Asian Civilizations and Humanities

The courses below are offered through the Department of East Languages and Cultures.

Departmental Chair and Departmental Adviser: Robert Hymes, 407A Kent
212-854-2574
hymes@columbia.edu

Departmental Office: 407 Kent
212-854-5027
Office Hours: Monday-Friday, 9:00 AM-5:00 PM

Web: www.columbia.edu/cu/ealac

Admission to Language Courses and Language Placement Test

Students who wish to begin study of a language at a level beyond first-term elementary and students who have had a break of a semester or more in their language study must pass a language placement test before registering. The test will be given on the Friday before the first day of classes (September 2, 2005, and January 13, 2006). Please see the departmental Web site for additional information.

NOTE

Course scheduling is subject to change. Days, times, instructors, class locations, and call numbers are available on the Directory of Classes.

Fall course information begins posting to the Directory of Classes in February; Summer course information begins posting in March; Spring course information begins posting in June. For course information missing from the Directory of Classes after these general dates, please contact the department or program.

Click on course title to see course description and schedule.

 

Fall 2009

East Asian Languages and Cultures

East Asian Civilization and Humanities

Credit Courses

  • ASCE V2002x or y. Introduction to Major Topics in Asian Civilizations: East Asia. 4 pts.

    An interdisciplinary and topical approach to the major issues and phases of East Asian civilizations and their role in the contemporary world.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: ASCE V2002 :: Credit Sections
    ASCE
    2002
    42346
    001
    MW 1:10p - 2:25p
    405 Kent Hall
    M. Gentzler 23 / 25 [ More Info ]
    ASCE
    2002
    43296
    002
    MW 2:40p - 3:55p
    411 Kent Hall
    W 1:10p - 4:00p
    411 Kent Hall
    R. Chung 19 / 20 [ More Info ]
    ASCE
    2002
    45999
    003
    MW 9:10a - 10:25a
    424 Kent Hall
    W 9:00a - 12:00p
    424 Kent Hall
    A. Smith 10 / 25 [ More Info ]
  • ASCE V2363x or y. Introduction To East Asian Civilizations: Korea. 3 pts.

    The evolution of Korean society and culture, with special attention to Korean values as reflected in thought, literature, and the arts.

    Discussion Section Required.
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: ASCE V2363 :: Credit Sections
    ASCE
    2363
    17297
    001
    MW 10:35a - 11:50a
    413 Kent Hall
    M 9:00a - 12:00p
    403 International Affairs Bldg
    C. Armstrong 55 / 70 [ More Info ]
  • AHUM V3400x and y. Colloquium on major texts: East Asia. 4 pts.

    V3399 and V3400 form a sequence but either may be taken separately. V3399 may also be taken as part of a sequence with Asian Humanities V3830. Readings in translation and discussion of texts of Middle Eastern, Indian, Chinese, and Japanese origin, including (V3399) the Quran, Islamic philosophy, Sufi poetry, the Upanishads, the Bhagavad Gita, Buddhist sutras, Indian epics and drama, Gandhi's Autobiography; (V3400) the Analects of Confucius, Mencius, Lao Tzu, Chuang Tzu, the Lotus Sutra, Dream of the Red Chamber, Tale of Genji, Zen literature, Noh plays, bunraku (puppet) plays, Chinese and Japanese poetry.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: AHUM V3400 :: Credit Sections
    AHUM
    3400
    73443
    001
    Tu 2:10p - 4:00p
    628 Kent Hall
    P. Anderer 23 / 25 [ More Info ]
    AHUM
    3400
    28047
    002
    W 11:00a - 12:50p
    HL-2 Heyman Center For Humanities
    C. Schirokauer 12 / 25 [ More Info ]
    AHUM
    3400
    03416
    003
    Tu 9:00a - 10:50a
    214 Milbank Hall
    D. Moerman 5 / 25 [ More Info ]
    AHUM
    3400
    17246
    004
    Th 4:10p - 6:00p
    522C Kent Hall
    H. Hori 15 / 25 [ More Info ]
    AHUM
    3400
    28499
    005
    M 2:10p - 4:00p
    401 Hamilton Hall
    D. Lurie 19 / 20 [ More Info ]
    AHUM
    3400
    48400
    006
    W 2:10p - 4:00p
    309 Hamilton Hall
    A. Pitkin 3 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • EAAS V3927x. China in the Modern World. 3 pts.

    The rise of China has impacted world politics and economy in significant ways. How did it happen? This course introduces some unique angles of self-understanding as suggested by Chinese writers, intellectuals, and artists who have participated in the making of modern China and provided illuminating and critical analyses of their own culture, history, and the world. Our readings will cover a wide selection of modern Chinese fiction and poetry, autobiographical writing, photography, documentary film, artworks, and music with emphasis on the interplays of art/literature, history, and politics. We will pay close attention to the role of storytelling, the mediating powers of technology, new forms of visuality and sense experience, and the emergence of critical consciousness in response to global modernity. In the course of the semester, a number of contemporary Chinese artists, filmmakers, and writers will be invited to answer students� questions.

    This course will draw on cross-disciplinary methods from art history, film studies, anthropology, and history in approaching our texts and other works. Our goal is to develop critical reading skills and gain in-depth understanding of modern China and its engagement with the modern world beyond the Cold War rhetoric. Our topics of discussion include historical rupture, loss and melancholy, exile, freedom, migration, social bonding and identity, capitalism, nationalism, and the world revolution. All works are read in English translation.
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: EAAS V3927 :: Credit Sections
    EAAS
    3927
    88779
    001
    Tu 2:10p - 4:00p
    301M Fayerweather
    L. Liu 13 / 25 [ More Info ]
  • AHUM W4029x. Colloquium On Major Works of Japanese Philosophy, Religion, and Literature. 4 pts.

    Prerequisites: AHUM 3400, ASCE V2361, or ASCE V2002.

    Reading and discussion of major works of Chinese philosophy, religion, and literature, including important texts of the Buddhist and Neo-Confucian traditions. Sequence with AHUM W4030, but either may be taken separately if the student has adequate preparation.

  • East Asian History

    Credit Courses

  • HSEA W3862x. The History of Korea To 1900. 3 pts.

    Issues pertaining to Korean history from its beginnings to the early modern era. Issues will be examined in the Korean context and also from a comparative East Asian perspective.

  • HSEA W3871x. Japan In the 20th Century. 3 pts.

    Japanese history from 1890 to the present, with particular emphasis on political, social, and economic developments.

  • HSEA W3880x. History of Modern China I. 3 pts.
    China�s transformation under its last imperial rulers, with special emphasis on economic, legal, political, and cultural change.
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: HSEA W3880 :: Credit Sections
    HSEA
    3880
    12946
    001
    TuTh 10:35a - 11:50a
    404 International Affairs Bldg
    Tu 9:00a - 12:00p
    404 Internation
    M. Zelin 24 [ More Info ]
  • This seminar is limited to 15 students. No prior courses are required, although some background on Chinese and American history is helpful.

    EAAS W4235x (Section 001). The United States and China: Images, Perceptions, and Realities. 4 pts.

    Why does China occupy such a large territory in the American imagination? What do Chinese believe about Americans? The seminar will examine the images, perceptions, and stereotypes that have shaped U.S.-China relations, and discuss the implications for contemporary policy issues. It will describe the sources and history of American attitudes about China as well as Chinese views of the United States. Drawing upon visual images, public opinion polls, written accounts and other materials, the course will analyze the positive and negative swings and shifts that characterize relations between these two countries.

  • HSEA W4845x. Modern Japan in History and Memory. 3 pts.

    The history of modern Japan as interpreted in twentieth-century Japanese history, writing, and public memory. Emphasis on the ways in which different versions of the past have been affected by changes in the present, from the 1880s through the 1990s.Open without prerequisite to graduate, undergraduate, and SIPA students.

  • HSEA W4866x. Competing Nationalisms In East Asia: Representing Chinese and Tibetan Relations in History. 3 pts.
    After an introduction to nationalism in general and in Asia, this seminar will examine the issue of nationalist influences on the writing of Asian history through the lens of Chinese and Tibetan historiography. By critically examining the historical arguments for and against the inclusion of Tibet as part of the modern Chinese nation-state, students will have an opportunity to compare two important cultural traditions presented as competing national entities and apply this to their own topics (on China, Japan, Korea, Vietnam, or Tibet) for the final research paper.
  • HSEA W4881. Gods, Ghosts, and Ancestors: Social History of Chinese Religion. 3 pts.

    Problems in the social history of Chinese religion, viewed as much as possible through primary documents in translation. Focuses on the place of religious ideas and practices (including those of the high traditions of Buddhism, Taoism, and neo-Confucianism) in everyday life and examines the relation of images of ancestors, gods, ghosts, paradise, and hells to Chinese models (explicit and implicit) of human society.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: HSEA W4881 :: Credit Sections
    HSEA
    4881
    97852
    001
    M 4:10p - 6:00p
    311 Fayerweather
    R. Hymes 15 / 25 [ More Info ]
  • HSEA W4893x or y. Family In Chinese History. 3 pts.

    Prerequisites: ASCE V2359.

    The history of the Chinese family, its changing forms and cultural expressions: marriage and divorce; parent and child; clan and lineage; ancestor worship; the role of women; the relation of family and state; Western parallels and contrasts.

  • HSEA W4894x. Who is the Samurai?. 3 pts.

    Primary and secondary texts representing the samurai in various periods of Japanese history. How did members of the warrior class, both men and women, live? What did they do? How did they think of themselves? How have others conceived of them?

