ASIA 211 / HART 211/ HIST 206 INTRODUCTION TO ASIAN CIVILIZATIONS. Fall 2015 Tuesdays and Thursdays, 2:30-3:50 p.m. Humanities Building, Room 117

Similar documents
History 1618: Introduction to Chines History to 1644

Spring Quarter, Time: Tu Th, 5:00 6:20 Place: Warren Lecture Hall 2205 Professor: Suzanne Cahill Office: HSS 3040

Class time will use lectures, video and internet resources to explore various aspects of Chinese history.

PHIL 035: Asian Philosophy

Required Textbooks: (available at UCSB bookstore or online stores, and on reserve)

History of East Asia II

EAST ASIA: THE GREAT TRADITION EARLY HISTORY, SOCIETY, AND CULTURES OF CHINA, KOREA, AND JAPAN

Bentley Chapter 14 Study Guide: The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia

THE SUI AND TANG DYNASTY

Two Golden Ages of China The Mongol and Ming Empires Korea and Its Traditions The Emergence of Japan Japan s Feudal Age

The Sui, Tang, and Song dynasties restored peace to China in between periods of chaos, civil war, and disorder.

2. This dynasty reunified China in 589 C.E. after centuries of political fragmentation. a. a) Tang b. b) Song c. d) Sui d. c) Han

Post-Classical East Asia 500 CE-1300 CE

Indias First Empires. Terms and Names

Upon successful completion of ART 3A, students will:

APWH chapter 12.notebook October 31, 2012

World History Unit 3 Contd. Post Classical Asia and Beyond

CHAPTER TWELVE Reunification and Renaissance in Chinese Civilization: The Era of the Tang and Song Dynasties

East Asia. China, Korea, Vietnam and Japan

Syllabus History of South Asia 1 Course number 21:510:280 Fall 2016, Rutgers University-Newark Tuesday/Thursday 10:00 am 11:20 am, ENG-209

Key Concept 2.1. Define DIASPORIC COMMUNITY.

Chapter 5 Reading Guide The Classical Period: Directions, Diversities, and Declines by 500 C.E.

SY 2017/ nd Final Term Revision. Student s Name: Grade: 11 B & C. Subject: SOCIAL STUDIES. Teacher Signature

8. Which of the following statements best describes the relationship between China and the northern nomads in the period ?

PACKET C. New Religions Emerge and Spread. 6 Topic Workshop #16. Module

Brief overview of Postclassical China: Sui/Tang/Song Dynasties Postclassical China Adventures

Part 1: Use each map to answer the multiple choice questions ( / 16) Map A:

The Hemet Unified School District HISTORY/SOCIAL SCIENCE Content Standards In the Classroom

APWH chapter 10.notebook October 10, 2013

World Civilizations The Global Experience, AP* Edition, 6 th Edition 2011

Name: Period 3: 500 C.E C.E. Chapter 15: India and the Indian Ocean Basin Chapter 16: The Two Worlds of Christendom

Name: Period 3: 500 C.E C.E. Chapter 13: The Resurgence of Empire in East Asia Chapter 14: The Expansive Realm of Islam

CHAPTER FIVE The Classical Period: Directions, Diversities and Declines by 500 C.E.

Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism: Intellectual History of China Fall 2014 [Class location & meeting time]

REL 011: Religions of the World

The Mongols. Background and effects

AP World History Mid-Term Exam

CONFUCIANISM, DAOISM, BUDDHISM: INTELLECTUAL HISTORY OF CHINA

History 145 History of World Religions Fall 2012

Chapter 14 Section 1-3 China Reunifies & Tang and Song Achievements

Chapter 9 Learning Guide China and the World: East Asian Connections

China. Chapter 7 Test. Student Signature

HIST 270 China in the World Section 001, Winter 2011

RSOC 10: Asian Religious Traditions Fall 2016 TTh 8:30 AM- 10:10 AM

Confucianism Daoism Buddhism. Eighth to third century B. C.E.

Learn strategies for approaching and making sense of primary historical sources. Learning to understand and evaluate scholarly arguments.

