East Asian Studies
2011-12 General Catalog
Department of History
201 Humanities
(831) 459-2982
http://eastasianstudies.ucsc.edu
Program Description
East Asian studies addresses the three societies of China, Japan, and Korea in northeast Asia. We recognize that they compose a meaningful regional designation that contains a diverse range of peoples, languages, and cultures. Linked by centuries of common use of the Chinese writing system, a shared textual canon, general principles of statecraft, and the continual circulation of people and goods, the three societies nevertheless also possess distinctive languages, histories, and social identities, making it necessary to explore each society in its own right.
In recognition of this diversity within the common bonds, East Asian studies at UCSC encourages students to explore East Asia in both depth and breadth. Building first upon developing language skills in Chinese or Japanese, students also begin their studies in one of two historical surveys—History 40A, Early Modern East Asia, or History 40B, The Making of Modern East Asia—which explore the broad regional forces that contextualize each society’s particular trajectory. From these foundations, students are encouraged to investigate a broad range of questions pertinent to each society in classes across the university, including anthropology, economics, education, feminist studies, film and digital media, history, history of art and visual culture, languages, linguistics, literature, music, politics, sociology, and theater arts.
Requirements for the Minor
Language. Completion of the Chinese or Japanese language sequence, at least two of which must be upper-division. A student who wishes to complete the East Asian studies program should enroll in beginning Chinese or Japanese no later than the sophomore year.
Required courses. One core course: History 40A, Early Modern East Asia, or History 40B, The Making of Modern East Asia.
Three additional upper-division courses from the East Asian studies curriculum, one of which may be an individual study (course 199).
A minimum of 25 upper-division units must be completed within the East Asian studies minor course requirements.
Study Abroad
Because the minor is designed to support the integration of language training with exploration of East Asian societies, we strongly endorse participation in one of the many education abroad programs available for UC students in East Asia where language skills acquired at the university are put to practical use in daily life and research. At present, there are UC education abroad programs in China, Japan, Hong Kong, Korea, and Taiwan. For more information on the program, see the UC Education Abroad program (EAP) web sites: UCSC—http://ieo.ucsc.edu/programs-abroad/getting-started/index.html, and UC system-wide—http://eap.ucop.edu/.
Associated Faculty
Noriko Aso, Associate Professor of History
Dilip Basu, Associate Professor of History
Raoul Birnbaum, Professor of History of Art and Visual Culture
Nancy Chen, Professor of Anthropology
Alan Christy, Associate Professor of History
Christopher Connery, Professor of Literature
Sakae Fujita, Lecturer of Languages
Hiroshi Fukurai, Professor of Sociology
K.C. Fung, Professor of Economics
Per Gjerde, Professor of Psychology
June Gordon, Professor of Education
Gail B. Hershatter, Professor of History
Christine Hong, Assistant Professor of Literature
Emily Honig, Professor of History
Minghui Hu, Assistant Professor of History
Junko Ito, Professor of Linguistics
Stacy Kamehiro, Associate Professor of History of Art and Visual Culture
Hi Kyung Kim, Associate Professor of Music
L.S. Kim, Associate Professor of Film and Digital Media
Paul Lubek, Professor of Sociology
Boreth Ly, Assistant Professor of History of Art and Visual Culture
David Keenan, Lecturer of Languages
Shigeko Okamoto, Professor of Languages
Benjamin Read, Assistant Professor of Politics
Lisa Rofel, Professor of Anthropology
Dana Y. Takagi, Professor of Sociology
Yiman Wang, Assistant Professor of Film and Digital Media
Rob Wilson, Professor of Literature
Karen Yamashita, Professor of Literature
Alice Yang, Associate Professor of History
Revised: 8/13/12