    East Asian Literature, Film and Culture

    Credit Courses

  • EAAS V3220x. Korean Film and the Making of Cold War Culture. 3 pts.

    This course traces the early history of South Korean film, focusing on the ways in which issues central to the formation of global Cold War culture in the 1950s and 1960s cut across four genres: comedy, combat/military film, melodrama, and the spy thriller. We pay particular attention to the comedic representation of family and the developmental state, the negotiation of race and sexuality in combat/military films, the role of sentimental masculinity in the melodramatic imagination, and the relation between modern discourses of attention and vigilance in the spy thriller. Linking Korean cinema to the transnational context of the Pax Americana, we will also examine cross-cultural representations of Cold War culture in Korean and Hollywood filmic productions. In addition to the secondary sources on Korean/U.S. Cold War culture and Korean literary works, our reading of selected theoretical texts will serve as a point of departure for analyzing such issues as the relation between film as visual medium and the global "red scare"; motion picture and mobilization/militarization; and gender/ways of seeing.

    Mandatory weekly film screening.

  • EAAS W3338y. Cultural History of Japanese Monsters. 3 pts.

    From Godzilla to Pokemon (literally, "pocket monster") toys, Japanese monsters have become a staple commodity of late-capitalist global pop culture. This course seeks to place this phenomenon within a longer historical, as well as a broader cross-cultural, context. Through an examination of texts and images spanning over thirteen centuries of Japanese history, along with comparable productions from other cultures, students will gain an understanding not only of different conceptions and representations of monsters, ghosts, and other supernatural creatures in Japan, but also of the role of the "monstrous" in the cultural imagination more generally. The course draws on various media and genres of representation, ranging from written works, both literary and scholarly, to the visual arts, material culture, drama, and cinema. Readings average 100-150 pages per week. Several film and video screenings are scheduled in addition to the regular class meetings. Seating is limited, with final admission based on a written essay and other information to be submitted to the instructor before the beginning of the semester. Some preference is given to EALAC and History majors, as well as to those who have done previous coursework on Japan.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: EAAS W3338 :: Credit Sections
    EAAS
    3338
    53148
    001
    MW 6:10p - 7:25p
    628 Kent Hall
    G. Pflugfelder 18 [ More Info ]
  • EAAS W3405x or y. Women In Japanese Literature: Gender, Genre, and Modernity. 3 pts.
    This course engages in close readings of major works of Japanese literature from the 18th-century to the present with particular attention to the issues of gender and genre in the formation of modern Japanese literature. The course considers figures such as female ghosts, wives and courtesans, youth and schoolgirls, the new woman and the modern girl, actors/actresses and cross-dressers. Readings highlight the role of literary genres, examining the ways in which the literary texts engage with changing socio-historical conditions, especially with regard to gender and social relations. Genres include puppet plays, ghost stories, melodrama, Bildungsroman, domestic fiction, autobiographical fiction, and the fantastic. Related critical issues are the novel and the formation of a national community; women�s writings; media and the development of urban mass culture; colonial and imperial spaces; history and memory. All readings are in English. Fulfills the major culture B requirement.
  • EAAS W3927x. China in the Modern World. 4 pts.

    The rise of China has impacted world politics and economy in significant ways. How did it happen? This course introduces a unique angle of self-understanding as suggested by Chinese writers, intellectuals, and artists who participated in the making of modern China and have provided illuminating and critical analysis of their culture, history and the world. Topics of discussion include historical rupture, loss and melancholy, exile, freedom, migration, social bonding and identity, capitalism, nationalism and the world revolution.

  • EAAS W3928x. Japanese Literature: Beginning To 1900. 3 pts.

    An examination of the major genres -- poetry, prose fiction, historical narrative, drama, and philosophical writing -- of Japanese literature from the ancient period up to 1900 as they relate to larger historical changes and social, political and religious cross-currents.

  • EAAS W4x. Literary Production and Aesthetic Practice in Premodern Japan. 3 pts.
    Close reading, lecture, and discussion concerning representative works of literature and drama from ancient to early modern Japan. Theoretical analysis will be integrated with readings from the sociology and anthropology of religion; treatises associated with Buddhist, Confucian, Shintô, and Daoist traditions; and readings on the history of religion in Japan.
  • EAAS W4031x or y. Introduction to the History of Chinese Literature. 3 pts.

    An introduction to the major narrative genres, forms and works from the beginning through to 900 C.E. Readings in English.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: EAAS W4031 :: Credit Sections
    EAAS
    4031
    67547
    001
    Th 2:00p - 4:00p
    522C Kent Hall
    W. Swartz 19 / 30 [ More Info ]
  • EAAS W4031y. Introduction to the History of Chinese Literature (9th Century through the 19th Century) ENG. 3 pts.

    An introduction to the major narrative genres, forms and works from the 9th Century through the 19th Century. Readings in English.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: EAAS W4031 :: Credit Sections
    EAAS
    4031
    67547
    001
    Th 2:00p - 4:00p
    522C Kent Hall
    W. Swartz 19 / 30 [ More Info ]
  • EAAS W4106x. Global Genres and East Asian Cinema. 3 pts.

    This course explores East Asian Cinema from the perspective of film genre. In particular, the course examines East Asian genre films as active interaction with the circulation of global film genres as well as mass mediated engagement with specific economic, social, and political histories of East Asia. We will study contemporary theories of film genre, examine how the case of East Asian genre films complicate existing theories, while paying due attention to the parallel transnational traffics--between East Asian Cinema and global film genre, and across East Asian Cinema in their history of cultural and economic flow as well as political confrontation. We will integrate our investigations of genre-specific questions (industry, style, reception, spectatorship, affect) with those of gender, ethnicity, power as well as nation and transnational/transregional identity.

    Discussion Section Required.
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: EAAS W4106 :: Credit Sections
    EAAS
    4106
    97798
    001
    Tu 4:10p - 6:00p
    522C Kent Hall
    W. Bao 15 / 20 [ More Info ]
    EAAS
    4106
    23549
    E01
    Tu 6:00p - 8:00p
    522C Kent Hall
    Instructor To Be Announced 0 / 0 [ More Info ]
  • EAAS W4220x. Popular Culture in Modern Chinese Societies. 3 pts.

    A transnational examination of Chinese popular culture and media technology in China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and overseas Chinese communities. Readings and discussion focus on popular fiction and non-fiction, print journalism, film, pop music, video, photographic media, radio and television broadcast, and the internet.

  • EAAS W4230x. The Rise of Modern Chinese Thought. 3 pts.

    Critical introduction to the intellectual trajectory of modern China with emphasis on imperial legacy, nation building, social change, internationalism, public discourse, knowledge production and world revolution. Readings include seminal primary as well as secondary texts in English translations.

  • EAAS W4357x. Topics in Contemporary Japanese Cinema. 3 pts.

    By introducing important films and directors, this course examines issues both in the field of Japanese cinema and in popular cultural discourse from the 1980s to the present. Directors' oeuvres, social and cultural backgrounds, film theories, and analysis of the works are introduced. Reading assignments include writings drawn from perspectives of auteurism, formal analysis, feminist critique, national cinema, cultural studies, and theories of globalization. These various readins will assist students in critically examining filmic texts, and developing their own views of the works and issues that films raise. Moreover, the course is designed to enhance students' further understanding of Japanese society both in the domestic and global contexts by studying popular media.

    Mandatory film screening each week.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: EAAS W4357 :: Credit Sections
    EAAS
    4357
    56701
    001
    Tu 6:10p - 8:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    Tu 7:10p - 10:00p
    424 Kent Hall
    H. Hori 22 / 25 [ More Info ]
    EAAS
    4357
    63011
    E01
    Tu 8:10p - 10:00p
    522C Kent Hall
    Instructor To Be Announced 0 / 0 [ More Info ]
  • EAAS W4557x. Envisioning the SnowLand: Film and TV in Tibet and Inner Asia. 3 pts.
    A study of film and television production in Tibet, comparisons with cinema and TV in Mongolia, Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia. The course will look at the ways state, nation, culture, and politics are constructed at different times through film and other visual media. Major Cultures Requirement: East Asian Civilization List B only when
    paired with ASCE V2365 Introduction to East Asian Civilization: Tibet.
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: EAAS W4557 :: Credit Sections
    EAAS
    4557
    87399
    001
    M 2:10p - 4:00p
    522D Kent Hall
    Tu 7:10p - 9:30p
    522D Kent Hall
    R. Barnett 8 [ More Info ]

    East Asian Language Courses - Chinese

    Credit Courses

  • CHNS W1011x. Introductory Chinese II (Courses A and B) (N). 2.5 pts.

    Prerequisites: Chinese W1010 (offered in the Spring only) or the equivalent.

