East Asian Studies 200 - COLQ: TOPICS EAST ASIAN STUD
Spring
2013
01
4.00
Jina Kim
MW 01:10-02:30
Smith College
39880-S13
SEELYE 102
jkim@smith.edu
Focusing on a theme of significance to the region, this course is designed to introduce students to a variety of methods of inquiry used for research in the interdisciplinary field of East Asian Studies. Students will be introduced to methods of locating and analyzing information sources, developing research questions and writing during the course of the semester. Normally taken in the sophomore or junior year. Also open to non-EAS majors. This course explores the various discourses of the "modern" through the study of two iconic female figures who were often labeled as "difficult women": the New Woman and the Modern Girl. We will explore who these figures were, what was so modern and difficult about them, by examining the discourses accompanying them in China; Japan; Korea; and Taiwan. By using these figures to enrich our understanding of gendered politics, consumer culture, colonial modernity, and international relations, students will become familiar with interdisciplinary studies. We will also use historical, literary, and visual texts to consider the possibilities and problems of comparative colonial history. Enrollment limited to 18. (E)
Topic: The Difficult Female.