Course Catalog - 2008-2009

     

ASIA 140 - INTRO CHINESE RELIGIONS

Long Title: INTRODUCTION TO CHINESE RELIGIONS
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Surveys major Chinese religious traditions of Confucianism, Daoism and Buddhism. Readings will include both philosophical texts, historical and anthropological studies, as well as popular literature. Cross-list: RELI 140.
 

ASIA 211 - INTRO TO ASIAN CIVILIZATIONS

Long Title: INTRODUCTION TO ASIAN CIVILIZATIONS
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: A team-taught interdisciplinary course focusing primarily on the major philosophical, religious and artistic traditions of pre-modern Asia, with a particular emphasis on the historical importance of cultural interactions--that is, the processes by which ideas, people, products, technologies, and skills circulated within and across local, regional, and national boundaries. Cross-list: HART 211, HIST 206.
 

ASIA 212 - PROSPECTIVES ON MODERN ASIA

Long Title: PROSPECTIVES ON MODERN ASIA
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group II
Credit Hours: 3
Description: A team taught interdisciplinary course focusing on the political, social and economic forces that are shaping the lives of the nearly one-half of the world's population that lives in Asia. Provides a selective, in-depth look at certain important areas of East, Southeast and South Asia that reflect larger themes and problems.
 

ASIA 221 - LIFE OF PROPHET MUHAMMAD

Long Title: LIFE OF THE PROPHET MUHAMMAD
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will examine the life of the Prophet Muhammad, focusing on its significance for Muslims and for non-Muslims. Readings in The Qur'an, Ibn Hisham, and Haykal. Cross-list: RELI 221.
 

ASIA 230 - ASIAN RELIGIONS IN AMERICA

Long Title: ASIAN RELIGIONS IN AMERICA
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: A survey course on Hinduism, Buddhism, Taoism, and Jainism in America, from the colonial period to the present, with a special focus on American metaphysical religion, the counterculture, the New Age, and the history of Western Colonialism, transcultural encounter, translation and immigration. Cross-list: RELI 230.
 

ASIA 231 - AMERICAN METAPHYSICAL RELIGION

Long Title: AMERICAN METAPHYSICAL RELIGION
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Beginning with a historical survey of the American metaphysical tradition, this course turns to a close study of the Esalen Institute in Big Sur, California, as a unique window into some of the different ways the tradition has appropriated Asian religions, psychological models of the unconscious, and contemporary scientific paradigms. Cross-list: RELI 231.
 

ASIA 232 - RELIGIONS FROM INDIA

Long Title: RELIGIONS FROM INDIA
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will survey the religions of India, namely Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Christianity, Islam, and Sikhism. Emphasis will be placed on the study of scriptures of these traditions and their continuing global relevance, particularly in American history and culture. Cross-list: RELI 232.
 

ASIA 240 - GENDER & POLITICIZED RELIGION

Long Title: GENDER AND POLITICIZED RELIGION
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course examines the emergence of religion-based politics in various Asian countries-particularly Hindu and Muslim-focusing on the women participants in these movements as well as the movements' concern with gender roles in society. We will investigate, for instance, the extent to which women participants have been willing or able to reshape the central ideas of such movements. Cross-list: RELI 285, SWGS 240, Equivalency: ASIA 340. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for ASIA 240 if student has credit for ASIA 340.
 

ASIA 250 - MEDITATION, MYSTICISM & MAGIC

Long Title: MEDITATION, MYSTICISM, AND MAGIC
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: The course moves between Buddhist religious and Western psychological literature, analyzing these as models of human development, as guides to a meditative life or critiques of it, and above all as expressions of deeply rooted cultural proclivities. Reading Freud, Khakar, Milarepa, Norbu, Obeyesekere, Sutric and Tantric literature, Taylor and Wangyal. Cross-list: RELI 250.
 

ASIA 304 - THIRD WORLD URBANIZATION

Long Title: URBANIZATION IN THE THIRD WORLD
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will engage in transnational and comparative approaches to urban issues in the Third World. Topics will include migration, shelter struggles, urban informality, violence, social movements, gender, race and ethnic engagements with public and private spaces of the city and cinematic representations. Cross-listed with ANTH 304.
 