    The program is designed to develop basic skills in listening, speaking, reading and writing colloquial Chinese. This course (Part II) is offered in the Fall only. The two parts (I and II) together cover the same materials as Chinese C1101/F1101 (Fall) and fulfill the requirement for admission to Chinese C1102/F1102 (Spring). Standard Chinese pronunciation, traditional characters. Enrollment limited to 18. Section subject to cancellation if under-enrolled. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: CHNS W1011 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    1011
    87530
    001
    MW 9:10a - 10:15a
    522A Kent Hall
    W 9:00a - 12:00p
    522A Kent Hall
    S. Qi 10 / 20 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1011
    88442
    002
    TuTh 6:10p - 7:15p
    628 Kent Hall
    Tu 7:10p - 10:00p
    628 Kent Hall
    Q. Tan 8 / 20 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1011
    75506
    003
    TuTh 9:10a - 10:15a
    423 Kent Hall
    Th 9:00a - 12:00p
    423 Kent Hall
    S. Qi 8 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS C1101x-C1102. Elementary Chinese I - II (N) (Level 1). 5 pts. Additional weekly oral session and lab to be arranged.
    Additional weekly oral session and lab to be arranged. The course is designed to develop basic skills in understanding, speaking, reading, and writing modern colloquial Chinese. Standard Chinese pronunciation, traditional characters. Students who already can speak Mandarin will not be accepted into this course. Enrollment limited to 18. Section subject to cancellation if under-enrolled. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: CHNS C1101 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    1101
    28597
    001
    M 1:10p - 4:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    M 4:10p - 7:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    M 7:10p - 10:00p
    L. Zhang 20 / 20 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1101
    55944
    002
    MTuWTh 10:35a - 11:40a
    307 Pupin Laboratories
    M 1:10p - 4:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    M 4:
    Q. Tan 16 / 20 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1101
    41247
    003
    MTuWTh 12:00p - 1:05p
    411 Kent Hall
    M 1:10p - 4:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    M 4:10p - 7:00
    L. Hu 15 / 20 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1101
    42297
    004
    MTuWTh 12:00p - 1:05p
    424 Kent Hall
    M 1:10p - 4:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    M 4:10p - 7:00
    L. Liu 11 / 20 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1101
    46746
    005
    M 1:10p - 4:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    MTuWTh 2:40p - 3:45p
    424 Kent Hall
    M 4:10p - 7:00p
    X. Tai 19 / 20 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1101
    50898
    006
    M 1:10p - 4:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    MTuWTh 4:10p - 5:15p
    511 Kent Hall
    M 7:10p - 10:00
    L. Yan 14 / 20 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1101
    52500
    007
    M 1:10p - 4:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    M 4:10p - 7:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    MTuWTh 5:40p - 6:45p
    X. Wang 12 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS F1101x-F1102. Elementary Chinese I-II (N) (Level 1). 5 pts. Additional weekly oral session and lab to be arranged.
    Additional weekly oral session and lab to be arranged. Instructors to be announced. Same course as C1101-C1102 (N). Students who can speak Mandarin will not be accepted into this course. Enrollment limited to 20. Section subject to cancellation if under-enrolled. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: CHNS F1101 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    1101
    78029
    001
    M 1:10p - 4:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    M 4:10p - 7:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    MTuWTh 6:10p - 7:15p
    S. Hong 8 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS C1111x-C1112. Elementary Chinese I and II (W) (Level 1). 5 pts.
    The course is specially designed for students of Chinese heritage and advanced beginners with good speaking skills. It aims to develop the student's basic skills to read and write modern colloquial Chinese. Pinyin system is introduced; standard Chinese pronunciation, and traditional characters. Classes will be conducted mostly in Chinese. Open to students with Mandarin speaking ability in Chinese only. Enrollment limited to 25. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: CHNS C1111 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    1111
    57796
    001
    MWF 1:10p - 2:35p
    628 Kent Hall
    S. Hong 16 / 20 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1111
    60847
    002
    TuTh 4:10p - 5:35p
    522B Kent Hall
    F 2:10p - 3:35p
    522B Kent Hall
    H. Wang 18 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS C1201x-C1202. Intermediate Chinese I and II (N) (Level 2). 5 pts. Additional weekly oral session and lab to be arranged.

    Prerequisites: Chinese C1101-1102 or F1101-1102, or the equivalent. See Admission to Language Courses.

    Designed to further the student's four skills acquired in the elementary course, this program aims to develop higher level of proficiency through comprehensive oral and written exercises. Cultural aspects in everyday situations are introduced. Traditional characters. Enrollment limited to 18. Section subject to cancellation if under-enrolled. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: CHNS C1201 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    1201
    82899
    001
    MTuWTh 10:35a - 11:40a
    405 Kent Hall
    M 9:00a - 12:00p
    628 Kent Hall
    S. Qi 16 / 20 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1201
    87347
    002
    MTuWTh 12:00p - 1:05p
    511 Kent Hall
    Tu 9:00a - 12:00p
    424 Kent Hall
    L. Zhang 20 / 20 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1201
    90798
    003
    MTuWTh 2:40p - 3:45p
    405 Kent Hall
    W 1:10p - 4:00p
    405 Kent Hall
    Q. Tan 21 / 20 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1201
    92248
    004
    MTuWTh 4:10p - 5:15p
    405 Kent Hall
    X. Wang 21 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS F1201x-F1202. Intermediate Chinese I-II (N) (Level 2). 5 pts. Additional weekly oral session and lab to be arranged.

    Prerequisites: Chinese C1101-1201 or F1101-1102, or the equivalent.�See Admission to Languages Courses.

    Same course as C1201-C1202. Enrollment limited to 18. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: CHNS F1201 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    1201
    83030
    001
    MTuWTh 6:10p - 7:15p
    511 Kent Hall
    M 7:10p - 10:00p
    511 Kent Hall
    X. Tai 16 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS C1221x-C1222. Intermediate Chinese I and II (W) (Level 2). 5 pts.

    Prerequisites: CHNS C1112 or F1112, or the equivalent. See Admission to Language Courses.

    Enrollment limited to 25. Continuation of CHNS C1112, with a focus on reading comprehension and written Chinese. Traditional characters. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: CHNS C1221 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    1221
    96946
    001
    M 1:10p - 2:35p
    308 Lewisohn Hall
    WF 1:10p - 2:35p
    522C Kent Hall
    C. Sobelman 3 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS W3301x-W3302. Introduction To Classical Chinese. 3 pts.

    Prerequisites: CHNS C1102, JPNS C1202, or KORN W1202, or the equivalent.

    Introduction to the classical Chinese written language. Emphasis on the fundamentals of grammar and style, as reflected in representative core texts from the classical tradition, with presentation of elementary materials on classical phonology and lexicology. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: CHNS W3301 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    3301
    10848
    001
    MWF 9:10a - 10:25a
    423 Kent Hall
    F 9:00a - 12:00p
    424 Kent Hall
    L. Liu 19 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS W4003x-W4004. Advanced Chinese I and II (N) (Level 3). 5 pts.
    Enrollment limited to 15. Prerequisite for W4003: CHNS C1202 or F1202, or the equivalent. Prerequisite for W4004: CHNS W4003 or the equivalent. See Admission to Language Courses. This course fulfills the language requirement for east Asian studies majors. Prepares for more advanced study of Chinese through rigorous vocabulary expansion, more sophisticated language usage patterns, and introduction to basics of formal and literary styles. Materials are designed to advance the student's fluency for everyday communicative tasks as well as reading skills. Simplified characters are introduced. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: CHNS W4003 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    4003
    12696
    001
    MTuWTh 9:10a - 10:15a
    511 Kent Hall
    Th 9:00a - 12:00p
    511 Kent Hall
    Z. Wang 19 / 20 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    4003
    16897
    002
    MTuWTh 10:35a - 11:40a
    511 Kent Hall
    M 9:00a - 12:00p
    511 Kent Hall
    Z. Wang 6 / 20 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    4003
    18446
    003
    MTuWTh 12:00p - 1:05p
    405 Kent Hall
    M 9:00a - 12:00p
    405 Kent Hall
    Z. Shi 17 / 20 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    4003
    21296
    004
    MTuWTh 4:10p - 5:15p
    423 Kent Hall
    L. Hu 10 / 20 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    4003
    25896
    005
    MTuWTh 6:10p - 7:15p
    424 Kent Hall
    M 7:10p - 10:00p
    424 Kent Hall
    L. Liu 13 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS W4005x-W4006. Advanced Chinese I and II (W) (Level 3). 5 pts.
    Enrollment limited to 25. Prerequisite for W4005: CHNS C1222 or F1222, or the equivalent. Prerequisite for W4006: CHNS W4005 or the equivalent. Admission after Chinese placement exam and an oral proficiency interview with the instructor. Especially designed for students who possess good speaking ability and who wish to acquire practical writing skills as well as business-related vocabulary and speech patterns. Introduction to semiformal and formal Chinese used in everyday writing and social or business-related occasions. Simplified characters are introduced.
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: CHNS W4005 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    4005
    26946
    001
    MWF 11:10a - 12:15p
    609 Hamilton Hall
    M 9:00a - 12:00p
    609 Hamilton Hall
    H. Wang 17 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS W4007x-W4008. Readings In Classical Chinese. 4 pts.
    Prerequisite for W4007: CHNS W3302 or the equivalent. Prerequisite for W4008: CHNS W4007 or the equivalent. Admission after placement exam. Focusing on Tang and Song prose and poetry, introduces a broad variety of genres through close readings of chosen texts as well as the specific methods, skills, and tools to approach them. Strong emphasis on the grammatical and stylistic analysis of representative works. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: CHNS W4008 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    4008
    57034
    001
    TuTh 11:00a - 12:15p
    326 International Affairs Bldg
    Tu 9:00a - 12:00p
    326 Internation
    W. Shang 13 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS W4012x. Business Chinese. 5 pts.

    Prerequisites: Two years Chinese study at college level.

    This course is designed for students who have studied Chinese for two years at college level and are interested in business studies concerning China. It offers systematic descriptions of Chinese language used in business discourse. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: CHNS W4012 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    4012
    28029
    001
    MTuWTh 10:00a - 10:50a
    628 Kent Hall
    Th 9:00a - 12:00p
    628 Kent Hall
    Z. Shi 15 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS W4014x. Media Chinese. 4 pts.

    Prerequisites: At least 3 years of intensive Chinese language training at college level and instructor approval.

