BA History and French / Course details

Year of entry: 2023

Course unit details:
Empire and Culture in East Asia

Course unit fact file
Unit code JAPA13222
Credit rating 20
Unit level Level 1
Teaching period(s) Semester 2
Offered by Japanese Studies
Available as a free choice unit? Yes

Overview

This course will make use of selected cultural texts and film to introduce students to the politics and complex colonial history of East Asia in the period of Japanese Empire. Lectures incorporating discussion of novels and screenings will introduce to students the formation of colonial and postcolonial Asia and open dialogue about how Japanese expansionism influenced the development of national identities in China, Korea and Japan and across South East Asia. During weekly lectures students will have the opportunity to consider a small selection of representative works, from ideological manifestos, novels and film from China, Taiwan, Korea, and Japan: each bringing different perspectives of the enforced and resisted construction and life of ‘Asia’ within the Japanese Greater East Asian Empire. During seminars students will view and discuss representative films and documentaries such as Mud and Soldiers, Karayuki, Dankichi the Adventurer, Rikugun, and The Human Condition. Literary texts to be examined include classics of the East Asian empire period such as Xiao Hong’s In the Field of Life and Death (China, 1932). Ideological and revolutionary texts by political leaders such as Mao Zedong (On Guerrilla Warfare, 1937) and Kim Il Sung (With the Century, 1993) will be examined as responses to Japanese imperial policy. In this survey of the Japanese empire in East Asia, students will learn how East Asia has been forged through both encounter, resistance and incorporation into Imperial Japan. By sampling literature and film responding to this experience, students will explore ideology, experience, and sentiment across the region, and consider the legacy of the Greater East Asian Empire for postcolonial Asia. 

Aims

  • to introduce the major points of conflict and unity necessary for a fuller understanding of modern culture and regional relations in Asia serving as a grounding into the East Asian Studies Major
  • to provide students with an understanding of the key events and conceptual issues surrounding the Japanese empire in Asia and its legacy
  • to enable students to analyse cultural problems and dynamics in contemporary East Asia in an informed and critical way
  • to nurture and build skills for source reading and interpreting to support robust essay writing in the following years
  • to provide guidance and a preliminary experience of essay planning, class presentations, and class discussion in the first year of the East Asian / Chinese/ Japanese Studies Major

Knowledge and understanding

  • demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the history and cultural reaction to the development of East Asia as a region
  • demonstrate critical understanding of key analytical concepts related to the study of history and culture
  • show detailed knowledge of some representative cultural works (novels and films) from across East Asia

Intellectual skills

  • write analytically
  • engage in informed critical analysis of East Asian hisory and culture
  • read and watch critically

Practical skills

  • Construct ideas and arguments from own research and apply knowledge to finding solutions to authentic realworld problems
  • Improve basic skills for academic writing
  • Improve presentation skills

Transferable skills and personal qualities

  • will have honed their skills for reasoned discussion and argument
  • will be able to find and use critically a range of materials such as books, journals and web-based resources relevant to the topics studied in the course
  • will be able to better participate in world affairs and informed global citizens

Employability skills

Other
¿ project management: Students taking this unit will be learning to work towards deadlines, work independently and to manage their time effectively. ¿ written communication: Students on this unit will develop their ability to communicate a coherent and critical argument of depth and complexity in written form and to write in a way that is lucid, precise and compelling.

Assessment methods

A short essay on a cultural source in social and historical context - 30%

Essay - 70%

 

Feedback methods

Feedback method Formative or Summative
Written feedback on oral presentation distributed through semester summative
Written feedback on  a review of a cultural source summative and formative
Written and oral feedback on class participation and written assessments available during weekly office hours formative
Written feedback on essay summative

 

Recommended reading

  1. Louise Young, Japan’s Total Empire (1998) ebook
  2. Joshua Motow. ed. The Columbia Companion to Modern East Asian Literature (2003)
  3. Peter Duus et al.  Japan’s Wartime Empire (1996) ebook

Study hours

Scheduled activity hours
Lectures 11
Practical classes & workshops 1
Seminars 18
Independent study hours
Independent study 170

Teaching staff

Staff member Role
Sharon Kinsella Unit coordinator

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