ASIA 315 - TAIWAN'S FILMS SINCE 1980

Long Title: TAIWAN'S FILMS SINCE 1980: ART, CULTURE, SOCIETY AND LANGUAGE
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisite(s): CHIN 302 AND CHIN 312
Description: This course discusses influential Taiwanese films since 1980 as pieces of artwork and as reflections of Taiwan's cultural, social, economic, and political changes in the past three decades. Language assignements are designed to help students develop proficiency in reading authentic materials, writing essays, and giving reports. Current collaborations among Taiwan, China, and Hong Kong in film production also included.
 

ASIA 322 - INTRODUCTION TO BUDDHISM

Long Title: INTRODUCTION TO BUDDHISM
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Exploration of the Buddhist traditions of India, Tibet, China, and Japan, emphasizing the relationship between styles of meditation, their philosophical perspectives, cultural context, and classic Buddhist texts. Cross-list: RELI 322.
 

ASIA 323 - BUDDHISM, GENDER & SOCIETY

Long Title: THE KNOWING BODY: BUDDHISM, GENDER AND THE SOCIAL WORLD
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Western thought tends to regard mind and body dualistically, a view with significant impact on religious cultural, gendered, and social processes. This course juxtaposes received Western assumptions with Buddhist perspectives (especially Tibetan Buddhist), mapping Western and Buddhist categories onto each other to better understand the implications of each. Cross-list: RELI 323, SWGS 323.
 

ASIA 330 - INTRO TO TRAD CHINESE POETRY

Long Title: INTRODUCTION TO TRADITIONAL CHINESE POETRY
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course seeks to decode enchanting features of traditional Chinese poetry through examining the transformation of poetic genres, the interaction between poetic creation and political, social and culture changes, and the close association of poetry with art. Thus, this course also serves to understand Chinese culture and history through poetic perspectives. All readings in English translation. Cross-list: CHIN 330, MDST 370.
 

ASIA 331 - S ASIAN LIT, POETRY & POP I

Long Title: SOUTH ASIAN LITERATURE, POETRY, AND POPULAR CULTURE I
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisite(s): HIND 202 or permission of instructor
Description: Focus will vary each year depending on both, the needs and interests of the students in the class, as well as contemporary issues. Readings range from classical, to modern 20th century literature and poetry. Various arts forms, including theater and film, will be thematically related to the readings. This course is taught in Hindi. Cross-list: HIND 335.
Course URL: http://http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~gshah/adv.html
 

ASIA 332 - FILM & CHINESE LITERATURE

Long Title: CHINESE LITERATURE AND ITS MOVIE ADAPTATIONS
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Exploration of modern Chinese literature through the visual imagery of Chinese films to show how and why different time periods and different media affect the theme of a story. One third covers movie adaptations of classical Chinese literature. Films, subtitled in English, shown outside of class. All reading in English. Cross-list: CHIN 332.
 

ASIA 334 - TRADITIONAL CHINESE TALES

Long Title: TRADITIONAL CHINESE TALES AND SHORT STORIES
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Learning Chinese literature and culture through reading vernacular stories, fantastic tales, biographies, and philosophical parables. Discussion topics: literature and Confucianism, Taoism, and Buddhism; literature and history; self and other; fantastic world and reality; women as domestic aliens and aliens portrayed as women, etc. Readings are in English translation. Cross-list: CHIN 334.
 

ASIA 335 - INTRO CLASCL CHINESE NOVELS

Long Title: INTRODUCTION TO CLASSICAL CHINESE LITERATURE
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Examination of the basic characteristics of classical Chinese novels, primarily through six important works from the 16th to 18th centuries: Water Margin, Monkey, Golden Lotus, Scholars, Romance of the Three Kingdoms, and Dream of the Red Chamber. Cross-list: CHIN 335, MDST 375.
 

ASIA 336 - S. ASIAN LIT, POETRY & POP II

Long Title: SEMINAR IN SOUTH ASIAN LITERATURE, POETRY, AND POPULAR CULTURE II
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: HIND 336 consolidates and builds on the fifth semester Hindi course HIND 335. Continues to build student proficiency in understanding, speaking, writing, and thinking in Hindi. Prepares the student for further academic and non-academic use of Hindi. Emphasis is placed on spontaneous self-expression in the language. Cross-list: HIND 336. Recommended Prerequisite: HIND 335 or ASIA 331.
 

