All grades, including the final grade for the course, will be reached upon joint evaluation by the professor and the teaching assistants.

Similar documents
History 1618: Introduction to Chines History to 1644

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

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

History 276/ASLC 276: PERSPECTIVES ON CHINESE HISTORY Amherst College, Fall 2015 Tues- Thurs 2:30-3:50. Course Materials

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

Unit 4: Ancient River Valley Civilizations - China

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

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

THE SUI AND TANG DYNASTY

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

Post-Classical East Asia 500 CE-1300 CE

CHAPTER SEVEN CHINA REVIEW

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

AP World History Mid-Term Exam

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

Amherst College Fall 2012 History 171/ALC 124 T/Th 2:30-3:50 CHINESE CIVILIZATION TO 1700

APWH chapter 12.notebook October 31, 2012

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

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

Competing Images of the Sage: Confucius and Lao Tzu

HIST 270 China in the World Winter

CHAPTER 7 EXAM. Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

WORLD HISTORY S1 FINAL EXAM REVIEW GUIDE

Dynastic Rule of China. 7 th Chapter 7

China. Chapter 7 Test. Student Signature

Physical Geography of China

Lesson 1: The Geography of China

History of East Asia II

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

ANCIENT CHINA GUIDED NOTES. 1. The climate in the north of China is cold and dry, while in the south,

«Central Asian Studies World Wide» Course Syllabi for the Study of Central Eurasia

World History Topic 3 Reading Guide Ancient India and China

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

Foundations of the Imperial State

World History Unit 3 Contd. Post Classical Asia and Beyond

APWH chapter 10.notebook October 10, 2013

Name Class Date. TRUE/FALSE Read the FALSE statements below. Replace each underlined word with one from the word bank that makes each sentence TRUE.

China in the World: from Early Antiquity to 1700

HIST 270 China in the World Section 001, Winter 2011

HIST097 History of Modern China

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

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

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

Ancient Chinese Dynasty Presentations

East Asia. China, Korea, Vietnam and Japan

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

Confucius By Vickie Chao

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

RELIGIONS OF CHINA RELI 360/2a

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

Life in Ancient China

Nomads of the Asian Steppe

1. What Ottoman palace complex serves as a useful comparison with the Forbidden City? Describe one way that the Hongwu emperor sought to

Chinese Love Stories From "Ch'Ing-Shih" By Hua-Yuan Li Mowry READ ONLINE

A.D. 600 A.D Wendi founds Sui dynasty. Chinese print world s first book. Genghis Khan unites the Mongols. Zheng He begins.

A Compact Classic Written by Luo Guanzhong Adapted by Asiapac Editorial Illustrated by Huang Qingrong Translated by Wong Huey Khey

Were the Mongols an or?

AP World History Study Guide Unit 3B Name China & the Mongols (Ch 15, 18) Score / Hour November 2, 2012

World Scientific Research Journal (WSRJ) ISSN: Discussion on the positive value of traditional family training culture to

Intermediate World History A: From Prehistory Through the Middle Ages

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

Add today notes to Yesterday s Note Page

PHIL 035: Asian Philosophy

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

CONFUCIANISM, DAOISM, BUDDHISM: INTELLECTUAL HISTORY OF CHINA

New Civilizations in the Eastern and Western Hemispheres

Geography of China. The Huang He River is more than 2900 miles long. It flows across Central China and empties into Yellow Sea

A. The junk had internal bulkheads. B. China was not trading with anyone during this time.

Honors Global Studies I Syllabus Academic Magnet High School

Dynasties of China. Timeline Cards

China's Confession ---- episode 1.

Legal Studies 161. Chinese Law & Society Spring, 2013 T-Th 11-12:30pm 105 North Gate Hall

Four major accomplishments of the Tang account for their long-lasting power:

The Prosperity of the Han

RESURGENCE OF EMPIRE IN EAST ASIA CHINA UNDER THE SUI, TANG, AND SONG

1. What was the Opium war, and why was it fought? 2. What were the Taiping and Boxer Rebellions? 3. Who was Sun Yixian, and what did he want?

