Graduate

EALC 28015/48015 Archaeology of Bronze Age China

(ANTH 26760, ANTH 36760)

“Bronze Age” in China conventionally refers to the time period from ca. 2000 to about 500 BC, during which bronze, an alloy of copper and other metals such as tin and lead, was the predominant medium used by the society, or to be more precise, the elite classes of the society. Bronze objects, in the forms of vessels, weapons, and musical instruments, were reserved for the upper ruling class of the society and were used mostly as paraphernalia during rituals and feasting. “Bronze Age” in China also indicates the emergence and eventual maturation of states with their bureaucratic systems, the presence of urban centers, a sophisticated writing system, and advanced craft producing industries, especially metal production.

This course surveys the important archaeological finds of Bronze Age China, and the theoretical issues such as state formation, craft production, writing, bureaucratic systems, urbanization, warfare, and inter-regional interaction, etc.  It emphasizes a multi-disciplinary approach with readings and examples from anthropology, archaeology, art history, and epigraphy. This course will also visit the Smart Museum, the Field Museum, and the Art Institute of Chicago to take advantage of the local collections of ancient Chinese arts and archaeology.

2023-2024 Spring

EALC 27014/37014 Voices from the Iron House: Lu Xun’s Works

(CMLT 27014, CMLT 37014, FUND 21907)

An exploration of the writings of Lu Xun (1881-1936), widely considered as the greatest Chinese writer of the past century. We will read short stories, essays, prose poetry and personal letters against the backdrop of the political and cultural upheavals of early 20th century China and in dialogue with important English-language scholarly works.

2020-2021 Spring

EALC 25900/35900 Warring States Unearthed Manuscripts new number in the 200/300

This course will provide an overview of Chinese unearthed documents, beginning with the oracle-bone inscriptions of the Shang dynasty and the bronze inscriptions of the Western Zhou dynasty, and then concluding with bamboo and silk manuscripts of the Warring States, Qin and Han dynasties. By reading selections from these materials, we will seek to gain a general sense of both how they were produced and used at the time and also how their modern study has evolved.

2020-2021 Spring

EALC 24950/34950 Fictions of Selfhood in Modern Japanese Literature

As Japanese leaders in the mid 19th century faced the threat of colonization at the hands of the Western powers, they launched a project to achieve “Civilization and Enlightenment,” quickly transforming Japan into a global power that possessed its own empire. In the process fiction became a site for both political engagement and retreat.  A civilized country, it was argued, was supposed to boast “literature” as one of its Fine Arts. This literature was charged with representing the inner life of its characters, doing so in a modern national language that was supposed to be a transparent medium of communication. Between the 1880s and the early 1900s, a new language, new literary techniques, and a new set of ideologies were constructed to produce the “self” in novels and short stories. As soon as these new practices were developed, however, they became the objects of parody and ironic deconstruction. Reading key literary texts from the 1880s through the 1930s, as well as recent scholarship, this course will re-trace this historical and literary unfolding, paying special attention to the relationship between language and subjectivity. All readings will be in English.

2023-2024 Spring

EALC 70000 Advanced Residence

Staff
2020-2021 Winter

EALC 65000 Directed Translation

Fulfills translation requirement for EALC graduate students. Must be arranged with individual faculty member. Register by section with EALC faculty.

Staff
2020-2021 Winter

EALC 60000 Reading Course

Independent reading course.

 

Prerequisites

Note(s): Consent required.

Staff
2020-2021 Winter

EALC 59700 Thesis Research

For course description contact East Asian Languages.

Prerequisites

Note(s): ,Consent required.

Staff
2020-2021 Winter

EALC 28010/48010 Archaeology of Anyang: Bronzes, Inscriptions, World Heritage

(ANTH 26765, ANTH 36765)

Anyang is one of the most important archaeological sites in China. The discoveries of inscribed oracle bones, the royal cemetery, clusters of palatial structures, and industrial-scale craft production precincts have all established that the site was indeed the last capital of the Shang dynasty recorded in traditional historiography. With almost continuous excavations since the late 1920s, work at Anyang has in many ways shaped and defined Chinese archaeology and the study of Early Bronze Age China. This course intends to examine the history of research, important archaeological finds, and the role of Anyang studies in the field of Chinese archaeology. While the emphasis is on archaeological finds and the related research, this course will also attempt to define Anyang in the modern social and cultural contexts in terms of world heritage, national and local identity, and the looting and illegal trade of antiquities.

Prerequisites

Note(s): Open to undergraduates with consent of instructor.

2020-2021 Winter

EALC 45406 Media, History, East Asia

This seminar serves as an introduction to theories of media and mediation in the context of scholarship on East Asia. “Media” has come to be a ubiquitous term in how we think not just about technologies of communication and dissemination, but about literature, music, film, digital art, and other forms of cultural production. We will look at how the concept has been taken up in recent scholarly work on China, Japan, and Korea, and raise questions about how this research draws on media theories from elsewhere; how it seeks to develop or recover locally inflected theories of media; and how we might distinguish between the two. Specific media covered include writing, the book, music, television, film, and digital platforms. A portion of the course will also be dedicated to thinking and learning about how to acquire and analyze materials from online sources using digital tools. The past and present intersection of media history with area studies concerns will thus be as much of a focus as the future this dialogue holds.

2020-2021 Winter
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