ASIA 340 - GENDER & POLITICIZED RELIGION

Long Title: GENDER AND POLITICIZED RELIGION (ENRICHED VERSION)
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course examines the emergence of religion-based politics in various Asian countries-particularly Hindu and Muslim-focusing on the women participants in these movements as well as the movements' concern with gender roles in society. We will investigate, for instance, the extent to which women participants have been willing or able to reshape the central ideas of such movements. Credit may not be received for both ASIA 240 and ASIA 340. Cross-list: RELI 341, SWGS 340, Equivalency: ASIA 240. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for ASIA 340 if student has credit for ASIA 240.
 

ASIA 344 - KOREAN LITERATURE AND CULTURE

Long Title: KOREAN LITERATURE AND CULTURE
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Exploration of selections from modern Korean literature and Korean films. Includes background survey of Korean history, philosophy and religion. All texts and films in English translation. No previous knowledge of Korean required. Instructor Permission Required.Cross-list: HUMA 344, KORE 344.
 

ASIA 345 - LINGUISTIC STRUCTURE OF KOREAN

Long Title: LINGUISTIC STRUCTURE OF KOREAN AND RELATED LANGUAGES IN EAST ASIA
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Focuses on the origin of Korean and related languages. It explores the way the Korean language evolved and interacted with other East Asian languages, including Chinese and Japanese. The socio-linguistic aspect of these languages will be studied, including the difference in male and female language usage and the honorific systems. Cross-list: KORE 345, LING 345.
 

ASIA 346 - KORE CULTURE & SOCIETY IN FILM

Long Title: KOREAN CULTURE AND SOCIETY THROUGH MULTIMEDIA
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course introduces important elements of Korean culture and society through readings and multimedia. Topics are in the areas of history, philosophy, and family life around the early 20th century to the present. Also, the class will explore the recent phenomenon of "Korea Wave" in Asia. Korean background is unnecessary. Cross-list: KORE 346.
 

ASIA 350 - HISTORY &POLITICS CENTRAL ASIA

Long Title: HISTORY AND POLITICS OF CENTRAL ASIA
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This is an introduction to the history, culture, lands, peoples, and contemporary importance of Central Asia. Topics to be discussed include the Great Game, Sovietization, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the War on Terror, and the new Great Game, the race for resources between Russia, China, and the United States.
Course URL: http://lang.rice.edu/Ludwig/asia350/Asia350.html
 

ASIA 360 - CHINA AND THE CHINESE DIASPORA

Long Title: TRANSNATIONAL CHINA: CHINA AND THE CHINESE DIASPORA
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Exploration of the political, economic, and social forces changing the lives of nearly a quarter of humanity, the 1.4 billion people of Mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore and the diasporic Chinese communities of East and Southeast Asia. Topics include political and economic liberalization, nationalism and urban identity, privatization and consumerism, environmentalism and public goods, and the globalization of communication technologies and Chinese cultural media.
Course URL: http://www.owlnet.rice.edu/~swlewis/asia360/
 

ASIA 361 - THE ORIENTAL RENAISSANCE

Long Title: THE ORIENTAL RENAISSANCE
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will explore the European and American encounters with India from seventeenth-century France to twentieth-century America. Particular attention will be given to the translation of Sanskrit texts, the English, and German Romantic traditions, the depth psychology of C.G. Jung, and the American New Age. Cross-list: RELI 361.
 

ASIA 371 - CHINESE PAINTING

Long Title: TRADITIONAL CHINESE PAINTING
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course examines Chinese painting from ancient times to the early twentieth century. Issues of examination include themes, styles, and functions of Chinese painting; the interrelationship between paintings and the intended viewers; regionalism; images and words; foreign elements in Chinese painting. Cross-list: HART 371.
 

ASIA 372 - CHINESE ART & VISUAL CULTURE

Long Title: CHINESE ART AND VISUAL CULTURE
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: In this course, we will study how various artistic styles developed in historical, social, and cultural contexts from the ancient period to the present day. Through the careful examination of architecture, calligraphy, painting, sculpture, ceramics, bronze, and film, students will gain a deeper understanding of Chinese art and visual culture. Cross-list: HART 372, MDST 373.
 

ASIA 374 - ART & RELIGION IN CHINA

Long Title: ART & RELIGION IN CHINA
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This introductory course examines the complex relationship between art and religion in China (4th - 19th centuries). Through an analysis of painting, sculpture, cave temples, steles, manuscripts, talismans, illustrated prints, and primary sources, we will explore the visual, religious, and cultural dimensions of Buddhism and Daoism, and the fluid nature of Chinese culture. Cross-list: HART 374, RELI 374.
 