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

Course Description: Pre-Modern China

Traditional Chinese Philosophy PHIL 191

C H

Outline of Chinese Culture (UGEA2100F)

AP WORLD HISTORY Big Ideas

Eastern Han Dynasty dōng hàn Three Kingdoms sān guó Jin Dynasty xī jìn / dōng jìn Southern and Northern Dynasties

Occasionally though, China did get invaded from the north and west. Yellow River (a.k.a. River)

Mao Zedong And China In The Twentieth Century World A Concise History Asia Pacific Culture Politics And Society

An Introduction to the Song dynasty ( )

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

Ancient India and China

Review Unit Packet (page 1-37)

Indias First Empires. Terms and Names

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

Review Questions 1. What were the cities of Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro like?

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

3/12/14. Eastern Responses to Western Pressure. From Empire (Ottoman) to Nation (Turkey) Responses ranged across a broad spectrum

World History Assignment for 26 February 2016

Western Hangzhou Tour

Dartmouth Middle School

Regents Review. Unit Summaries

World History Unit 1 Lesson 1 Geography, etc

2) The original base of the Ottoman Turks was A) Anatolia. B) Syria. C) Mesopotamia. D) Transoxiana. E) the Balkans.

Transcription:

World Cultures Themes in Chinese Culture V55.0512 Fall 2005 TR 2-3.15 29 W 4 St room 101 Joanna Waley-Cohen KJCC 521 jw5@nyu.edu 998-8645 Office Hours Tuesdays 11-12 or by appointment Teaching Assistants: Miao Feng mf791@nyu.edu Osamu Nakano on225@nyu.edu THE COURSE: introduction to some of the fundamental values, issues, and practices of Chinese society and culture. The course is organized thematically, not chronologically. We will spend three sessions each on eight broad areas of central importance, which will spill over into one another, as follows: 1) Loyalty and Dissent; 2) Beliefs; 3) History and Literature; 4) Politics and Government 5) Social Relations; 6) Material Culture; 7) China and Others; 8) War and Revolution. Readings in primary sources include novels, short stories, and eyewitness accounts; the textbook consists of a collection of biographies. COURSE REQUIREMENTS 1) Attendance and participation. Attendance will be taken at both. 20% of grade 2) Keeping up with assigned readings, which will be discussed in section. Thus it is important to complete assignments the week they are listed. 3) Written work, as follows: a) one take-home map assignment, due in class November 3. 20% of grade. A handout listing places to include will be posted online by no later than October 27. Please draw your own map and do not download from the internet. b) Midterm exam, in class on October 27 20% of grade. Exam will consist of short identifications, true or false questions, and a short essay c) 3-5 page paper on ONE of the following novels (partial or abridged version) EITHER a) Monkey (DUE OCTOBER 6) OR Three Kingdoms, (DUE OCTOBER 18) OR Story Of the Stone (DUE NOVEMBER 10) Paper topic to be selected from a list that will be posted on Blackboard. 20% of grade d) Final Take-Home Exam, due in class December 13. 20% of grade. All grades, including the final grade for the course, will be reached upon joint evaluation by the professor and the teaching assistants. OPTIONAL: Discussion forum on Blackboard where students may, if they wish, respond to or raise questions about readings and lectures and respond to others postings READINGS The following books are available for purchase at the University Bookstore and on reserve in Bobst Library. Books may also be available from online booksellers but if you take this route be sure to order at least two weeks before they are needed. Cao Xueqin, tr D. Hawkes, The Story of the Stone, volume 1 Lu Xun, Selected Stories Luo Guanzhong, tr. M. Roberts, Three Kingdoms (Abridged Version) Struve, Lynn, eds., Voices from the Ming-Qing Cataclysm Waley, Arthur, tr., Monkey Wills, John E., Jr, Mountain of Fame: Portraits in Chinese History

NOTE: YOU MUST READ ALL THREE NOVELS (Story of the Stone; Three Kingdoms; Monkey) BUT YOU ARE REQUIRED TO WRITE ON ONLY ONE OTHER READINGS IN THE SYLLABUS ARE MARKED WITH * AND WILL BE MADE AVAILABLE ON BLACKBOARD HOW TO ACCESS AN NYU BLACKBOARD SITE: 1. Log in to NYUHome at http://home.nyu.edu with a valid NYU NetID and password. If you do not yet have a NetID, you can activate their NYUHome accounts by accessing http://start.nyu.edu, then proceeding to http://home.nyu.edu. 2. Click on the "Academics" tab and look under the "Classes" channel for the course name. 3. Click on the course name to enter the NYU Blackboard course site. 4. Click on Course Documents and find the reading you are looking for. Additional assistance for this class is available to you free of charge at the College Learning Center located on the 1st Floor of Weinstein Hall (right behind Java City). For information on one-on-one and group peer tutoring, please stop by the CLC or go to their website: http://www.nyu.edu/cas/clc/index.html ATTACHED TO THIS SYLLABUS ARE: 1) a chronology of Chinese dynasties 2) romanization conversion table, e.g. pinyin qiao = WG ch iao 3) CAS Academic Guidelines for Students SOME THINGS TO THINK ABOUT WHILE READING ENCOUNTERING SORROW --What themes can you discern in the poem? --What does the poem have to say about loyalty and dissent? --What does the poem have to say about personal integrity? --What does the poem say about the relationship between one s personal feelings and one s public duty? --Does the poem have anything relevant to say to us today? 2