New Visions Global History Curriculum 9th Grade Pacing Calendar Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1 2 3

REGIONAL AND TRANSREGIONAL INTERACTIONS C

The spread of Buddhism In Central Asia

Mongol Eurasia and its Aftermath, Chapter 12

WORLD HISTORY S1 FINAL EXAM REVIEW GUIDE

India s First Empires

National Consortium for Teaching about Asia Seminar on Teaching about Asia. July 16-21, 2007 Indiana University

Outline of Chinese Culture (UGEA2100F)

HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE ESSAY

Traditional Chinese Philosophy PHIL 191

Name: Date: Pd: World History Fall Semester Final Review

Alabama Course of Study Social Studies

Bentley Chapter 17 Study Guide: Nomadic Empires and Eurasian Integration

Period IV: Interregional Patterns of Culture and Contact. New Empires following the Mongols. How regions did the Mongol s connect via trade?

China s Middle Ages ( AD) Three Kingdoms period. Buddhism gained adherents. Barbarism and religion accompanied breakup

Chao Center for Asian Studies

C H

Between Han and Tang: The emergence of Chinese Buddhism and Religious Daoism. October 1, 2013

United Kingdom. South Africa. Australia Brazil. Vikings. Mexico. Canada India. Greece Rome. Russia. China. Japan. Grade 6

History 50: World Civilizations to 1600 Spring 2015; Monday / Wednesday 1:30-2:45; Mendocino Hall 1005

Asian Religions and Islam

History 145 History of World Religions Fall 2015

Unit 4: Ancient River Valley Civilizations - China

NCTA Seminar on East Asia. Terry Owens. Implementation Plan. Lesson Plan #1: Buddhism and Hinduism. Course: Appropriate for 10 th grade World History

3. Indus Valley Civilization: Origin, date, extent, characteristics, decline, survival and significance, art and architecture.

Cyrus, Cambyses Darius and his admin. Persepolis Achaemenid Empire Satrap/Satrapy. Xerxes Persian Wars Seleucid Empire Parthian Empire Sasanid Empire

Introduction to Islam in South Asia

REL 230 South Asian Religions

Chapter 3 Reading Guide Classical Civilization: INDIA

REL 2320: NONWESTERN RELIGIONS Fall Semester 2014

Where in the world? When did it happen? Imperial China Lesson 1 China Reunites ESSENTIAL QUESTION. Terms to Know GUIDING QUESTIONS

Nomads of the Asian Steppe

Dynastic Rule of China. 7 th Chapter 7

RELS : INTRODUCTION TO WORLD RELIGIONS MWF 1-1:50, ECTR 103

India s First Empires

AP World History SCORING GUIDELINES

Honors Global Studies I Syllabus Academic Magnet High School

AP World History. Sample Student Responses and Scoring Commentary. Inside: Document-Based Question. Scoring Guideline.

CURRICULUM VITAE KWANGMIN KIM

HIST 270 China in the World Winter

Muslim Empires Chapter 19

Unit III: Regional and Trans-Regional Interactions c. 600 C.E. to c. 1450

Review #9. Reading. A. Caste as Varna: (Bonus if you can remember the Hindu names) B. What are the features of JATI?

Ancient Chinese Dynasty Presentations

WHI.04: India, China, and Persia

Welcome 10/8/2012 RELS RELIGIONS OF CHINA HEAVEN IN CONFUCIANISM DR. JOSEPH A. ADLER CHINESE COSMOLOGY CONFUCIANISM

Cultures of Persia, India, and china. WH I 4a-e

12. Chinese references to western barbarians in the Tang dynasty included which group of people? a. Portuguese b. Indians c. Vietnamese d.

Chapter Introduction Section 1: China Reunified Section 2: The Mongols and China Section 3: Early Japan and Korea Section 4: India After the Guptas

UNIT TWO In this unit we will analyze Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Indian, and Chinese culture.

PHL 170: The Idea of God Credits: 4 Instructor: David Scott Arnold, Ph.D.

MMW 13 Lecture 7, April 23

TEXTBOOKS: o Vernon O. Egger, A History of the Muslim World to 1405: The Making of a Civilization, (Required)

Reunification and Renaissance in Chinese Civilization: The Era of the Tang and Song Dynasties

Transcription:

1 ASIA 211 / HART 211/ HIST 206 INTRODUCTION TO ASIAN CIVILIZATIONS Fall 2015 Tuesdays and Thursdays, 2:30-3:50 p.m. Humanities Building, Room 117 Instructors Professor Lisa Balabanlilar Office: Humanities 309; office phone number: 713-348-8085; e-mail address: balabanlilar@rice.edu; office hours: most days by appointment Professor Susan Huang Herring 110; office phone number: 713-348-4240; e-mail address: sh6@rice.edu; office hours: Tuesdays 2:30-3:30 and by appointment Professor Richard J. Smith Office: Humanities 322; office phone number: 713-348-2552; e-mail address: smithrj@rice.edu; office hours: TuTh 8:30-9:15 a.m., 11:00-11:30 a.m., 1:30-2:15 p.m. and 4:00-4:45 p.m. and by appointment. Course Description: Asia Beyond Borders Any Introduction to Asian Civilizations is just that: an introduction. In a mere fourteen weeks, there can be no attempt at comprehensive coverage whether geographical, chronological, or topical. This semester we shall focus on three major themes: (1) foundational religious and philosophical traditions in Asia (notably Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, and Daoism), (2) art and literature; and (3) interactions that have connected and continue to connect people in Asia to each other and to the rest of the world. In particular, we will examine how people in different parts of Asia South, Central and East Asia in particular have responded to the above-mentioned belief systems and to others, including Islam and Christianity, adopting, altering, and at times rejecting them in pursuit of their own political, social, economic, or religious goals. Such dynamics of inter-regional interaction have occurred on a global scale as well. A significant part of this course, then, will be concerned with the processes sometimes peaceful and sometimes not by which ideas, people, products, practices, and skills have circulated within and across local, regional and national boundaries. We will also give attention to cross-cultural comparisons in an effort to show similarities and differences as they are manifested in our lecture topics and in your readings. You should always be attuned to such comparisons and their significance, even when they are not explicitly emphasized.

2 The course is thus designed to achieve four main goals: (1) to provide not only a basic familiarity with some of the major cultural traditions of Asia (with an emphasis on India, Central Asia, China and Japan) but also a sense of the complex relationships existing between these cultures; (2) to explore some of the ways in which these traditions have changed in different parts of Asia, including why they evolved in these ways, and why these changes have been significant; (3) to examine some particularly important examples of the causes and consequences of pre-modern empire-building in Asia; and (4) to introduce some analytical tools for use in comparing and contrasting cultures and for evaluating the complexity and historical significance of cultural interactions across space and time. A particular emphasis in this course will be on visual and material culture including arts, crafts and other artifacts. We will examine ways of reading various objects, from paintings and statues to architectural structures and gardens, and we will consider their relationship to other sources of historical information such as written texts. Students will be encouraged to think carefully and critically not only about the products of so-called high (elite) culture but also about items produced by and for commoners. Tools and other utensils, for example, tell us much about daily life and social relations, as do domestic structures, graves, walls and irrigation systems. Remember that science, technology, math and medicine are also parts of culture. Course Requirements (1) One take-home midterm exam (due in class on October 8): c. 6-9 pages typed and double-spaced [35% of the course grade] (2) One take-home final exam (due in the History Department by noon on the day of our scheduled final exam): c. 9-12 pages, typed and double-spaced [45% of the course grade] (3) Six short response papers (due in class at various points in the semester, as indicated in the syllabus): each paper will be 1-page single-spaced [20% of the course grade] Details on exams: The first take-home exam (due in class on October 8) will cover the reading and lecture material for the period through October 6, 2015. The second (final) take-home exam (due in the History Department by noon on the day of our scheduled final exam) will cover the reading and lecture material for the period from October 15, 2015 through the end of the semester. Both of these take-home exams will be comprised of three (3) separate essay questions, one question from each of us. Each of the three essays for the first exam must be no less than two pages and no more than three pages in length, typed and double-spaced in 12-point font. For the final exam, each of the three essays must be no less than three pages and no more than four pages in length, typed and double-spaced in 12-point font. Late exams will not be accepted without a documented medical excuse and the approval of all three instructors. Details on response papers : Over the course of the semester you will be assigned a