    This advanced course is designed to specifically train students' listening and speaking skills in both formal and colloquial language through various Chinese media sources. Students view and discuss excerpts of Chinese TV news broadcasts, soap operas, and movie segments on a regular basis. Close reading of newspaper and internet articles and blogs supplements the training of verbal skills.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: CHNS W4014 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    4014
    44255
    001
    MW 6:10p - 8:00p
    254 International Affairs Bldg
    M 7:10p - 10:00p
    254 International Af
    Y. Meng 11 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS G4015x-G4016. Readings In Modern Chinese I and II (N) (Level 4). 4 pts.
    Prerequisite for G4015: CHNS W4004 or the equivalent. Prequisite for G4016: CHNS G4015 or the equivalent. Implements a wide range of reading materials to enhance the student�s speaking and writing as well as reading skills. Supplemented by television broadcast news, also provides students with strategies to increase their comprehension of formal style of modern Chinese. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: CHNS G4015 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    4015
    61249
    001
    MTuWTh 10:00a - 10:50a
    402 Hamilton Hall
    Th 9:00a - 12:00p
    402 Hamilton Hall
    Y. Meng 15 / 18 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    4015
    63248
    002
    MWTh 5:40p - 6:55p
    411 Kent Hall
    W 4:10p - 7:00p
    411 Kent Hall
    L. Yan 12 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS W4017x-W4018. Readings In Modern Chinese I and II (W) (Level 4). 4 pts.

    Prerequisites: Prerequisite for W4017: CHNS W4006 or the equivalent.
    Prerequisite for W4018: CHNS W4017 or the equivalent.

    This is a non-consecutive reading course designed for those whose proficiency is above 4th level. See Admission to Language Courses.

    Selections from contemporary Chinese authors in both traditional and simplified characters with attention to expository, journalistic, and literary styles.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: CHNS W4017 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    4017
    57779
    001
    M 11:00a - 12:35p
    308 Lewisohn Hall
    M 9:00a - 12:00p
    308 Lewisohn Hall
    W 11:00a
    C. Sobelman 7 / 18 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    4017
    53097
    002
    M 2:45p - 4:00p
    308 Lewisohn Hall
    W 1:10p - 4:00p
    522C Kent Hall
    W 2:45p - 4:00p
    C. Sobelman 6 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS W4019x or y. History of Chinese Language. 3 pts.
    Introduces the evolution of Chinese language. It reveals the major changes in Chinese sound, writing and grammar systems, and social and linguistic factors which caused these changes. CC GS EN CE GSAS
  • CHNS G5017x-G5018. Colloquium In Advanced Modern Chinese Readings I-II (Level 5). 3 pts.

    Prerequisites: Chinese W4005-4006,W4015-4016,W4017-4018, or the equivalent.

    This course aims to advance the student's linguistic competence through intesive and extensive readings of various genres including literate and news reports. Discussions focus on cultural as well as linguistic features. Assignments: oral presentations and written reprots based on readings. GF
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: CHNS G5017 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    5017
    56447
    001
    TuTh 9:10a - 10:25a
    405 Kent Hall
    L. Liu 13 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS G6005x. Tang Poetry. 3 pts.
    Focus on the art of reading poetry, with attention to relevant historical, biographical and literary-historical contexts.
  • CHNS G6010x or y. History - Literature & Culture 1550-1850. 3 pts.
    This course offers a critical survey of late Ming to mid-Qing literature and culture. The topics include: dramas, vernacular stories and novels, late-Ming print culture, book illustrations, daily-life encyclopedias, literary miscellanies, morality books, ledgers of merit and demerit, etc. Although most of the readings are in English, this class will involve some Chinese texts.

    Japanese

    Credit Courses

  • JPNS W1001y-W1002. Elementary Japanese A and B. 2.5 pts.

    Prerequisite for W1002: C+ or above in JPNS W1001 or pass the placement test. The sequence begins in the spring term. JPNS W1001-W1002 is equivalent to JPNS C1101 or F1101 and fulfills the requirement for admission to JPNS C1102 or F1102. Aims at the acquisition of basic Japanese grammar and Japanese culture with an emphasis on accurate communication in speaking and writing. CC GS EN CE GSAS

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: JPNS W1002 :: Credit Sections
    JPNS
    1002
    73320
    001
    TuTh 5:40p - 6:45p
    616 Hamilton Hall
    Th 4:10p - 7:00p
    616 Hamilton Hall
    H. Hamada 12 / 25 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    1002
    17096
    002
    MW 11:00a - 12:05p
    317 Hamilton Hall
    M 9:00a - 12:00p
    317 Hamilton Hall
    H. Hamada 9 / 25 [ More Info ]
  • JPNS C1101x-C1102. First-Year Japanese. 5 pts.

    Prerequisite for C1102: JPNS C1101, F1101, or W1001-W1002, or the equivalent. Basic training in Japanese through speaking, listening, reading and writing in various cultural contexts.Lab Required.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: JPNS C1101 :: Credit Sections
    JPNS
    1101
    60942
    001
    MTuWTh 10:35a - 11:40a
    424 Pupin Laboratories
    Tu 1:10p - 4:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    Tu
    F. Nazikian 14 / 20 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    1101
    56530
    002
    MTuWTh 12:00p - 1:05p
    307 Pupin Laboratories
    Tu 1:10p - 4:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    Tu 4
    J. Park 12 / 20 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    1101
    40848
    003
    MTuWTh 1:10p - 2:15p
    511 Kent Hall
    Tu 4:10p - 7:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    Tu 7:10p - 10:
    M. Nittono 15 / 20 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    1101
    42298
    004
    MTuWTh 4:10p - 5:15p
    413 Hamilton Hall
    Tu 1:10p - 4:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    Tu 7:10p -
    S. Sato 21 / 20 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    1101
    28049
    005
    MTuWTh 2:40p - 3:45p
    316 Hamilton Hall
    Tu 1:10p - 4:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    Tu 4:10p -
    H. Hamada 9 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: JPNS F1101 :: Credit Sections
    JPNS
    1101
    81529
    001
    MTuWTh 5:40p - 6:45p
    522D Kent Hall
    Tu 1:10p - 4:00p
    413 Kent Hall
    Tu 4:10p - 7:
    K. Okamoto 12 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • JPNS C1201x-C1202. Second-Year Japanese. 5 pts.

    Prerequisite for C1201: JPNS C1102 or the equivalent. Prerequisite for C1202: JPNS C1201 or the equivalent. Further practice in the four language skills. Participation in a once a week conversation class is required.Lab Required.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: JPNS C1201 :: Credit Sections
    JPNS
    1201
    87446
    001
    MTuWTh 10:35a - 11:40a
    423 Kent Hall
    M 9:00a - 12:00p
    423 Kent Hall
    S. Eguchi 14 / 18 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    1201
    92396
    002
    MTuWTh 12:00p - 1:05p
    522B Kent Hall
    M 9:00a - 12:00p
    522C Kent Hall
    M. Hatakeyama 15 / 18 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    1201
    97497
    003
    MTuWTh 1:10p - 2:15p
    423 Kent Hall
    S. Eguchi 11 / 18 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    1201
    75781
    004
    MTuWTh 4:10p - 5:15p
    522D Kent Hall
    J. Park 12 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • JPNS W4005x-W4006. Third-Year Japanese. 5 pts.

    Prerequisite for W4005: JPNS C1202 or the equivalent. Prerequisite for W4006: JPNS W4005 or the equivalent. Readings in authentic/semi-authentic texts, videos, and class discussions.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: JPNS W4005 :: Credit Sections
    JPNS
    4005
    21697
    001
    MTuWTh 1:10p - 2:15p
    424 Kent Hall
    K. Okamoto 16 / 15 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    4005
    23196
    002
    MW 4:10p - 5:15p
    255 International Affairs Bldg
    TuTh 4:10p - 5:15p
    313 Pupin Laborato
    M. Hatakeyama 15 / 15 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    4005
    91148
    003
    MTuWTh 10:35a - 11:40a
    424 Kent Hall
    M 9:00a - 12:00p
    424 Kent Hall
    S. Sato 4 / 15 [ More Info ]
  • JPNS W4007x. Introduction To Classical Japanese. 4 pts.
    Prerequisite: JPNS C1202 or the equivalent. Introduction to the fundamentals of classical Japanese grammar. Trains students to read Japanese historical and literary texts from the early period up to the 20th century.
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: JPNS W4007 :: Credit Sections
    JPNS
    4007
    26099
    001
    MW 10:35a - 11:50a
    101 Kent Hall
    M 9:00a - 12:00p
    101 Kent Hall
    H. Shirane 11 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • JPNS W4017x-W4018. Fourth-Year Japanese. 4 pts.

    Prerequisite for W4017: JPNS W4006 or the equivalent. Prerequisite for W4018: JPNS W4017 or the equivalent. Sections 1 & 2: Readings of advanced modern literary, historical, political, and journalistic texts, and class discussions about current issues and videos. Exercises in scanning, comprehension, and English translation. Section 3: Designed for advanced students interested in developing skills for reading and comprehending modern Japanese scholarship.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: JPNS W4017 :: Credit Sections
    JPNS
    4017
    27596
    001
    MWF 1:10p - 2:20p
    522A Kent Hall
    F. Nazikian 11 / 15 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    4017
    26032
    002
    MW 1:10p - 2:25p
    TBA
    F 1:10p - 2:25p
    313 Hamilton Hall
    S. Eguchi
    S. Sato
    9 / 15 [ More Info ]
  • JPNS W4019x or y. Kanbun. 3 pts.