SYLLABUS NOTE THAT THIS SYLLABUS IS A WORK IN PROGRESS, THAT IS, READINGS AND ASSIGNMENTS MAY CHANGE IN THE COURSE OF THE SEMESTER. CHANGES WILL BE ANNOUNCED IN CLASS AND POSTED TO THE COURSE BLACKBOARD SITE. Sept 6 INTRODUCTION Sept 8 IN CLASS MOVIE: Gate of Heavenly Peace (first part) PART ONE: LOYALTY AND DISSENT Sept 13 Qu Yuan and the Tradition of Integrity. Read *Encountering Sorrow Sept 15 Loyalism and Collaboration. Read Yue Fei, Zheng Chenggong (Coxinga) (in Wills); read Voices from the Ming-Qing Cataclysm 6-54, 93-113, 179-203 Sept 20 Democracy in China: Read Liang Qichao, (biogs). Recommended: view remainder of Gate of Heavenly Peace, available in the Avery Fisher Center at Bobst Library PART TWO: BELIEFS Sept 22 The Confucian Tradition. Read Yu Confucius Wang Yangming (in Wills); read *Analects, selectionsy). Start reading Monkey Sept 27 Buddhism and Daoism. Read Hui Neng and Qiu Chuji, the Daoist (in Wills). Continue reading Monkey. Sept 29 19 th and 20 th century ideologies. Read Mao (in Wills). Read *Liang Qichao essay on destroyed countries. Finish reading Monkey PART THREE: HISTORY AND LITERATURE Oct 6 The History of History: Read Sima Qian, Empress Wu (in Wills); read *Sima Qian s letter explaining why he chose castration over death. Begin reading Three Kingdoms THOSE WHO CHOSE TO WRITE ON MONKEY SHOULD TURN IN THEIR PAPERS IN CLASS TODAY Oct 11 Literature and Society: poetry, fiction, drama, storytelling. Read *Tao Yuanming, Peach Blossom Spring; read *Lu Xun, My Old Home and Medicine ; continue reading Three Kingdoms Oct 13 NO CLASS (Yom Kippur). Read Zhuge Liang (in Wills). Finish reading Three Kingdoms. PART FOUR: POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT Oct 18 Unification and Division. Read The First Emperor of Qin (in Wills) THOSE WHO CHOSE TO WRITE ON THREE KINGDOMS SHOULD TURN IN THEIR PAPERS IN CLASS TODAY Oct 20 Law and Bureaucracy. Read primary sources on Chinese law, tba Oct 25 Reform and Revolution Read Su Dongpo (in Wills), *20 th c PRIMARY SOURCE tba October 27 MIDTERM EXAM HELD IN CLASS 3

PART FIVE: SOCIAL RELATIONS Nov 1 Patronage and Connections. Begin reading Story of the Stone Nov 3 Female Elite Culture. Read Ban Zhao (in Wills); *Ban Zhao s text; Continue reading Story of the Stone Nov 8 Women and Revolution: Read *Lu Xun, What Happens when Nora Leaves Home In class, view In Chinese Women s Eyes. Finish reading Story of the Stone. PART SIX: MATERIAL CULTURE Nov 10: Taste and Aesthetics reading tba THOSE WHO CHOSE TO WRITE ON STORY OF THE STONE SHOULD TURN IN THEIR PAPERS IN CLASS TODAY Nov 15: Food *Read *Yuan Mei, *Li Yu (extracts) Nov 17: Opium read * Opium Talk PART SEVEN: CHINA AND OTHERS Nov 22 Silk Roads read primary source to be posted Nov 24 NO CLASS (Thanksgiving) Nov 29 Christianity. Read Hong Xiuquan (in Wills), Dec 1 19th-century Imperialism Read Zou Rong PART EIGHT: WAR AND REVOLUTION Dec 6 Strategic Culture. Readings tba Dec 8 Military Culture (show slides) Read Qianlong (in Wills) Dec 13 War and Revolution in the 20 th century TAKE-HOME EXAM DUE IN CLASS TODAY 4

