1. Silk Road History/Art History/Central Asia
The silk road was the trade route that ran from Chang-an to Rome and
connected all the civilizations of Asia for over 1000 years. In this
section we will look at how the Silk Road functioned as a place of
economic and cultural exchange.
Texts: Susan Whitfield Life Along the Silk Road Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1999
International Dunhuang Project
-Paper on one of the biographies in Whitfield
Silk Road sites
2. Strange journeys Literary studies/China
When going on a strange trip you need a strange guidebook, and
Liaozhai is it. In this section we will look at what boundries were and
how you crossed them in Late Imperial China.
Texts: Judith Zeitlin
Historian of the Strange: Pu Songling and the
Chinese Classical Tale Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1993
Stories from
Liaozhai
-Possible paper on a story from Liaozhai
3. Moving between cultures History/Film Studies/China
Asians and foreigners have been fascinated with
people who live on the margins between two cultures and spend their
lives moving between them. In this section we will look at two
movies, one from Hollywood and one from Hong Kong, that examine what it
means to be between cultures.
Texts:
Sand Pebbles,
Once Upon a Time in China II
-Possible paper
4. Moving between worlds Religious Studies/Women’s
Studies/S.W. Asia
The 20th has been a century of revolution in Asia. Countless
revolutionaries have spoken of the need to drag the nation and its
people into a new world. In this section we will look at some
narratives of change and displacement that come out of the Iranian
Revolution.
Texts: Marjane Satrapi,
Persepolis : The Story of a Childhood,
New York Pantheon 2003;
“The Dead Flame” from Ryszard Kapuscinski,
Shah of Shahs, New
York: Vintage 1992.
-Possible paper
5. Indigenous people Political Science Anthropology, S.E.
Asia, S. Asia
Throughout Asia modernizing states have struggled to contain and
control people who refused to settle down and become productive
taxpayers. To be modern is to stay in one place and not move around. In
this section we will look at both how governments have tried to control
these people and how they have fought back. Each of you will do a short
presentation on one group of people.
Texts: James Scott “
The
State and People Who Move Around: How the
valleys make the hills in Southeast Asia” IIAS Annual Lecture,
1998;
Stuart Corbridge “The Ideology of Tribal Economy and Society: Politics
in the Jharkhand, 1950-1980”
Modern Asian Studies, Vol. 22, No.
1. (1988), pp. 1-42.
-Presentation on indigenous people
6. Moving between families Sociology/Anthropology/ Japan
For women marriage, moving between one family and one set of customs
and another, was the most important journey they would make. In this
section we will look at the modern transformation of marriage in Japan.
Texts:
Walter Edwards Modern Japan Through Its Weddings: Gender,
Person and Society in Ritual Portrayal Stanford, 1989; “Haruko and
Sho-ichi,” “Sex and Drinking” from Gail Bernstein
Haruko’s World: A
Japanese Farm Woman and Her Community, Stanford: Stanford
University Press, 1983.
-Possible paper
Grades
Silk Road
paper
20%
Other pape
20
Oral
Presentation
20
Bibliography for presentation 10
Final
Exam
20
Class
Participation
10
Each of you will write a short paper on the Silk Road book and another
short paper on one of the other units. As there are four other units
you can write on whichever one you wish and you may write more than one
and drop the lowest grades.
-Each of you will do a presentation to the class on one group of
indigenous people. You may pick whatever group you like, and may
discuss whatever aspect of their society interests you, but it should
be a well-researched presentation.
-Class participation is an important part of your grade. In order to do
well on this you need to not only show up
for class but actively contribute to our discussions. There may be other
written assignments that will be part of the class participation grade.
-Our final exam will involve writing an essay that compares and
contrasts two or more of the themes we have talked about in class.