    Prerequisite: JPNS W4007 or the equivalent. Introduction to the fundamentals of reading Chinese-style Japanese and related forms, using literary and historical texts. CC GS EN CE GSAS

    Korean

    Credit Courses

  • KORN W1001y-W1002. Elementary Korean A and B. 2.5 pts.

    This course provides basic training in listening, speaking, reading, and writing in Korean. Elementary Korean A (1001y) is equivalent to the first half of Elementary Korean I. Elementary Korean B (1002x) is equivalent to the second half of Elementary Korean I.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: KORN W1002 :: Credit Sections
    KORN
    1002
    52248
    001
    MW 2:40p - 3:45p
    522A Kent Hall
    W 1:10p - 4:00p
    522A Kent Hall
    H. Yi 10 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • KORN W1101x-W1102. Elementary Korean I and II. 5 pts. Students who are unsure which section to register for should see the Director of the Korean Language Program.

    An introduction to written and spoken Korean. Textbook: Integrated Korean, Beginning I and II. Note: Students who are unsure which section to register for should see the Director of the Korean Language Program.Lab Required.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: KORN W1101 :: Credit Sections
    KORN
    1101
    57297
    002
    MTuWTh 4:10p - 5:15p
    411 Kent Hall
    B. Lee 8 / 20 [ More Info ]
    KORN
    1101
    87197
    003
    MTuWTh 4:10p - 5:15p
    424 Kent Hall
    C. Schulz 11 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • KORN W1201x-W1202. Intermediate Korean I and II. 5 pts.

    Prerequisites: KORN W1102 or the equivalent. Consultation with the instructors is required before registration for section assignment..

    Further practice in reading, writing, listening comprehension, conversation, and grammar. Note: Consultation with instructors is required before registration for section assignement.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: KORN W1201 :: Credit Sections
    KORN
    1201
    82347
    001
    MTuWTh 2:40p - 3:45p
    511 Kent Hall
    Th 1:10p - 4:00p
    511 Kent Hall
    E. Won 6 / 18 [ More Info ]
    KORN
    1201
    86246
    002
    M 4:10p - 7:00p
    316 Hamilton Hall
    MTuWTh 4:15p - 5:20p
    316 Hamilton Hall
    H. Yi 14 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • KORN W4005x-W4006. Advanced Korean I and II. 5 pts.

    Prerequisites: KORN W1202 or the equivalent and consultation with instructor. (See Entrance to Language Courses Beyond the Elementary Level in the main bulletin under Department of Instruction -- East Asian Languages and Cultures.)

    Readings in modern Korean. Selections from modern Korean writings in literature, history, social sciences, culture, and videos and class discussions.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: KORN W4005 :: Credit Sections
    KORN
    4005
    91348
    001
    MTuWTh 10:35a - 11:40a
    522A Kent Hall
    M 9:00a - 12:00p
    522A Kent Hall
    C. Schulz 7 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • KORN W4105x-W4106. Fourth-Year Korean I and II. 4 pts.

    Prerequisites: KORN W4006 or the equivalent.

    Selections from advanced modern Korean writings in social sciences, literature, culture, history, journalistic texts, and intensive conversation exercises.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: KORN W4105 :: Credit Sections
    KORN
    4105
    93096
    001
    TuTh 10:35a - 11:50a
    403 Kent Hall
    Tu 9:00a - 12:00p
    403 Kent Hall
    F 10:35a - 11
    E. Won 3 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • KORN W4200x (Section 001). Modern Korean Literature. 3 pts.

    In this course, we will engage in a critical study of representative Korean literary texts of the twentieth century. Texts will be drawn from both the Japanese colonial period (1910-1945) and the post-liberation period (1945-present). We will supplement our reading of literary works with theoretical texts and recent scholarship on modern Korea. In our discussion of works written in the colonial period, we will consider the formation of �modern literature,� the emergence of rival literary camps, representations of gender, nationalism, assimilation, and resistance against Japanese rule.

    Topics central to the Korean postcolonial experience include national division, war, the emergence of women writers, rapid industrialization, and authoritarianism.

    Tibetan

    Credit Courses

  • TIBT G4600x-G4601. Elementary Modern Colloquial Tibetan, I and II. 3 pts.
    This course introduces students to conversational and basic written skills in modern Tibetan, Llasa dialect. Students are also introduced to modern Tibetan studies through selected readings and guest lectures.
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: TIBT G4600 :: Credit Sections
    TIBT
    4600
    98750
    001
    MTuWTh 6:10p - 7:00p
    TBA
    M 7:10p - 10:00p
    TBA
    F 10:00a - 10:50a
    TBA
    T. Norbu 5 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • TIBT G4603x-G4604. Intermediate Modern Colloquial Tibetan, I and II. 3 pts.
    Introduces students to conversational and basic written skills in modern Tibetan, Llasa dialect. Students are also introduced to modern Tibetan studies through selected readings and guest lectures.
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: TIBT G4603 :: Credit Sections
    TIBT
    4603
    79029
    001
    TuTh 10:30a - 12:00p
    907A International Affairs Bldg
    Tu 9:00a - 12:00p
    907A Internati
    T. Norbu 3 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • TIBT G4611x-G4612. Advanced Modern Colloquial Tibetan I and II. 3 pts.
    This course introduces students to conversational and basic written skills in modern Tibetan, Llasa dialect. Students will also be introduced to modern Tibetan studies through selected readings and guest lecturers.
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Fall 2009 :: TIBT G4611 :: Credit Sections
    TIBT
    4611
    83782
    001
    MW 10:30a - 12:00p
    907A International Affairs Bldg
    M 9:00a - 12:00p
    907A Internationa
    T. Norbu 3 / 18 [ More Info ]

    Vietnamese

    Credit Courses

  • VIET W1101x. Elementary Vietnamese I. 4 pts.
    The objective of this course is to help students acquire the basic grammar and writing system of modern Vietnamese and a core vocabulary through emphasis on integrated skills, including speaking, listening, writing, and reading comprehension.

    Spring 2010

    East Asian Languages and Cultures

    Credit Courses

  • EAAS W4510y (Section 001). Contention and Democracy in South Korea. 3 pts.

    An examination of the interaction between popular contention and formal politics, long characteristic of the dynamic, if unstable nature of South Korean political processes. By examining major paradigms and testing them against historical realities, students acquire a better understanding of the interplay between contention and democracy in general and South Korean politics in particular.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: EAAS W4510 :: Credit Sections
    EAAS
    4510
    07647
    001
    Th 4:10p - 6:00p
    TBA
    S. Kim 4 [ More Info ]

    East Asian Civilization and Humanities

    Credit Courses

  • ASCE V2002x or y. Introduction to Major Topics in Asian Civilizations: East Asia. 4 pts.

    An interdisciplinary and topical approach to the major issues and phases of East Asian civilizations and their role in the contemporary world.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: ASCE V2002 :: Credit Sections
    ASCE
    2002
    92851
    001
    W 11:10a - 12:25p
    TBA
    C. Schirokauer 18 / 25 [ More Info ]
    ASCE
    2002
    96747
    002
    TBA M. Gentzler 25 / 25 [ More Info ]
    ASCE
    2002
    98548
    003
    TBA A. Smith 5 / 25 [ More Info ]
  • ASCE V2363x or y. Introduction To East Asian Civilizations: Korea. 3 pts.

    The evolution of Korean society and culture, with special attention to Korean values as reflected in thought, literature, and the arts.

    Discussion Section Required.
  • AHUM V3400x and y. Colloquium on major texts: East Asia. 4 pts.

    V3399 and V3400 form a sequence but either may be taken separately. V3399 may also be taken as part of a sequence with Asian Humanities V3830. Readings in translation and discussion of texts of Middle Eastern, Indian, Chinese, and Japanese origin, including (V3399) the Quran, Islamic philosophy, Sufi poetry, the Upanishads, the Bhagavad Gita, Buddhist sutras, Indian epics and drama, Gandhi's Autobiography; (V3400) the Analects of Confucius, Mencius, Lao Tzu, Chuang Tzu, the Lotus Sutra, Dream of the Red Chamber, Tale of Genji, Zen literature, Noh plays, bunraku (puppet) plays, Chinese and Japanese poetry.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: AHUM V3400 :: Credit Sections
    AHUM
    3400
    65966
    001
    W 11:00a - 12:50p
    607 Hamilton Hall
    A. Pitkin 7 / 25 [ More Info ]
    AHUM
    3400
    00338
    002
    Tu 11:00a - 12:50p
    TBA
    D. Moerman 20 / 25 [ More Info ]
    AHUM
    3400
    68399
    003
    Tu 2:10p - 4:00p
    TBA
    T. Suzuki 24 / 25 [ More Info ]
    AHUM
    3400
    81250
    004
    M 2:10p - 4:00p
    309 Hamilton Hall
    W. De Bary 17 / 25 [ More Info ]
  • EAAS W4590y (Section 001). History and Aesthetics of Martial Arts Film. 3 pts.

    Corequisites: Must register for mandatory film screenings.

    This course examines the history and aesthetics of martial arts films by situating them in transnational contexts of production, circulation, and reception. Our course will run chronologically from 1920s to 2006, from the inception of Chinese martial arts films in the silent period to the Shaw Brothers swordsplay and Kung Fu movies in the 1960s and 70s, concurrent with American/Hong Kong action thrillers starring Bruce Lee, and culminating in contemporary transnational productions involving Hollywood and East Asia.

    East Asian History

    Credit Courses

  • HSEA W3881y. History of Modern China II -- China In the Twentieth Century. 3 pts.
    The social, political and cultural history of twentieth-century China with a focus on issues of nationalism, revolution, "modernity" and gender.
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: HSEA W3881 :: Credit Sections
    HSEA
    3881
    88596
    001
    TuTh 1:10p - 2:25p
    413 Kent Hall
    E. Lean 18 / 40 [ More Info ]
  • HSEA W3898y. The Mongols In History. 3 pts.

