 5000 |
Historical Methods |
| HIST 5160 |
Graduate Colloquium in U.S. History |
| HIST 6950 |
Thesis |
| HIST 6950 |
Thesis |
|
| HIST 6546* |
Readings in Cultural History and Theory |
| HIST 6317* |
Readings in the American West |
| HIST 6326* |
Readings in U.S. Intellectual History |
|
| RLST 6850* |
Comparative Studies in Religion |
| RLST 5305* |
Topics in Native American Religion |
| RLST 5550* |
Religion, War and Peace in U.S. History |
|
| RLST 6820 |
Religious Studies Graduate Colloquium |
| RLST 6830 |
Approaches to the Study of Religion |
| RLST 5800 |
Religious Texts and Contexts |
| RLST 5750 |
Taoism |
|
| * = course double-counted in the other department |
SAMPLE PROGRAM OF STUDY FOR THE DUAL M.A.
Traditional Chinese Literature and
East Asian Religions
Primary Department: Religious Studies |
| CHIN 5010 |
Bibliography and Research Methods |
| CHIN 5020 |
Methods of Teaching Chinese |
| CHIN 5210 |
Ancient Prose |
| CHIN 5280 |
Topics in Ancient Literature |
|
| CHIN 5410* |
Medieval Prose |
| CHIN 5480* |
Topics in Medieval Literature |
| CHIN 5430* |
Medieval Thought and Religion |
|
| RLST 5750* |
Taoism |
| RLST 5280* |
Topics in Religious Studies |
| RLST 6830* |
Approaches to the Study of Religion |
|
| RLST 6850 |
Comparative Studies in Religion |
| RLST 6850 |
Comparative Studies in Religion |
| RLST 6950 |
Thesis |
| RLST 6950 |
Thesis |
|
| * = course double-counted in the other department |
For more information, contact:
Department of East Asian Languages & Civilizations
(303) 492-6639
Department of History
(303) 492-6683
Department of Religious Studies
(303) 492-8041
| Top | EALC Home
|
|