3 total of six (6) one-page papers two from each of us. These papers must be typed with a standard 12-point font and single-spaced. The due-dates are indicated in your syllabus. You can find these assignments in your Owlspace folder titled One-page response papers (under Resources ). Each paper will be due at the beginning of class and must be delivered in person at that time no exceptions without a documented medical excuse. These response papers will not be graded, but if they demonstrate a genuine engagement with the material and if they also reveal careful and critical thought, they will be given a positive mark (a check: ). If all six assignments are turned in on time and if they all meet the above-mentioned criteria, you will receive an A for 20% of the course. If a paper is missing, late, not turned in by you personally or otherwise unsatisfactory, you will receive a B for the 20%. Anything less and you will receive an F for the 20%. NOTE: Your response paper assignments will focus primarily on written texts but at least two will focus on visual materials. Plagiarism on ANY assignment will be grounds for a failing grade in the course and report to Rice University Honor's Council. For specific definitions and examples of plagiarism, see: http://ori.hhs.gov/avoiding-plagiarism-self-plagiarism-and-other-questionable-writingpractices-guide-ethical-writing Summary of grading: Due dates Grade percentage First take-home exam 10/8 (due in class) 35% Second take-home exam due in the History Department 45% office no later than 4:00 p.m. on December 11 6 one-page response papers see syllabus for individual due dates 20% Class attendance and participation may also be taken into account in the final grade, especially in borderline cases. Required Texts (available in the campus bookstore) (1) Patricia Buckley Ebrey, Anne Walthall and James Palais, East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and Political History (second edition; paperback) hereafter cited as Ebrey et al. Note: Students should read this entire book, not simply the sections designated as required reading for certain lectures. Why? Because this text will be an invaluable resource for anyone who chooses to focus on either East Asian crosscultural comparisons or transnational circulations of people, ideas, products, etc.

4 in East Asia for the final paper. It is also a wonderful source of images from China, Japan and Korea. (2) Vidya Dehejia, Indian Art, Phaidon press, Ltd., 1997 hereafter cited as Dehejia (3) All other required and recommended readings will be posted on our Owlspace under the category Resources and/or placed on Reserve in the Fondren Library. IT IS ESSENTIAL THAT YOU DO THE READING THAT WE HAVE LISTED FOR EACH CLASS SESSION BEFORE THE ACTUAL SESSION. We have not assigned much reading for most of our sessions, so we assume that you will have a solid command of the material at all times. Additional Note We STRONGLY suggest that you bring to class EVERY DAY a copy of the document titled Asia: A Comparative Chronology. It is available on our Owlspace under Resources, General Materials (Chronologies, Outlines, Etc.). This outline will enable you to locate the period we are discussing without the need for us to bombard you with dates. Statement on Disabilities Students with a documented disability and in need of academic or other adjustments should speak with one of us during the first two weeks of class. All discussions will remain confidential. Students with disabilities should also contact the office of Disabled Student Services (phone: 737-5841; e-mail: adarice@rice.edu) in the Allen Center. CLASS SESSIONS I. INTRODUCTION Tuesday, August 25: Perspectives on Asia [Balabanlilar, Huang and Smith] Themes: Organization of the course; ways of representing and understanding Asia Required reading: On our Owlspace under Resources, East Asian History (Smith), Articles and Excerpts : (1) Engaging Asia and (2) East Asian languages

5 II. ORIGINS Thursday, August 27: The Origins of East Asian Civilizations, c. 600 to 221 B.C.E. [Smith] Themes: The invention and spread of writing; the emergence of philosophy Required reading: Ebrey, et al., Connections, 2-7 and Philosophers and Warring States, 20-34. On our Owlspace under Resources, East Asian History (Smith), Primary Documents : (1) Early Confucianism, (2) Early Daoism and (3) Mohism and Legalism and (4) Nature of Man debate (key figures for this session: Confucius, Mencius, Xunzi, Laozi, Mozi, Han Feizi) Tuesday, September 1: The Origins of Empire in East Asia, 221 B.C.E. to 907 C.E. [Smith] Themes: The Qin dynasty (221-206 B.C.E.), the Han dynasty (206 B.C.E.-220 C.E.), the Six Dynasties Period (220-589) and the Sui (589-618) and Tang (618-907) dynasties; the Tang cultural model in East Asia Required reading: Ebrey, et al., (1) Founding of the Bureaucratic Empire: Qin- Han China (256 B.C.E.-200 C.E.), 35-54; (2) The Cosmopolitan Empires of Sui and Tang China (581-960), 74-91. On our Owlspace under Resources, East Asian History (Smith), Primary Documents, First emperor's inscriptions (219-218 BCE) RESPONSE PAPER DUE TODAY (Topic to be posted) Thursday, September 3: The Origins of South Asian Civilization [Balabanlilar] Themes: Character of Vedic thought and the early texts; development of a proto- Hinduism Required reading: Dehejia, Indian Art, Chapter 1, Experiencing Art (pp. 11-22); Chapter 2, Brick, Seals and Stones (pp. 25-32). Tuesday, September 8: The Early Evolution of South Asian Philosophy; Buddhism and the Brahmanical response [Balabanlilar] Themes: Evolution of divergent forms of Buddhism: Theravada and Mahayana; political alliances and patronage Required reading: Dehejia: Chapter 3, Stories in Stone (pp. 51-76); Chapter 4, After Alexander (pp. 79-100); Chapter 5, Into the Mountainside, (pp. 103-