    Study of the role of the Mongols in Eurasian history, focusing on the era of the Great Mongol Empire. The roles of Chinggis and Khubilai Khan and the modern fate of the Mongols to be considered.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: HSEA W3898 :: Credit Sections
    HSEA
    3898
    27696
    001
    Tu 9:10a - 11:00a
    TBA
    M. Rossabi 59 / 60 [ More Info ]
  • HSEA W4890y. Historiography of East Asia. 3 pts.
    Major issues in the practice of history illustrated by a critical reading of the important historical work on East Asia.
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: HSEA W4890 :: Credit Sections
    HSEA
    4890
    86282
    001
    Th 9:00a - 10:50a
    901 International Affairs Bldg
    M. Zelin 10 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • HSEA W4893x or y. Family In Chinese History. 3 pts.

    Prerequisites: ASCE V2359.

    The history of the Chinese family, its changing forms and cultural expressions: marriage and divorce; parent and child; clan and lineage; ancestor worship; the role of women; the relation of family and state; Western parallels and contrasts.

    East Asian Literature, Film and Culture

    Credit Courses

  • EAAS W3338y. Cultural History of Japanese Monsters. 3 pts.

    From Godzilla to Pokemon (literally, "pocket monster") toys, Japanese monsters have become a staple commodity of late-capitalist global pop culture. This course seeks to place this phenomenon within a longer historical, as well as a broader cross-cultural, context. Through an examination of texts and images spanning over thirteen centuries of Japanese history, along with comparable productions from other cultures, students will gain an understanding not only of different conceptions and representations of monsters, ghosts, and other supernatural creatures in Japan, but also of the role of the "monstrous" in the cultural imagination more generally. The course draws on various media and genres of representation, ranging from written works, both literary and scholarly, to the visual arts, material culture, drama, and cinema. Readings average 100-150 pages per week. Several film and video screenings are scheduled in addition to the regular class meetings. Seating is limited, with final admission based on a written essay and other information to be submitted to the instructor before the beginning of the semester. Some preference is given to EALAC and History majors, as well as to those who have done previous coursework on Japan.

  • EAAS W3405x or y. Women In Japanese Literature: Gender, Genre, and Modernity. 3 pts.
    This course engages in close readings of major works of Japanese literature from the 18th-century to the present with particular attention to the issues of gender and genre in the formation of modern Japanese literature. The course considers figures such as female ghosts, wives and courtesans, youth and schoolgirls, the new woman and the modern girl, actors/actresses and cross-dressers. Readings highlight the role of literary genres, examining the ways in which the literary texts engage with changing socio-historical conditions, especially with regard to gender and social relations. Genres include puppet plays, ghost stories, melodrama, Bildungsroman, domestic fiction, autobiographical fiction, and the fantastic. Related critical issues are the novel and the formation of a national community; women�s writings; media and the development of urban mass culture; colonial and imperial spaces; history and memory. All readings are in English. Fulfills the major culture B requirement.
  • EAAS W4y. Critical Approaches to East Asia in the Social Sciences. 3 pts.
    Introduces students to social sciences research on East Asia by examining, first, the role of culture and the state in East Asian development and, second, the social and political consequences of economic development. Junior or senior standing in the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures preferred.
  • EAAS W4031x or y. Introduction to the History of Chinese Literature. 3 pts.

    An introduction to the major narrative genres, forms and works from the beginning through to 900 C.E. Readings in English.

  • EAAS W4031y. Introduction to the History of Chinese Literature (9th Century through the 19th Century) ENG. 3 pts.

    An introduction to the major narrative genres, forms and works from the 9th Century through the 19th Century. Readings in English.

  • CLEA W4101y. Literary and Cultural Theory East and West. 3 pts.

    Introduction to the major paradigms of contemporary literary and cultural theory and methods for understanding and analyzing East Asian literature and culture within comparative frameworks. The course covers wide-ranging topics including text and context, genre, writing and orality, narrative theory, media and visual culture, cultural translation, feminism, social and national identity, postmodernism, and postcolonial theory.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: CLEA W4101 :: Credit Sections
    CLEA
    4101
    22197
    001
    Th 2:10p - 4:00p
    411 Hamilton Hall
    L. Liu 15 / 23 [ More Info ]
  • This is an application only course. The first step to register for the course is to send an email to the instructor: pja@columbia.edu. Please mention your background and interest in the course.

    EAAS V4360y. Kurosawa Seminar. 3 pts.

    Limited enrollment. Close analysis of all the major work, especially the black and white films made between 1943 and 1965. Topics for discussion include Kurosawa's education and apprenticeship; the culture of wartime and postwar Japan; epic narration; modern tragedy.

  • EAAS W4545y. Culture and Art in Contemporary Tibet. 3 pts.

    In this course, we study films, poems, stories, paintings, pop songs and other forms of cultural product that have been made by Tibetans in the last 3 or 4 decades, together with some made by others in their name or in their areas. We discuss questions of identity, survival, history and the politics of representation. We�ll look at questions about cultures and continuity; about whether and how we as outsiders can come to understand or interpret the culture of a country whose language and history we may barely know; about the interplay of texts, politics, and power; and about ways of reading and interpreting artworks and the meanings that they generate in politically charged societies and communities.

  • EAAS G4618y. Biography, Memory and Modern Tibet: the Reading and Writing of Life Stories. 3 pts.

    A study of modern Tibet through its biographies, autobiographies, testimonies and life-stories. The course involves reading and analyzing texts by officials, intellectuals, lamas, and revolutionaries in translation, studying their influences, and carrying out interviews with Tibetans in the community. Major Cultures Requirement: East Asian Civilization List B only when paired with ASCE V2365 Introduction to East Asian Civilization: Tibet.

    East Asian Language Courses - Chinese

    Credit Courses

  • CHNS W1010y. Introductory Chinese I (N). 2.5 pts.

    The program is designed to develop basic skills in listening, speaking, reading and writing colloquial Chinese. This course (Part I) is offered in Spring only. Course II is offered in the fall. The two parts together cover the same materials as Chinese C1101/F1101 (Fall) and fulfill the requirement for admission to Chinese C1102/F1102 (Spring). Standard Chinese pronunciation, traditional characters. Enrollment limited to 18. Section subject to cancellation if under-enrolled. CC GS EN CE

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: CHNS W1010 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    1010
    83247
    001
    MW 9:10a - 10:15a
    405 Kent Hall
    Instructor To Be Announced 6 / 15 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1010
    86396
    002
    TuTh 9:10a - 10:15a
    405 Kent Hall
    Instructor To Be Announced 13 / 15 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1010
    88196
    003
    TuTh 12:00p - 1:05p
    315 Hamilton Hall
    Instructor To Be Announced 15 / 15 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1010
    91497
    004
    MW 12:00p - 1:05p
    522B Kent Hall
    Instructor To Be Announced 11 / 15 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS C1101x-C1102. Elementary Chinese I - II (N) (Level 1). 5 pts. Additional weekly oral session and lab to be arranged.
    Additional weekly oral session and lab to be arranged. The course is designed to develop basic skills in understanding, speaking, reading, and writing modern colloquial Chinese. Standard Chinese pronunciation, traditional characters. Students who already can speak Mandarin will not be accepted into this course. Enrollment limited to 18. Section subject to cancellation if under-enrolled. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: CHNS C1102 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    1102
    25532
    001
    MTuWTh 9:10a - 10:15a
    511 Kent Hall
    X. Tai 18 / 18 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1102
    64695
    002
    MTuWTh 10:35a - 11:40a
    423 Kent Hall
    Q. Tan 14 / 18 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1102
    26248
    003
    MTuWTh 12:00p - 1:05p
    222 Pupin Laboratories
    Instructor To Be Announced 6 / 18 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1102
    61246
    004
    MTuWTh 12:00p - 1:05p
    522A Kent Hall
    Instructor To Be Announced 8 / 18 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1102
    77148
    005
    MTuWTh 2:40p - 3:45p
    222 Pupin Laboratories
    L. Hu 18 / 18 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1102
    77896
    006
    MTuWTh 4:10p - 5:15p
    411 Hamilton Hall
    L. Yan 20 / 18 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1102
    81246
    007
    MTuWTh 5:40p - 6:45p
    405 Kent Hall
    X. Wang 13 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS F1101x-F1102. Elementary Chinese I-II (N) (Level 1). 5 pts. Additional weekly oral session and lab to be arranged.
    Additional weekly oral session and lab to be arranged. Instructors to be announced. Same course as C1101-C1102 (N). Students who can speak Mandarin will not be accepted into this course. Enrollment limited to 20. Section subject to cancellation if under-enrolled. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: CHNS F1102 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    1102
    76997
    001
    MTuWTh 6:10p - 7:15p
    224 Pupin Laboratories
    Instructor To Be Announced 4 / 20 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1102
    77496
    002
    MTuWTh 5:40p - 6:45p
    522A Kent Hall
    Instructor To Be Announced 1 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS C1111x-C1112. Elementary Chinese I and II (W) (Level 1). 5 pts.
    The course is specially designed for students of Chinese heritage and advanced beginners with good speaking skills. It aims to develop the student's basic skills to read and write modern colloquial Chinese. Pinyin system is introduced; standard Chinese pronunciation, and traditional characters. Classes will be conducted mostly in Chinese. Open to students with Mandarin speaking ability in Chinese only. Enrollment limited to 25. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: CHNS C1112 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    1112
    86246
    001
    MWF 1:10p - 2:35p
    411 Hamilton Hall
    H. Wang 18 / 18 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1112
    93247
    002
    TuThF 4:10p - 5:35p
    424 Kent Hall
    H. Wang 14 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS C1201x-C1202. Intermediate Chinese I and II (N) (Level 2). 5 pts. Additional weekly oral session and lab to be arranged.

