Untitled Document Journal of American East asian Relations. Bur, chinese, japanese, Korean, Alb, Bulgarian, Czech, Hun, Latvian, lit, Rum, Russian, Serbian Croatian, http://dlilibrary.monterey.army.mil/home.htm
Extractions: Catalog Home Library Account Access Contacts Library Services ... Site Directory Title Languages The Afghanistan Studies Journal Arabic, Persian, Pashto, Dari Americas Spanish, Portuguese Arabic Studies Quarterly Arabic, Persian, Pashto, Dari, Turkish, Hebrew Asian Affairs Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Thai, Vietnamese Asian Culture Quarterly Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Tagalog, Bur, Indonesian Asian Defence Journal Arabic, Chinese, Bur, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Tagalog, Thai, Vietnamese Asian Survey Tagalog, Thai, Vietnamese Beijing Review Bur, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Thai, Vietnamese Business in Russia Russian China Quarterly Chinese China Today Chinese Contemporary Southeast Asia Bur, Chinese, Indonesian, Tagalog, Vietnamese Cultural Survival Quarterly General Current History General The Economist General Egypt Arabic Far Eastern Economic Review Arabic, Bur, Chinese, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Tagalog, Turkish, Persian, Pashto, Dari, Vietnamese Foreign Affairs General Greek Diplomatic Life Greek International Affairs General International Journal of Middle Eastern Studies Arabic, Hebrew, Persian, Turkish, Ukrainian
DLIFLC Libraries Home Bur, chinese, japanese, Korean, Vietnamese. Journal of asian Studies Alb,Bulgarian, Czech, Hun, Latvian, lit, Rum, Russian, Serbian Croatian, Slovene, http://dlilibrary.monterey.army.mil/Journals Culture.htm
Extractions: DEFENSE LANGUAGE INSTITUTE FOREIGN LANGUAGE CENTER LIBRARIES Catalog Home Library Account Access Contacts Library Services ... DLI Home Title Languages The Afghanistan Studies Journal Arabic, Persian, Pashto, Dari Americas Spanish, Portuguese Arabic Studies Quarterly Arabic, Persian, Pashto, Dari, Turkish, Hebrew Asian Affairs Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Thai, Vietnamese Asian Culture Quarterly Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Tagalog, Bur, Indonesian Asian Defence Journal Arabic, Chinese, Bur, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Tagalog, Thai, Vietnamese Asian Survey Tagalog, Thai, Vietnamese Beijing Review Bur, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Thai, Vietnamese Business in Russia Russian China Quarterly Chinese China Today Chinese Contemporary Southeast Asia Bur, Chinese, Indonesian, Tagalog, Vietnamese Cultural Survival Quarterly General Current History General The Economist General Egypt Arabic Far Eastern Economic Review Arabic, Bur, Chinese, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Tagalog, Turkish, Persian, Pashto, Dari, Vietnamese Foreign Affairs General Greek Diplomatic Life Greek International Affairs General International Journal of Middle Eastern Studies Arabic, Hebrew, Persian, Turkish, Ukrainian
Asian Languages And Cultures Anthropology Art History asian Studies chinese Comparative literature Economics Section 01 TTH5 CAC Maynard. 01565315 japanese ABomb lit http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~easian/asianstudies/courses/spring2001.html
Asian Languages And Cultures 01165419, Readings Classic chinese lit. (chinese) PREREQ 01165302 or 01165322or 01565242, Modern japanese literature in Translation (English) http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~easian/lang-culture/courses/spring2003.html
Languagehat.com: ASIAN ACRONYMS. HighBeautiful BigSchool becomes Kodae lit. HighBig . In japanese, it s abit more complicated. chinese characters can be pronounced not just in their http://www.languagehat.com/archives/001089.php
Extractions: Main In a comment on the previous entry, Joel of Far Outliers mentioned a post he'd done on acronyms in Chinese and other Asian languages that were influenced by Chinese: In Chinese, for instance, acronyms are composed of the initial syllabic characters of (usually) two-syllable words. So, Peking (= Beijing) University, or Beijing Daxue [lit. 'NorthCapital BigSchool'] becomes Beida [lit. 'NorthBig']. In Korean, Korea University, or Koryo Taehak [lit. 'HighBeautiful BigSchool'] becomes Kodae [lit. 'HighBig']. In Japanese, it's a bit more complicated. Chinese characters can be pronounced not just in their Chinese loan forms, but as native Japanese words that mean (more or less) the same thing... So the acronym for Hiroshima University, or Hiroshima Daigaku [lit. 'WideIsland BigSchool'] becomes HiroDai [lit. 'WideBig']. The name Hiroshima is native Japanese (the Sino-Japanese pronunciation would be Koutou = Ch. Guangdao), but Daigaku is borrowed [= Ch. Daxue]. He goes on to give examples from Indonesian and Vietnamese (which uses initial letters, like English, rather than combining initial syllables). I would direct the interested reader to my own entry on the phrase gung ho , which has its origin in precisely this form of abbreviation.