CHRONOLOGY OF CHINESE DYNASTIES ALL DATES BEFORE 841 BC ARE TRADITIONAL ONLY Pre-Dynastic Archaeological Record A series of stone-age cultures, widely distributed in North and South China and chronologically ranging from early Paleolithic to late Neolithic Literary Tradition A series of legendary sage-rulers and creators of successive stages of civilization, of whom the most important are: Fu Hsi, Subduer of Animals (2852-2738) Shen Nung, the Divine Husbandman (2737-2698) Huang Ti, the Yelow Lord (2697-2598) Yao (2357-2256) Shun (2255-2206) Pre-Imperial Dynasties (2205-222 BC) Hsia (2205-1766) Now more or less confirmed by archaeology. Founded by Yu the Great, who before becoming ruler saved humankind from a vast flood and made the world fit for sedentary human habitation. Shang (1765-1123) Many archaeological remains (capital at Anyang) Earliest script; bronzes Zhou (1122-256; actual founding probably ca. a century later) China s age of feudalism : many small principalities nominally under Zhou suzerainty 841 onward: a single standard chronology Western Zhou (1122-771) Eastern Zhou (770-256) Spring and Autumn (qunqiu) period (722-481) Warring States (zhanguo) period (403-222) Increasing warfare between half a dozen large states; rise of iron technology; classical age of Chinese philosophy The Early Empires (221 BC-220) Qin (221-207) Creation of China s first universal empire; a centralized bureaucratic government with unified script, law, weights and measures, roads; building of the first Great Wall Han (206 BC-220 AD), capital in XXXXXX (approx modern Xi an) Age of classical empire; elaboration of Qin system of government; expansion into Central Asia and elsewhere through wars and trade; rise to orthodoxy of Confucian beliefs Former or Western Han (206 BC-5 AD) Wang Mang as Regent and Acting Emperor (6-8 AD); then as emperor of Xin dynasty (9-23 AD) Later or Eastern Han (25-220 AD) Period of Disunity (190/220-589) 5

Spread of Buddhism; division between north and south; invasion of the north by barbarian groups who establish successive non-chinese states and dynasties Three Kingdoms (190/220-280) Jin Dynasty (265-316) Northern and Southern Dynasties (317-589) The Middle Empires (590-1279) Sui (590-617) Reunification of north and south into one empire Tang (618-906), capital in Chang an, Shaanxi (approx modern Xi an) Political grandeur, cultural brilliance, cosmopolitanism, apogee of Buddhism, beginning of printing Five Dynasties (907-959) An interim period of brief ruling states Song (960-1279) A Renaissance dynasty: relative political weakness coupled with great economic development, urbanization, spread of printing; rise of Neo- Confucianism, decline of Buddhism Northern Song (960-1126), capital in Kaifeng, Henan Southern Song (1127-1279), capital in Hangzhou, Zhejiang The Later Empires (1280-1912) Yuan (Mongol) (1279-1367) China s first total rule by non-chinese it becomes part of a vast network of Mongol empires stretching right across the Eurasian landmass. Marco Polo and other Europeans in China. Ming (1368-1644) Restoration of Chinese rule; government voyages to South Asia and East Africa (early 15 th century); late 16 th -century commercial boom and intense consumerism; economic integration into emerging global economy via silver and plant imports from New World exchanged for Chinese silks and porcelains Qing (Manchus, 1644-1912) China s 2 nd total rule by non-chinese, who combine Inner Asian and Chinese traditions. Political expansion into Northern and Central Asia; empire ruled from Beijing is largest ever. From early 19 th century, increasing political/economic/cultural impact of West (imperialism) Republican China Republic of China (1912-49) Sun Yat-sen; China divided by warlord rulers, then (1928) partial reunification by Guomindang party under Jiang Jieshi (Chiang Kai-shek); Sino-Japanese War (1937-45); civil war between Guomindang and Chinese Communists (CCP) (1945-49) People s Republic of China (1949-) Guomindang and Jiang Jieshi flee to Taiwan (1949) and establish Republic of China; CCP under Mao Zedong (Mao Tse-tung) establish People s Republic (PRC) The Chinese People Have Stood Up. Death of Mao 1976 6