    Prerequisites: Chinese C1101-1102 or F1101-1102, or the equivalent. See Admission to Language Courses.

    Designed to further the student's four skills acquired in the elementary course, this program aims to develop higher level of proficiency through comprehensive oral and written exercises. Cultural aspects in everyday situations are introduced. Traditional characters. Enrollment limited to 18. Section subject to cancellation if under-enrolled. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: CHNS C1202 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    1202
    93248
    001
    MTuWTh 10:35a - 11:40a
    405 Kent Hall
    S. Qi 4 / 18 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1202
    98346
    002
    MTuWTh 12:00p - 1:05p
    405 Kent Hall
    S. Qi 17 / 18 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1202
    62997
    003
    MTuWTh 2:40p - 3:45p
    405 Kent Hall
    Instructor To Be Announced 18 / 18 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    1202
    66747
    004
    MTuWTh 4:10p - 5:15p
    405 Kent Hall
    X. Wang 18 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS F1201x-F1202. Intermediate Chinese I-II (N) (Level 2). 5 pts. Additional weekly oral session and lab to be arranged.

    Prerequisites: Chinese C1101-1201 or F1101-1102, or the equivalent.�See Admission to Languages Courses.

    Same course as C1201-C1202. Enrollment limited to 18. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: CHNS F1202 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    1202
    80947
    001
    MTuWTh 6:10p - 7:15p
    424 Kent Hall
    X. Tai 9 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS C1221x-C1222. Intermediate Chinese I and II (W) (Level 2). 5 pts.

    Prerequisites: CHNS C1112 or F1112, or the equivalent. See Admission to Language Courses.

    Enrollment limited to 25. Continuation of CHNS C1112, with a focus on reading comprehension and written Chinese. Traditional characters. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: CHNS C1222 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    1222
    73096
    001
    M 1:10p - 2:25p
    308 Lewisohn Hall
    WF 1:10p - 2:25p
    522C Kent Hall
    C. Sobelman 7 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS W3301x-W3302. Introduction To Classical Chinese. 3 pts.

    Prerequisites: CHNS C1102, JPNS C1202, or KORN W1202, or the equivalent.

    Introduction to the classical Chinese written language. Emphasis on the fundamentals of grammar and style, as reflected in representative core texts from the classical tradition, with presentation of elementary materials on classical phonology and lexicology. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: CHNS W3302 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    3302
    93449
    001
    MWF 8:35a - 9:50a
    522C Kent Hall
    D. Branner 3 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS W4003x-W4004. Advanced Chinese I and II (N) (Level 3). 5 pts.
    Enrollment limited to 15. Prerequisite for W4003: CHNS C1202 or F1202, or the equivalent. Prerequisite for W4004: CHNS W4003 or the equivalent. See Admission to Language Courses. This course fulfills the language requirement for east Asian studies majors. Prepares for more advanced study of Chinese through rigorous vocabulary expansion, more sophisticated language usage patterns, and introduction to basics of formal and literary styles. Materials are designed to advance the student's fluency for everyday communicative tasks as well as reading skills. Simplified characters are introduced. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: CHNS W4004 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    4004
    27198
    001
    MTuWTh 9:10a - 10:15a
    423 Kent Hall
    Instructor To Be Announced 5 / 15 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    4004
    25533
    002
    MTuWTh 10:35a - 11:40a
    424 Kent Hall
    Instructor To Be Announced 6 / 15 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    4004
    63004
    003
    MTuWTh 12:00p - 1:05p
    424 Kent Hall
    Instructor To Be Announced 15 / 15 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    4004
    13009
    004
    MTuWTh 4:10p - 5:15p
    TBA
    Instructor To Be Announced 9 / 15 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    4004
    79781
    005
    MTuWTh 6:10p - 7:15p
    511 Kent Hall
    Q. Tan 10 / 15 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS W4005x-W4006. Advanced Chinese I and II (W) (Level 3). 5 pts.
    Enrollment limited to 25. Prerequisite for W4005: CHNS C1222 or F1222, or the equivalent. Prerequisite for W4006: CHNS W4005 or the equivalent. Admission after Chinese placement exam and an oral proficiency interview with the instructor. Especially designed for students who possess good speaking ability and who wish to acquire practical writing skills as well as business-related vocabulary and speech patterns. Introduction to semiformal and formal Chinese used in everyday writing and social or business-related occasions. Simplified characters are introduced.
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: CHNS W4006 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    4006
    25030
    001
    MWF 9:10a - 10:30a
    628 Kent Hall
    H. Wang 11 / 25 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS W4007x-W4008. Readings In Classical Chinese. 4 pts.
    Prerequisite for W4007: CHNS W3302 or the equivalent. Prerequisite for W4008: CHNS W4007 or the equivalent. Admission after placement exam. Focusing on Tang and Song prose and poetry, introduces a broad variety of genres through close readings of chosen texts as well as the specific methods, skills, and tools to approach them. Strong emphasis on the grammatical and stylistic analysis of representative works. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: CHNS W4008 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    4008
    12597
    001
    MW 11:00a - 12:15p
    TBA
    W. Swartz 6 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS W4012x. Business Chinese. 5 pts.

    Prerequisites: Two years Chinese study at college level.

    This course is designed for students who have studied Chinese for two years at college level and are interested in business studies concerning China. It offers systematic descriptions of Chinese language used in business discourse. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: CHNS W4012 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    4012
    63297
    001
    MTuWTh 10:00a - 10:50a
    522D Kent Hall
    Z. Shi 18 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS G4015x-G4016. Readings In Modern Chinese I and II (N) (Level 4). 4 pts.
    Prerequisite for G4015: CHNS W4004 or the equivalent. Prequisite for G4016: CHNS G4015 or the equivalent. Implements a wide range of reading materials to enhance the student�s speaking and writing as well as reading skills. Supplemented by television broadcast news, also provides students with strategies to increase their comprehension of formal style of modern Chinese. CC GS EN CE
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: CHNS G4016 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    4016
    63464
    001
    MTuWTh 10:00a - 10:50a
    TBA
    Y. Meng 7 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    4016
    63288
    002
    MWTh 5:40p - 6:55p
    406 Hamilton Hall
    L. Yan 10 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS W4017x-W4018. Readings In Modern Chinese I and II (W) (Level 4). 4 pts.

    Prerequisites: Prerequisite for W4017: CHNS W4006 or the equivalent.
    Prerequisite for W4018: CHNS W4017 or the equivalent.

    This is a non-consecutive reading course designed for those whose proficiency is above 4th level. See Admission to Language Courses.

    Selections from contemporary Chinese authors in both traditional and simplified characters with attention to expository, journalistic, and literary styles.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: CHNS W4018 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    4018
    16047
    001
    M 11:00a - 12:35p
    308 Lewisohn Hall
    W 11:00a - 12:35p
    522C Kent Hall
    C. Sobelman 1 / 18 [ More Info ]
    CHNS
    4018
    16997
    002
    M 2:40p - 3:55p
    308 Lewisohn Hall
    W 2:40p - 3:55p
    522C Kent Hall
    C. Sobelman 0 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS W4019x or y. History of Chinese Language. 3 pts.
    Introduces the evolution of Chinese language. It reveals the major changes in Chinese sound, writing and grammar systems, and social and linguistic factors which caused these changes. CC GS EN CE GSAS
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: CHNS W4019 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    4019
    20847
    001
    TuTh 9:10a - 10:25a
    TBA
    Instructor To Be Announced 2 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS G5017x-G5018. Colloquium In Advanced Modern Chinese Readings I-II (Level 5). 3 pts.

    Prerequisites: Chinese W4005-4006,W4015-4016,W4017-4018, or the equivalent.

    This course aims to advance the student's linguistic competence through intesive and extensive readings of various genres including literate and news reports. Discussions focus on cultural as well as linguistic features. Assignments: oral presentations and written reprots based on readings. GF
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: CHNS G5018 :: Credit Sections
    CHNS
    5018
    60947
    001
    TuTh 9:10a - 10:25a
    522A Kent Hall
    L. Liu 2 / 18 [ More Info ]
  • CHNS G6010x or y. History - Literature & Culture 1550-1850. 3 pts.
    This course offers a critical survey of late Ming to mid-Qing literature and culture. The topics include: dramas, vernacular stories and novels, late-Ming print culture, book illustrations, daily-life encyclopedias, literary miscellanies, morality books, ledgers of merit and demerit, etc. Although most of the readings are in English, this class will involve some Chinese texts.
  • CHNS G6420y (Section 001). Chinese Historical Linguistics. 3 pts.

    Prerequisites: Undergraduate students may petition for admittance by emailing instructor.

    Introduction to the original standard language of China, before the development of Mandarin. This is the 6th century system for pronouncing characters, known to every literate Chinese person from then until the mid-20th century. Applications include poetic rhyming and prosody, traditional dictionaries, dialect relationships, intellectual history of language study, and the structure of the writing system. This course is taught in English and emphasizes practical facility rather than theory.

    Japanese

    Credit Courses

  • JPNS W1001y-W1002. Elementary Japanese A and B. 2.5 pts.