Asian American Studies Program Any 200 or higher level course in chinese or japanese asian Cultures and Anthro 347; Comp lit 382T; Comparative Religion 280, 354T; Geography 340; http://www.fullerton.edu/catalog/academic_departments/asam.asp
Extractions: Jeffrey Brody (Communications), Mary Kay Crouch (English), Thomas Fujita Rony (Asian American Studies), Art Hansen (History), Mikyong Kim-Goh (Human Services), Dennis Lee (Asian American Studies), Eliza Noh (Asian American Studies), Michael Perez (Sociology), Eric Reyes (Asian American Studies), Yichin Shen (English and Comparative Literature), Son Kim Vo (Intercultural Development Center). ADVISER The program council consists of faculty and non-faculty from on and off-campus groups who provide direction and support for the Asian American Studies Program: Gloria Bogdan (Anthropology, Orange Coast College), Jeffrey Brody (Communications), Juana Chen (Asian American Studies), Mary Kay Crouch (English), Thomas Fujita Rony (Asian American Studies), Angela Gee (Management), Art Hansen (History), Craig K. Ihara (Philosophy), Richard Jong (Asian American Studies), Ellen Junn (Child Development), Daniel Kee (Psychology), Mikyong Kim-Goh (Human Services), Trent Nguyen (Human Services), Eliza Noh (Asian American Studies), Michael Perez (Sociology), Eric Reyes (Asian American Studies), Sherri Sawicki (English), Yichen Shen (English), Susan Shoho (Gerontology), Sora Tanjasiri (Kinesiology), Jie Tian (Library), Son Kim Vo (Intercultural Development Center)
DIVERSITY INITIATIVE - Courses lit 4931 Black Women Writers of the African Diaspora (cross listed with lit PHP 3840 chinese japanese Philosophy REL 3313 Sources of Modern asian http://www.fiu.edu/orgs/diversity/courses.htm
Asian And Middle Eastern Languages And Literatures Incoming firstyear students with any background in Arabic, chinese, japanese or No knowledge of the japanese language required. Dist lit; WCult NW. http://www.dartmouth.edu/~reg/courses/desc/amel.html
Extractions: Skip to main content You may be using a Web browser that does not support standards for accessibility and user interaction. Find out why you should upgrade your browser for a better experience of this and other standards-based sites... Dartmouth Home Search Index Dartmouth Home ... Descriptions Chair: Dennis Washburn Professors S. Allan, L. H. Glinert; Associate Professors S. Blader, J. Dorsey, H. N. Kadhim, H. Mowry, D. Washburn; Assistant Professor D. Abouali; Instructor J. Smolin; Senior Lecturers M. Ishida, A. Li, J. B. Rudelson, I. Watanabe; Lecturer I. B. Ben-Moshe; Visiting Associate Professor Y. Li. Placement examinations for students with background in Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, or Korean will be scheduled as follows for the 05-06 academic year, on September 15, 8 - 10:30 am. Consult the orientation week schedule for details. Major Options for Asian and Middle Eastern Languages and Literatures Option 1. The major in language and literature Prerequisite for all languages: 23 or the equivalent The major consists of 11 courses: 10 [Note: these introductory courses are taught in English. The department offers Arabic 10, Chinese 10, Hebrew 10, and Japanese 10; students must take the offering that corresponds to the language they are studying for the major (e.g. students of Arabic must take Arabic 10, students of Japanese must take Japanese 10, etc.).]
