2015 Syllabus EAS105
2015 Syllabus EAS105
2015 Syllabus EAS105
culture, how Asian migratory labor became key to the patrolling of the
Canada-US border, and why we usually only hear about peasants when
they rise up in rebellion.
Readings
Students are responsible for completing two types of readings: i) a
textbook, offering a general synthesis of and arguments about the
periods we will cover; and ii) assigned articles, posted to the course
website, consisting of a more focused research article on a particular
topic or intellectual question. Both are required reading and will be the
basis of all assignments.
Neither the lectures nor the tutorials summarize these readings;
instead, after completing the readings you should always ask yourself
a key question before coming to class What was the authors point in
this reading? If you can answer this basic question, then you will be
well prepared for lectures and tutorials, which will make connections
between the readings and, in cases, move beyond them. This
question will also encourage you to treat all readings, even your
textbooks, as the creation of individual authors working in a specific
intellectual and temporal environment. The syllabus also lists some
italicized questions for each lecture and set of readings. These
questions will structure much of our discussion and are intended to
stimulate those gray cells in your cranium into thinking more deeply
about the readings. This last point cannot be emphasized enough:
dont just read the materials think about what the authors are doing
and why they are doing so.
Required Textbook: Jonathon Lipman, Barbara Molony, and
Michael Robinson. Modern East Asia: An Integrated History. Pearson,
2012. Available at the Bob Miller Bookroom, 180 Bloor St. West.
(opposite the ROM, lower concourse).
Tutorials
Tutorials will be held every week, starting the second week of the
semester (January 16). Active participation in tutorial discussions will
constitute ten per cent of your final mark, as determined by the
teaching assistant. Please arrive every week ready to talk, ask
questions and have fun please take advantage of the small group
session. Each week a specific reading will be assigned for discussion in
your tutorial session, as indicated in your syllabus. Since tutorials are
scheduled for the day after lecture, by the time you arrive you should
be able to triangulate between the lectures, the textbook and the
assigned reading.
Assignments
As this course is a continuation of EAS103H, all students will be
expected to have completed EAS103H before enrolling in this course.
Students will be responsible for three different forms of evaluation: i)
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during weeks two to five, you will have weekly one-page responses as
part of the read to write component of this class for a total of four
responses. Designed to boost your analytical skills, these four short
assignments are worth a total of 10%, on an upward sliding scale of 2%
(Jan.14), 2% (Jan. 21), 3% (Jan.28), and 3% (Feb.4) respectively. These
will be marked by your own teaching assistant and must be uploaded
by 10pm the night before the Thursday lecture. Late submissions are
penalized by one mark per day.
You will also have two 5-page take home essays, to be written on
a specific question, in one week between classes. Please be sure to
apportion sufficient time in your schedule for these assignments. You
will be asked questions that require you to reflect an understanding of
the assigned readings, such as Why is consumption a key to
understanding the global political economy of the Opium War? These
are not research essays and no extra reading is required to answer the
question; rather, top-notch essays will reflect a careful understanding
and analysis of the readings, textbook, lectures, and tutorial sessions.
Answers should be submitted electronically by noon on the due date.
Late responses are not accepted unless accompanied by a medical
note and submitted through your college registrar. Late penalty is one
mark per day. Proper citation practices, according to the Chicago style,
should be used to credit your readings.
Four responses
Take-home essay #1 (distributed Feb. 26; due March 5)
25%
Take-home essay #2 (distributed March26; due April 2)
25%
Tutorial Participation
10%
10%
The final exam will be worth 30% and will be scheduled by the Faculty
of Arts and Science. In the last class of the course, I will distribute a list
of possible exam questions for your own preparation. As you can see
from these forms of evaluations, memorization of names and dates is
not the priority of this course. Instead, you should direct your efforts at
writing essays in a clear, concise, and well-organized manner based on
a good understanding of the arguments in the readings. Writing quality
does matter! Besides our tutorials, where you will be discussing essay
writing, the university offers services to help with writing. Please see
both courses (http://www.writing.utoronto.ca/writing-courses) and
writing centres (http://www.writing.utoronto.ca/writing-centres).
Plagiarism is a serious academic offence. If you do not
understand what constitutes plagiarism, please ask me, your TA, or
refer to the essay How Not to Plagiarize
(http://www.writing.utoronto.ca/advice/using-sources/how-not-toplagiarize). The Department of East Asian Studies pursues such
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Problem of
Eurocentrism
1. Eurocentrism as a Traveling Narrative
Capitalism
What was the Meiji? How does a bottom-up history view the Meiji
Restoration? What were the long term consequences of the Meiji
political settlement and how have they served as the basis of a critique
of Japanese modernity?
Mikiso Hane, Modernization and the Peasants. In his Peasants,
Rebels, and Outcastes: The Underside of Modern Japan (New York:
Pantheon Books, 1982) 3-27.
Fukuzawa Yukichi, selections. TBA.
Textbook ch. 6.
Tutorial Discussion: Mikiso Hane.
February 19
February 26
Modern Power
How do Henry and Lee conceptualize colonial power beyond merely
brute force? What does Lee mean when he writes that the modern is
non-emancipatory?
Todd Henry, Sanitizing Empire: Japanese Articulations of Korean
Otherness and the Construction of early Colonial Seoul, 19051919. Journal of Asian Studies (August 2005), 64 (3), pg. 639675
Lee Chulwoo, Modernity, Legality, and Power in Korea Under
Japanese Rule. In Shin and Robinson, eds., Colonial Modernity in
Korea, 21-51.
Textbook ch. 7.
Tutorial Discussion: Chul Woo Lee
**First Take-home essay question distributed; due next week
March 5 Modernitys Obsession with the Past and the
The Cold War a single war or many regional wars? How did the
Korean civil war shape the political economy of the Cold War East
Asian and/or global order?
Paul Wingrove, Who Started the Korean War? History Today 50.7 (July
2000) three pages.
One more article, TBA.
Textbook ch. 10.
Final exam questions distributed. Date of exam to be announced by
Faculty of Arts and Science
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