6 134); On our Owlspace under Resources, Resources, South and Central Asia (Balabanlilar) : Ashoka Edicts RESPONSE PAPER DUE TODAY (topic to be posted) III. CONDUITS AND CONNECTIONS IN EAST ASIA AND BEYOND Thursday, September 10: Art and Culture Along the Silk Road: From Central Asia to China and Japan [Huang] Themes: Central Asia, Silk Road, Tang Dynasty capital at Chang an; Shōso-in; international trade and commodities Required reading: On our Owlspace under Resources, East Asian Art and Material Culture (Huang) : Valerie Hansen, The Hejia Village Hoard: A Snapshot of China s Silk Road Trade. Also, Ebrey et al., 51-59, 63-70, 78-85, 94-97 (esp. Material Culture: Silk from the Silk Road, 52; Connections: Cultural Contact Across Eurasia, 94-97; Map C3.1, Map of Asian Trade and Communication Routes in the Sixth-Tenth Centuries, 95) Tuesday, September 15: Buddhist Art in China, Japan, and Korea [Huang] Themes: Mahayana Buddhism; sinicization of Buddhist art Required reading: Ebrey et al., (1) The Dunhuang Documents, 90-91; (2) Material Culture: Cave 285 at Dunhuang, 71; (3) Material Culture: Sokkuram Buddhist Temple, 111. RESPONSE PAPER DUE TODAY (topic to be posted) Thursday, September 17: Varieties of Confucianism, c. 900-1200 C.E. [Smith] Themes: The Buddhist metaphysical challenge to Confucianism and the Confucian philosophical response (key figures: Zhu Xi, Lu Xiangshan, Wang Yangming) Required reading: Ebrey, et al., The Revival of Confucianism and the Learning of the Way, 139-144; On our Owlspace under Resources, East Asian History (Smith), Primary Documents : (1) Neo-Confucianism RESPONSE PAPER DUE TODAY (topic to be posted) Tuesday, September 22: The Religious Face of Confucianism: From 1200 Onward [Smith]

7 Themes: Institutional manifestations of Confucianism in China, Japan, Korea and Vietnam: similarities and differences Required reading: Ebrey et al., (1) [on the Chinese examination system]: 77, 81-82, 90, 108-09, 133-136, 201, 229-32; (2) [on the Korean examination system]: 168, 174-75, 243-44, 366. IV. CONTENDING EMPIRES IN SOUTH, CENTRAL AND EAST ASIA Thursday, September 24: Imperial India: Mauryan (322-185 BCE), Gupta (320-550 CE), Chola Empires (at peak, 1010-1200) [Balabanlilar] Themes: Urbanization of South Asia, spread of Buddhism and Hinduism/ religion and rulership/ The states of southern India and the rise of devotional Hinduism (ex: the Kingdom of Vijayanagar, 1336-1646) Required reading: Dehejia, Chapter 6, Seeing the Divine (pp. 137-152); Chapter 7, Sacred and Profane : the Nagara Temple (pp.155-182). See also Owlspace [look under Resources, South and Central Asia (Balabanlilar)] : excerpts from the Bhaghavadgita; also in same file, read William Dalrymple, The Great and Beautiful Lost Kingdoms, The New York, May 21 2015. Tuesday, September 29: Islam in India and the five dynasties of the Delhi Sultans (1206-1526 CE) [Balabanlilar] Themes: Islamic expansion, invasion and conquest/ South Asian religious identity: pragmatism and conversion Required reading: Dehejia, Chapter 11, Linear Abstractions (pp. 249-272). Thursday, October 1: Art, Technology, and Commerce in Song Times [Huang] Themes: the Qingming handscroll; representations of the city life, merchants, and markets Required reading: Valerie Hansen, The Qingming shanghe tu: A Black-and- White Reproduction of the Beijing Qingming Scroll <http://www.yale.edu/history/faculty/materials/hansen-qingming-scroll.html>, click <short introductory essay> (on the left of the web page). Also, Ebrey et al., (1) text, 128-143, 169-176, 226-227; (2) Material Culture: Tea, 79; Material Culture: Huang Sheng s Clothing, 143; (3) Map 8.1, Northern Song, Liao, and Xia, ca. 1050, 130; Map 8.2, Southern Song, Jin, and Xia, ca. 1200, 140.