East Asian Studies - Graduate Handbook - Doctoral Programs chinese Students must attain fluency in chinese. japanese - Proficiency in Modern specialists will take 2 modern lit. seminars and 1 pre-modern lit. http://eas.web.arizona.edu/handbook/doctoral.html
Extractions: Return to Main Table of Contents The same general conditions regarding preparation and admission noted for the M.A. program apply to the doctoral program. However, candidates for admission to the doctoral program must have a 3.5 GPA. Candidates for admission to the doctoral program must have the support of one faculty member within whose general area the student proposes to work. Information on requirements and procedures for admission is available from the Graduate College and the department. The department may admit a student with a B.A. directly into one of the Ph.D. programs if that student shows exceptional promise in his or her field and if there is strong backing from at least one faculty member. In such cases, the student is responsible for fulfilling all normal requirements for the appropriate M.A. program before beginning work for the Ph.D. China-Area Ph.D. Program
Internet Resources For East Asian Studies Choose Subject, Anthropology, asian Lang/lit, History (World) service issplit into categories of chinese, japanese, Korean, and East asian Studies. http://www2.lib.udel.edu/subj/eastasia/internet.htm
Bates College | German, Russian, And East Asian Lang/Lit blank image, blank image, Students of German, Russian, and East asian languages The curricula in chinese, japanese, German, and Russian emphasize the http://www.bates.edu/GREA.xml?dept=GREA
East Asian Languages & Civilizations News 2001 Bryna M. TuftBA, asian Studies, chinese Hilary A. WadeBA, japanese Kong Haili (Ph.D., Comp lit, chinese track, 1994) is currently associate professor http://www.colorado.edu/ealc/deptnews/news01.html
Extractions: Top of page Newsletter Contents EALC Home EALC invited the Chinese Student Association to join in sponsoring the annual Chinese New Year's Party on February 1. Great food, student demonstrations, and activities organized by the Chinese Student Association made this event highly successful. Many people attended: American and international students who study Chinese, American and Chinese teachers, Chinese students at CU. After the dinner, American students and Chinese students performed songs, did Chinese Kongfu, and played some interesting games concerning Chinese culture. All of those attending enjoyed the celebration very much. Top of page Newsletter Contents EALC Home With outstanding support from all of our CU sponsors, including Pablo Kjolseth, director of the International Film Series at CU, the department held a film symposium, spread over five weeks in the fall, and a conference on Japanese Women Filmmakers from October 5-7, 2000. Films shown included Tanaka Kinuyo's Eternal Breast and Girls of the Night , Hidari Sachiko's The Far Road , Kawase Naomi's Moe no Suzaku , and Hamano's In Search of Osaki Midori . Keynote speakers included Kawase Naomi, one of Japan's most important filmmakers, and Professor Keiko McDonald of Pittsburgh University, which held a similar conference in conjunction with ours. A lively group of scholars, students, and filmmakers from Japan, Canada, Austria, Belgium, and the U.S. gathered to hear speakers and discuss papers and films in both English and Japanese, often with simultaneous interpretation. The topics were wide-ranging, and various filmmakers spoke about their work, often in a very personal way. It was a rewarding event for the participants, and there are hopes of holding a similar conference in the future, perhaps on the wider topic of Gender and Film.
East Asian Languages & Civilizations News 2000 Sponsored by EALC and ALTEC, the first chinesejapanese Language Contest was held on lit. chinese track, 1994) received tenure at Swarthmore College. http://www.colorado.edu/ealc/deptnews/news00.html
Extractions: Third-year Japanese students have contributed articles about Boulder written in Japanese to www.BoulderCoUSA.com, a cybermarketing website run by Kei Izawa and his company, Unkai.com. The project team provides services to create web sites in Japanese and offers servicesmarket research, Japanese search engine registration, product brochures in Japanese, etc.to promote those sites to targeted segments in Japan. Top of page Newsletter Contents EALC Home Profs. Madeline Spring and Chao Fang-yi worked with TAs in the Chinese program to organize a Chinese New Year's Celebration to welcome in the Year of the Dragon. There was lots of good food, and students and TAs from all levels of Chinese classes participated. A talent show, which included a martial arts demonstration, singing, the reciting of poetry, and a special erhu performance topped off the evening's festivities. Top of page Newsletter Contents EALC Home Sponsored by EALC and ALTEC, the first Chinese-Japanese Language Contest was held on April 19. It provided an incentive to the 37 contestants to develop communication skills vital to students studying the target languages. At Level One contestants performed skits; Level Two students gave an interpretation, and Level Three participants presented a research paper. Top of page Newsletter Contents EALC Home Nancy J. Andrews
