ENROLL Course Search
Your search for courses for 21/FA and with code: ASSTEAST found 14 courses.
ARTH 266.00 Arts of the Japanese Tea Ceremony 6 credits
Closed: Size: 14, Registered: 15, Waitlist: 0
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11:10am12:20pm | 11:10am12:20pm | 12:00pm1:00pm |
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This course will examine the history and aesthetics of the tea ceremony in Japan (chanoyu). It will focus on the types of objects produced for use in the Japanese tea ceremony from the fifteenth century through the present. Themes to be explored include: the relationship of social status and politics to the development of chanoyu; the religious dimensions of the tea ceremony; gender roles of tea practitioners; nationalist appropriation of the tea ceremony and its relationship to the mingei movement in the twentieth century; and the international promotion of the Japanese tea ceremony post-WWII.
Prerequisite: Requires concurrent registration in Studio Arts 236
Extra Time Required, requires concurrent registration in ARTS 236
ARTS 236.00 Ceramics: Vessels for Tea 6 credits
Closed: Size: 14, Registered: 15, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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8:30am11:00am | 8:30am11:00am |
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Students will learn techniques used by Japanese potters, and those from around the world, to make vessels associated with the production and consumption of tea. Both handbuilding and wheel throwing processes will be explored throughout the term. We will investigate how Japanese pottery traditions, especially the Mingei “arts of the people” movement of the 1920s, have influenced contemporary ceramics practice in the United States and how cultural appropriation impacts arts practice. Special attention will be paid to the use of local materials from Carleton’s Arboretum as well as wood firing and traditional raku processes.
Prerequisite: Requires concurrent registration in Art History 266
Extra Time Required, requires concurrent registration in Art History 266
ASLN 111.00 Writing Systems 6 credits
Open: Size: 30, Registered: 19, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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1:15pm3:00pm | 1:15pm3:00pm |
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The structure and function of writing systems, with emphasis on a comparison of East Asian writing systems (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) to Western alphabetic systems. Topics covered include classification of writing systems, historical development, diffusion and borrowing of writing systems, and comparison with non-writing symbol systems.
CHIN 362.00 Advanced Chinese: Traditional Culture in Modern Language 6 credits
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 6, Waitlist: 0
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11:10am12:20pm | 11:10am12:20pm | 12:00pm1:00pm |
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This course explores Chinese traditional culture in advanced Mandarin Chinese. The long history and rich culture in premodern China have produced a precious legacy that has been widely inherited by contemporary China and significantly impacted the modern society. To better understand present-day China and the Chinese language, it is crucial for advanced learners to track the evolution back while acquiring higher-level vocabulary and structures. Lesson topics center on literature, language, writing, and so on. Many of our texts are from ancient Chinese stories (Mencius, Brotherhood, Language of Flowers, Dream of Red Mansions, etc.)
Prerequisite: Chinese 206 or equivalent
ECON 243.00 Market Development and Policy Reform in China 6 credits
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 3, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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11:10am12:20pm | 11:10am12:20pm | 12:00pm1:00pm |
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In the course of a few decades, China has launched itself from a poor country to a rising world power, at the same time substantially improving living standards and dramatically transforming its production base. What steps did China take to bring about these changes? We will examine China’s domestic economic reforms and development, considering the goals and impacts of various policy measures, along with on-going challenges. Topics to be considered include population, labor, income inequality, land, food production, industry, foreign relations, credit and financial markets, and the environment. While China will be our central focus, students will have some opportunities to compare and contrast with other country experiences.
Prerequisite: Eonomics 110 and 111
HIST 100.03 Confucius and His Critics 6 credits
Open: Size: 15, Registered: 14, Waitlist: 0
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12:30pm1:40pm | 12:30pm1:40pm | 1:10pm2:10pm |
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An introduction to the study of historical biography. Instead of what we heard or think about Confucius, we will examine what his contemporaries, both his supporters and critics, thought he was. Students will scrutinize various sources gleaned from archaeology, heroic narratives, and court debates, as well as the Analects to write their own biography of Confucius based on a particular historical context that created a persistent constitutional agenda in early China. Students will justify why they would call such a finding, in hindsight, "Confucian" in its formative days. Themes can be drawn from aspects of ritual, bureaucracy, speech and writing
Held for new first year students
HIST 157.00 Health and Medicine in Japan 6 credits
Open: Size: 30, Registered: 10, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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9:50am11:00am | 9:50am11:00am | 9:40am10:40am |
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How do Shintoism view childbirth and death? How do Buddhism and biotechnology intersect in the making of Japan? How do Japanese perceptions about health and medicine evolve with settler colonialism? This course examines the meaning of body, health, and medicine in Japan’s recent past when biomedicine came to replace classical Chinese medicine and to gradually occupy a hegemonic position in its pharmaceutical regime. Reading materials are drawn from illustrations, travelogues, and poems, as well as medical journals and reports. Themes include body and modern self, family and reproductive justice, medical colonialism, hygienic modernity, narcotics and ethnopsychology, and national healthcare system.
MUSC 182.00 Chinese Musical Instruments 1 credit, S/CR/NC only
Open: Size: 50, Registered: 3, Waitlist: 0
Requirements Met:
2022-23 $360 fee
MUSC 182J.00 Chinese Musical Instruments (Juried) 1 credit
Open: Size: 50, Registered: 1, Waitlist: 0
Requirements Met:
2022-23 $360 fee
MUSC 282.00 Chinese Musical Instruments 2 credits, S/CR/NC only
Open: Size: 50, Registered: 2, Waitlist: 0
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Prerequisite: Instructor Permission
2022-23 $720 fee. Instructor permission
MUSC 282J.00 Chinese Musical Instruments (Juried) 2 credits
Open: Size: 50, Registered: 3, Waitlist: 0
Requirements Met:
Prerequisite: Instructor Permission
2022-23 $720 fee. Instructor permission
POSC 170.00 International Relations and World Politics 6 credits
Closed: Size: 30, Registered: 27, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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12:30pm1:40pm | 12:30pm1:40pm | 1:10pm2:10pm |
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POSC 264.00 Politics of Contemporary China 6 credits
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 7, Waitlist: 0
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12:30pm1:40pm | 12:30pm1:40pm | 1:10pm2:10pm |
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This course examines the political, social, and economic transformation of China over the past century. Though contemporary issues are at the heart of the course, students will delve into an entire century of changes and upheaval to understand the roots of current affairs in China. Particular emphasis will be placed on state-building and how this has changed state-society relations at the grassroots. Students will also explore how the Chinese Communist Party has survived and even thrived while many other Communist regimes have fallen and assess the relationship between economic development and democratization.
RELG 153.00 Introduction to Buddhism 6 credits
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 24, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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1:15pm3:00pm | 1:15pm3:00pm |
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