    Prerequisite for W1002: C+ or above in JPNS W1001 or pass the placement test. The sequence begins in the spring term. JPNS W1001-W1002 is equivalent to JPNS C1101 or F1101 and fulfills the requirement for admission to JPNS C1102 or F1102. Aims at the acquisition of basic Japanese grammar and Japanese culture with an emphasis on accurate communication in speaking and writing. CC GS EN CE GSAS

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: JPNS W1001 :: Credit Sections
    JPNS
    1001
    92398
    001
    MW 11:00a - 12:05p
    411 Kent Hall
    Y. Watanabe 7 / 20 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    1001
    92997
    002
    TuTh 11:00a - 12:05p
    411 Kent Hall
    Y. Watanabe 12 / 20 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    1001
    86281
    004
    TuTh 5:40p - 6:45p
    522D Kent Hall
    H. Hamada 16 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • JPNS C1101x-C1102. First-Year Japanese. 5 pts.

    Prerequisite for C1102: JPNS C1101, F1101, or W1001-W1002, or the equivalent. Basic training in Japanese through speaking, listening, reading and writing in various cultural contexts.Lab Required.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: JPNS C1102 :: Credit Sections
    JPNS
    1102
    73598
    001
    MTuWTh 10:35a - 11:40a
    411 Hamilton Hall
    F. Nazikian 11 / 20 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    1102
    77448
    002
    MTuWTh 1:10p - 2:15p
    412 Pupin Laboratories
    M. Nittono 15 / 20 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    1102
    81147
    003
    MTuWTh 2:40p - 3:45p
    412 Pupin Laboratories
    H. Hamada 20 / 20 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    1102
    82897
    004
    MTuWTh 4:10p - 5:15p
    423 Kent Hall
    S. Sato 20 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: JPNS F1102 :: Credit Sections
    JPNS
    1102
    87296
    001
    MTuWTh 5:40p - 6:45p
    423 Kent Hall
    S. Sato 11 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • JPNS C1201x-C1202. Second-Year Japanese. 5 pts.

    Prerequisite for C1201: JPNS C1102 or the equivalent. Prerequisite for C1202: JPNS C1201 or the equivalent. Further practice in the four language skills. Participation in a once a week conversation class is required.Lab Required.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: JPNS C1202 :: Credit Sections
    JPNS
    1202
    87597
    001
    MTuWTh 10:35a - 11:40a
    511 Kent Hall
    S. Eguchi 6 / 15 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    1202
    91846
    002
    MTuWTh 12:00p - 1:05p
    511 Kent Hall
    S. Eguchi 8 / 15 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    1202
    93699
    003
    MTuWTh 1:10p - 2:15p
    313 Pupin Laboratories
    J. Park 7 / 15 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    1202
    85797
    004
    MTuWTh 4:10p - 5:15p
    522A Kent Hall
    K. Okamoto 10 / 15 [ More Info ]
  • JPNS W4005x-W4006. Third-Year Japanese. 5 pts.

    Prerequisite for W4005: JPNS C1202 or the equivalent. Prerequisite for W4006: JPNS W4005 or the equivalent. Readings in authentic/semi-authentic texts, videos, and class discussions.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: JPNS W4006 :: Credit Sections
    JPNS
    4006
    65847
    001
    MTuWTh 1:10p - 2:15p
    405 Kent Hall
    K. Okamoto 10 / 15 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    4006
    80029
    002
    MTuWTh 4:10p - 5:15p
    522D Kent Hall
    J. Park 7 / 15 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    4006
    83449
    003
    MTuWTh 12:00p - 1:05p
    423 Kent Hall
    S. Sato 1 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • JPNS W4017x-W4018. Fourth-Year Japanese. 4 pts.

    Prerequisite for W4017: JPNS W4006 or the equivalent. Prerequisite for W4018: JPNS W4017 or the equivalent. Sections 1 & 2: Readings of advanced modern literary, historical, political, and journalistic texts, and class discussions about current issues and videos. Exercises in scanning, comprehension, and English translation. Section 3: Designed for advanced students interested in developing skills for reading and comprehending modern Japanese scholarship.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: JPNS W4018 :: Credit Sections
    JPNS
    4018
    73441
    001
    MWF 1:10p - 2:20p
    423 Kent Hall
    F. Nazikian 5 / 15 [ More Info ]
    JPNS
    4018
    15944
    002
    MWF 1:10p - 2:20p
    411 Kent Hall
    S. Eguchi 3 / 15 [ More Info ]
  • JPNS W4019x or y. Kanbun. 3 pts.

    Prerequisite: JPNS W4007 or the equivalent. Introduction to the fundamentals of reading Chinese-style Japanese and related forms, using literary and historical texts. CC GS EN CE GSAS

    Korean

    Credit Courses

  • KORN W1001y-W1002. Elementary Korean A and B. 2.5 pts.

    This course provides basic training in listening, speaking, reading, and writing in Korean. Elementary Korean A (1001y) is equivalent to the first half of Elementary Korean I. Elementary Korean B (1002x) is equivalent to the second half of Elementary Korean I.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: KORN W1001 :: Credit Sections
    KORN
    1001
    17746
    001
    MW 2:40p - 3:45p
    423 Kent Hall
    Instructor To Be Announced 12 / 20 [ More Info ]
    KORN
    1001
    18546
    002
    TuTh 2:40p - 3:45p
    522D Kent Hall
    Instructor To Be Announced 10 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • KORN W1101x-W1102. Elementary Korean I and II. 5 pts. Students who are unsure which section to register for should see the Director of the Korean Language Program.

    An introduction to written and spoken Korean. Textbook: Integrated Korean, Beginning I and II. Note: Students who are unsure which section to register for should see the Director of the Korean Language Program.Lab Required.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: KORN W1102 :: Credit Sections
    KORN
    1102
    21647
    001
    MTuWTh 4:10p - 5:35p
    522B Kent Hall
    C. Schulz 13 / 20 [ More Info ]
    KORN
    1102
    25846
    002
    MTuWTh 4:10p - 5:35p
    TBA
    Instructor To Be Announced 6 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • KORN W1201x-W1202. Intermediate Korean I and II. 5 pts.

    Prerequisites: KORN W1102 or the equivalent. Consultation with the instructors is required before registration for section assignment..

    Further practice in reading, writing, listening comprehension, conversation, and grammar. Note: Consultation with instructors is required before registration for section assignement.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: KORN W1202 :: Credit Sections
    KORN
    1202
    28546
    001
    MTuWTh 2:40p - 3:45p
    313 Pupin Laboratories
    Instructor To Be Announced 2 / 20 [ More Info ]
    KORN
    1202
    73320
    002
    MTuWTh 4:10p - 5:15p
    411 Kent Hall
    H. Yi 12 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • KORN W4005x-W4006. Advanced Korean I and II. 5 pts.

    Prerequisites: KORN W1202 or the equivalent and consultation with instructor. (See Entrance to Language Courses Beyond the Elementary Level in the main bulletin under Department of Instruction -- East Asian Languages and Cultures.)

    Readings in modern Korean. Selections from modern Korean writings in literature, history, social sciences, culture, and videos and class discussions.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: KORN W4006 :: Credit Sections
    KORN
    4006
    79782
    001
    MTuWTh 10:35a - 11:40a
    522B Kent Hall
    C. Schulz 1 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • KORN W4105x-W4106. Fourth-Year Korean I and II. 4 pts.

    Prerequisites: KORN W4006 or the equivalent.

    Selections from advanced modern Korean writings in social sciences, literature, culture, history, journalistic texts, and intensive conversation exercises.

    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: KORN W4106 :: Credit Sections
    KORN
    4106
    72192
    001
    TuThF 10:35a - 11:50a
    522A Kent Hall
    Instructor To Be Announced 2 / 20 [ More Info ]

    Tibetan

    Credit Courses

  • Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: TIBT W4411 :: Credit Sections
    TIBT
    4411
    92069
    001
    TBA L. Jamspal 2 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: TIBT W4413 :: Credit Sections
    TIBT
    4413
    27195
    001
    TBA L. Jamspal 0 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: TIBT W4416 :: Credit Sections
    TIBT
    4416
    81761
    001
    TBA L. Jamspal 0 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • TIBT G4600x-G4601. Elementary Modern Colloquial Tibetan, I and II. 3 pts.
    This course introduces students to conversational and basic written skills in modern Tibetan, Llasa dialect. Students are also introduced to modern Tibetan studies through selected readings and guest lectures.
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: TIBT G4601 :: Credit Sections
    TIBT
    4601
    11279
    001
    MTuWTh 4:30p - 5:30p
    TBA
    F 10:00a - 11:00a
    TBA
    T. Norbu 0 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • TIBT G4603x-G4604. Intermediate Modern Colloquial Tibetan, I and II. 3 pts.
    Introduces students to conversational and basic written skills in modern Tibetan, Llasa dialect. Students are also introduced to modern Tibetan studies through selected readings and guest lectures.
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: TIBT G4604 :: Credit Sections
    TIBT
    4604
    25779
    001
    TuTh 10:30a - 12:00p
    TBA
    T. Norbu 0 / 20 [ More Info ]
  • TIBT G4611x-G4612. Advanced Modern Colloquial Tibetan I and II. 3 pts.
    This course introduces students to conversational and basic written skills in modern Tibetan, Llasa dialect. Students will also be introduced to modern Tibetan studies through selected readings and guest lecturers.
    Course
    Number
    Call Number/
    Section
    Days & Times/
    Location
    Instructor Enrollment
    Spring 2010 :: TIBT G4612 :: Credit Sections
    TIBT
    4612
    29030
    001
    MW 10:30a - 12:00p
    TBA
    T. Norbu 0 / 20 [ More Info ]