ASIA 381 - MEDIA: FOCUS ON MODERN JAPAN

Long Title: MEDIA: FOCUS ON MODERN JAPAN
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Survey of what makes Japanese media unique by analyzing trends from the Meiji Period to the present. Theoretical works of Western writers will be cross-culturally compared to those of Japanese writers to isolate similarities and differences of style and substance; focus on the organization of Japanese media and cultural traditions.
 

ASIA 382 - MOD. JAPAN THROUGH ITS NOVELS

Long Title: ANALYZING MODERN JAPANESE SOCIETY THROUGH NOVELS
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: An analysis of modern Japanese thought and behavior through the works of present-day novelists. We will break each novel down into its component parts while studying the reasons for the protagonists' and other characters' actions, compared to those of a Western novel. This cross-cultural analysis goes to the heart of modern Japan's national character.
 

ASIA 389 - MIGRATIONS & DIASPORAS

Long Title: MIGRATIONS AND DIASPORAS IN THE INDIAN OCEAN WORLD
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: The Indian Ocean World presents an enormously varied arena of cultural exchange and interaction spanning coastal regions of Africa, the Middle East, South and Southeast Asia and Australia. Seminar introduces the region by examining societies and empires shaped by voyages of exploration, religious pilgrimages, trading diasporas and forced migration. Cross-list: HIST 389.
 

ASIA 399 - WOMEN IN CHINESE LITERATURE

Long Title: WOMEN IN CHINESE LITERATURE
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course examines women's roles in Chinese literature as writers, readers, and characters, focusing particularly on the tension between women's lived bodily experiences and the cultural experiences inscribed on the female body and how, in the process, women have contrarily gendered patriarchal culture into their own. It will also touch on Chinese women's incorporation of the Western Tradition. Cross-list: MDST 379, SWGS 399.
 

ASIA 401 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 15
Description: Reading or research project to be determined by discussions between student(s) and faculty member(s).
 

ASIA 402 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 15
Description: Reading or research project to be determined by discussions between student(s) and faculty member(s).
 

ASIA 403 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description:
 

ASIA 422 - BEAUTY OF CHINESE LITERATURE

Long Title: THE ORIGINAL BEAUTY OF CHINESE LITERATURE
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: The course will expose students to the best literary works created in the Chinese tradition, both classical and modern, and give them a general introduction to different genres, including poetry, fiction, drama, and philosophical essays. It will improve their language proficiency through reading original texts of Chinese literature. Cross-list: CHIN 422.
 

ASIA 432 - ISLAM IN SOUTH ASIA

Long Title: ISLAM IN SOUTH ASIA
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Topics will include emergence of Indian Muslim society; Muslim responses to colonialism and the movement for Pakistan; and the role of Islam in politics in contemporary India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh. Requires no prior knowledge of Islam of South Asia. Cross-list: HIST 432, SWGS 432.
 

ASIA 441 - MAGIC & POPULAR RELIGION

Long Title: MAGIC AND POPULAR RELIGION
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will examine the popular religion in the Middle East from Late Antiquity until the 19th century, focusing on healing practices, astrology, protection, amulets, seasoned/life-cycle rituals, and other popular beliefs common to Islam, Judaism, and Christianity. Cross-list: RELI 441.
 

ASIA 474 - BOUNDARIES LATER CHINESE ART

Long Title: BOUNDARIES LATER CHINESE ART
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This advanced class examines later Chinese art beyond the conventional dynastic, geographic, and media-based framework. We will discuss issues of boundaries and visualities, and review the historiographical and methodological issues involved in the study of Chinese art. Instructor Permission Required.
 

ASIA 492 - GENDER HISTORIES: MODERN CHINA

Long Title: GENDER HISTORIES OF MODERN CHINA
Department: Asian Studies
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Seminar course, with some lectures, considers conceptual tools (gynotechnics, globalization, representation, etc.) in Late Imperial/20th Century China thru femininity-masculinity. Late Qing gender order through revolutionary eras Party state formation, Great Transformations of late 20th and early 21st centuries. Visual culture, film, primary texts, secondary histories readings. Cross-listed with HIST 492 and SWGS 492.