8 Tuesday, October 6: Perspectives on the Mongols [Balabanlilar, Huang and Smith] Themes: Mongol multi-culturalism; Chinese art under the Mongols Required reading: (1) On our Owlspace under Resources, South and Central Asia (Balabanlilar) : Jane Burbank and Frederick Cooper, The Mongol Way, Empires in World History, Princeton University Press, 2010, pp. 107-111. (2) On our Owlspace under Resources, East Asian Art and Material Culture (Huang) : James Watt, Introduction, The World of Khubilai Khan: Chinese Art in the Yuan Dynasty, pp. 3-37. (3) On our Owlspace under Resources, East Asian History (Smith), Articles and Excerpts : Review of The Mongol Empire and Its Legacy.pdf Thursday, October 8: First exam due today/discussion (mandatory attendance; an unexcused absence will result in a full-grade penalty, i.e. A- to B-) Tuesday, October 13: MIDTERM RECESS (NO CLASS) Thursday, October 15: Central Asia and India: Interactions and Migrations [Balabanlilar] Themes: Mongol successors in Central Asia/ The rise of Timur (1336-1405) / Crossing borders / origins of the Mughal empire (1526-1858) Required reading: Owlspace Resources, South and Central Asia (Balabanlilar) : excerpts from the Baburnama V. ELITE CULTURE IN ASIA: SOME COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES Tuesday, October 20: Imperial developments Mughal high culture in South Asia [Balabanlilar] Themes: Religion, politics, and the arts/ fusion and synthesis Required reading: Owlspace Resources, South and Central Asia (Balabanlilar) : Sufi and Bhakti poetry RESPONSE PAPER DUE TODAY (topic to be posted) Thursday, October 22: The Place of Culture in the Construction of Empires: Evidence from Late Imperial China [Smith] Themes: The cultural policies of the Yuan, Ming and esp. Qing dynasties

9 Required reading: Ebrey et al., China under the Mongols, 194-204; The Founding of the Ming Dynasty, 222-239 and Creation of the Qing Empire, 262-278 Tuesday, October 27: Landscape Art in China, Korea and Japan [Huang] Themes: Monumental landscape painting; political symbolism; landscape and body; landscape as paradise Required reading: On our Owlspace under Resources, East Asian Art and Material Culture (Huang) : (1) Japanese art, selected from Sherman Lee, A History of Far Eastern Art, 358-370; (2) Japanese.onna-e.femine, selected from Joan Stanley-Baker, Japanese Art, 122-137. RESPONSE PAPER DUE TODAY (Topic to be posted) Thursday, October 29: Tribute and Other Forms of Gifting [Balabanlilar, Huang and Smith] Themes: People in all cultures exchange gifts of one sort or another. Why? What happens when gift giving becomes institutionalized? Required reading: (1) On our Owlspace under Resources, East Asian Art and Material Culture (Huang) : Ralph Kauz, Gift Exchange between Iran, Central Asia, and China under the Ming Dynasty, 1368-1644, in Gifts of the Sultan: The Arts of Giving at the Islamic Court (exhibition catalogue); (2) Mapping China and the Question of a China-Centered Tributary System URL: http://www.japanfocus.org/-richard_j_-smith/3888 Tuesday, November 3: Cultural Expressions of Human Sexuality [Balabanlilar, Huang and Smith] Themes: The great Confucian philosopher Mencius said To enjoy sex is the desire of [all] human beings. But sexuality and its visual representations take many different cultural forms, which vary across both space and time. Required reading: (1) On our Owlspace under Resources, East Asian History (Smith), Articles and Excerpts : (1) Ebrey shifting views of footbinding and (2) Sex in Tokugawa and Meiji Japan, pp. 1-15 (on the Tokugawa period).

