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Academic Year 2001/2002
Representing China
ANTH 311 FA
This course will introduce perspectives that anthropologists, ethnographers, writers, film makers, artists and photographers have taken to understand contemporary social life in China. Students will learn to
differentiate the strengths and weaknesses of
each perspective and at the same time develop their own nuanced appreciation for Chinese culture and recent Chinese history. Beginning with basic concepts of family and family relationships, we will survey gift-giving
and banqueting, changes in the role
and status of women, education, organization of the workplace, rituals, festivals and changes since the beginning of the "reform and opening up" in the early 1980s. Anthropological essays and ethnographies will be
supplemented by short stories,
first-person narratives and class presentations of films, photographs and art works to illuminate the different ways that natives and foreigners represent Chinese culture. Lectures will provide cultural and historical
context for these materials. No pre
vious knowledge of China or Chinese is required for this class.
MAJOR READINGS
Margery Wolf, THE HOUSE OF LIM: A STUDY OF A CHINESE FARM FAMILY, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall 1968.
Jun Jing, THE TEMPLE OF MEMORIES: HISTORY, POWER AND MORALITY IN A CHINESE VILLAGE, Stanford: Stanford Univ.
1996.
Yan Yunxiang, THE FLOW OF
GIFTS: RECIPROCITY AND SOCIAL NETWORKS IN A CHINESE VILLAGE, Stanford: Stanford 1996.
We will also be reading selections from the following:
Bruun, Ole, BUSINESS AND BUREAUCRACY IN A CHINESE CITY: AN
ENTHOGRAPHY OF PRIVATE BUSINESS HOUSEHOLDS
IN CONTEMPORARY CHINA, (China Research Monograph, 43), New York: Institute of East Asian Studies 1993.
Fei Xiaotong, FROM THE SOIL: THE FOUNDATIONS OF CHINESE SOCIETY, Berkeley: California 1992 (1947).
Flower,
John and Pamela Leonard, "Defining
Cultural Life in the Chinese Countryside: The Case of the Chuan Zhu Temple," in E.B. Vesmeer, Frank Pieke and Woei-lian Chang, eds., COOPERATIVE AND COLLECTIVE IN CHINA'S RURAL DEVELOPMENT: BETWEEN STATE AND PRIVATE
INTERESTS, Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe,
c1998, pp.273-290; Freedman, Maurice, THE STUDY OF CHINESE SOCIETY.
EXAMINATIONS AND ASSIGNMENTS
Final paper, midterm exam.
ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS and/or COMMENTS
Participation in web-based discussion board, journals on weekly readings.
Unless preregistered students attend the first class meeting or communicate directly with the instructor prior to the first class, they will be dropped from the class list. NOTE: Students must still submit a completed
Drop/Add form to the Registrar's
Office.
COURSE FORMAT:
Lecture/Discussion
REGISTRATION INFORMATION
Level:
UGRD
Credit:
1
Gen Ed Area Dept:
NONE
Grading Mode:
Student Option
Prerequisites:
NONE
SECTION 01
- Instructor(s): Dowdey,Patrick
- Times: ..T.R.. 02:40PM-04:00PM; Location: PAC004
- Reserved Seats: (Total Limit: 30)
- SR. major: 5 Jr. major: 5
- SR. non-major: 5 Jr. non-major: 5 SO: 5 FR: 5
Special Attributes:
Links to Web Resources For This Course.
Last Updated on MAR-19-2002
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