10 Thursday, Nov. 5: Asian Gardens: Some Comparative Perspectives [Balabanlilar, Huang and Smith] Themes: Political, social and spiritual spaces Required reading: On our Owlspace under Resources, South and Central Asia (Balabanlilar), Ebba Koch, Mughal Gardens from Babur to Shah Jahan (1526-1648), Muqarnas, Vol. 14. (1997), pp. 143-165. Also Ebrey et al., Material Culture: Gardens of Suzhou, 235. Some interesting Asian gardens websites: Chinese gardens: http://depts.washington.edu/chinaciv/home/3garintr.htm; Japanese gardens: http://learn.bowdoin.edu/japanesegardens/; Mughal gardens: http://mughalgardens.org/detect/getflash.html Tuesday, November 10: Scholars and Literati Art in East Asia [Huang] Themes: values and aesthetics of the literati (or the elite; the educated); painting and calligraphy; art as self-expression; female artists practicing literati art Required reading: On our Owlspace under Resources, East Asian Art and Material Culture (Huang), Craig Clunas, Art in China, 135-153. Thursday, November 12: Some Literary Traditions in East Asia [Huang and Smith] Themes: Chinese popular illustrated fiction Required reading: On our Owlspace under Resources, East Asian History [Smith], Articles and Excerpts : Chinese vernacular literature [mainly plays and novels] Recommended: On our Owlspace under Resources, East Asian History [Smith], Articles and Excerpts : Chinese elite literature [mainly poetry] Tuesday, November 17: Ming-Qing Encyclopedias: The Relationship between Elite and Popular Culture in East Asia [Smith] Themes: Popular encyclopedias in East Asia were generally described as topically organized handbooks for daily use. What were the main topics addressed in these works? Who used these publications and why? Required reading: On our Owlspace under Resources, East Asian History (Smith), Articles and Excerpts : Ming Dynasty Compendia and Encyclopedias

11 VI. EUROPE AND ASIA: INTERACTIONS AND THEIR CONSEQUENCES Thursday, November 19: Cultural Shock: Jesuit Missionaries and Cultural Transfers [Huang] Themes: Teachers and technicians: Jesuit missionaries in the Chinese service; Matteo Ricci and his successors; Jesuit painters at the Qing court; Jesuit artistic influences in India Required reading: Ebrey et al., (1) Connections: Europe Enters the Scene, 257-261, 272-73; (2) color plates 19-22. Also on our Owlspace under Resources, East Asian History (Smith), Articles and Excerpts : Jesuits as experts (Elman) Tuesday, November 24: EARLY THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY; NO CLASS Tuesday, December 1: The Rise of British Power in India [Balabanlilar] Themes: Merchants and opium traders, the collapse of Mughal power, successor states (Mysore and Tipu Sultan), resistance to western influences, emergent British accidental empire Required reading: Dehejia, Chapter 16, Jewels in the Crown: Art in the British Raj, pp. 379-406. Also, Owlspace under Resources, South and Central Asia (Balabanlilar), Clive s Letters Thursday, December 3: Late Qing China, (c. 1800-1912) and Late Tokugawa Japan (c. 1800-1868) [Smith] Themes: The value and limits of explicit historical comparisons; what are we comparing and why? Required reading: Ebrey et al., (1) Maturation and Decay [Japan], 290-294; (2) Age of Western Imperialism, 296-303; (3) China in Decline (1800-1900), 304-323; (4) Japan in Turmoil (1800-1867), 324-336. On our Owlspace under Resources, East Asian History (Smith), Chronologies and Other Outlines : China-Japan comparative outline (Final exam handed out today; due on December 11 no later than 4:00 in the History Department office)

12 Goals and Standards: The University now requires us to include in our course syllabi a statement about overall course objectives and expected learning outcomes. So here goes: Our objective in this class is to encourage students to think carefully and critically about other people, places and times, not only as a means of understanding the experiences of others on their own terms but also as a way of encouraging reflection about our own cultural biases and preconceptions. We also expect that students will gain an appreciation of the need to take into account variables such as ethnicity, class and gender in any sort of historical analysis. Finally, our goal is to heighten awareness of the complex relationship between theory and practice in the political, social and economic life of every society, past and present. The University also requires us to offer statements about grade policies, absence policies, and expectations regarding course work and the Honor Code. So how about this? Examination grades will be based on a standard established by the class as a whole (a best collective answer, determined by an initial reading of all the exams); papers will be graded according to the prevailing standards of the historical profession regarding evidence and argument (see History Department website on this: http://history.rice.edu/). Finally, we expect that all assignments will be completed on time and in accordance with the stipulations of the Honor Code. Any sort of plagiarism will result in a failing grade for the course. We do not take roll, but our experience tells us that students who come to class regularly do much better than those who don t.