AGNSW: New Asian Galleries Cantilevered on top of the original asian gallery, when lit at night it glows range in date from the 9th to 19th century and include chinese, japanese, http://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/media/archives_2003/new_asian_galleries
Extractions: EXHIBITIONS EVENTS COLLECTION RESEARCH ... ABOUT US DHTML_MENU_rel_path = 'http://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/squizlib/dhtml_menu/images/'; Current Releases Coming Archives 2005 Archives 2004 ... Archives 2000 'THE ART OF ASIA IS THE ART OF HALF THE WORLD.' Edmund Capon, Director, Art Gallery of New South Wales The additional 720 square metres gives a central space dedicated to temporary exhibitions as well as providing more space for the permanent collection. So wide and diverse is the culture of Asia, that the imperative was a flexible space to present a challenging range of temporary exhibitions of Asian art - contemporary and traditional. This has been achieved, and the galleries respond to all the possibilities of exhibiting - from stone sculptures seen in filtered sunlight, to fragile silks requiring soft light and shadows. Clear lines, flexible spaces and variable light ensure that all types of art can be shown to their best advantage. As well as the new Asian galleries, this major building project includes alterations to the original Asian gallery, a temporary exhibition space - the Rudy Komon gallery - above the Art Gallery entrance foyer, with views of the ornately carved Vernon arches, new conservation studios, a café, a restaurant and dedicated function area with spectacular harbour views, and refurbishment of the administration area. The New South Wales State Government provided grants of $16 million for the Art Gallery of New South Wales to undertake this major building project.
Syllabus For ENGL 313: Asian Literature ***chinese and japanese literature will be studied after the Midterm exam. found in traditional asian lit that we have so far discussed in class. http://homepages.wmich.edu/~cpermpik/313syll.html
Extractions: Syllabus for ENGL 313: Asian Literature Dr. Chotiros Permpikul 2.00-3.15, 2204 Dunbar 4.00-5.15, 3031 Brown Office Phone: 387-2620 E-mail address: cpermpik@wmich.edu Office Hours: Wed 12.00-13.50 or by appointment Instructorís office: 917 Sprau Tower Course Objectives The course aims at providing you with some basic knowledge of Asian Literature, most especially certain Asian ways of thinking which are different from the Western ways. Examples reflected in the assigned readings are the Confucian ideology of law and order, ancestor worship and filial duty; the identification of detachment of self from the physical world with the Ultimate Reality in and the law of karma in Hinduism; the Japanese quest for aesthetic beauty as displayed in relationship between man and nature, etc. By the end of the course you should g ain some understanding and appreciation of representative works of ancient and contemporary Chinese, Indian and Japanese literature in their cultural context. In addition to this, we may study a few Asian films to supplement the course, when and if time permits.
Section 43.5 - Faculty Of Arts - University Of Alberta East asian Studies. a. Comparative literature C lit 100 or 201 and 202. follows *18 in either chinese or japanese language, *9 in chinese or japanese http://www.registrar.ualberta.ca/calendar/Undergrad/Arts/Honors-Major-Minor-Requ
Extractions: Print This Page Undergraduate Programs Faculty of Arts BA Honors and BA Major/Minor Requirements Anthropology Art and Design Christian Theology Classics Comparative Literature Drama East Asian Studies Economics English ... Writing Comparative Literature is an interdisciplinary program administered by the Office of Interdisciplinary Studies, Faculty of Arts. for admission requirements. for Faculty regulations concerning the Honors program. The following programs are available: Comparative Literature with an emphasis on two languages and literatures. a. C LIT 100 or 201 and 202; C LIT 206 and 207. An additional 24 in Comparative Literature. Of these 24, a minimum of 6 must be at the 400-level. As well, C LIT 499 ( 3) Honors Tutorial and Essay must be taken in the final year of the program. b. 24 in each of the two languages and literatures. Of these 24, a minimum of 6 must be at the 400-level in each language and literature. Comparative Literature with an emphasis on one language and literature other than English. a.
Lit Lang asian LITERATURE COURSES. chinese CURRICULA. chinese COURSES. japanese COURSES asian Literature chinese (Mandarin) japanese Korean. Civilization http://www.students.ucr.edu/9596Catalog/LitLang1.html
Acalog4 ACMS: Program Information The asian Studies program offers both major and minor specialization. LING 7 chinese and japanese Calligraphy and Language Credits 3 sh; lit 80 http://bulletin.hofstra.edu/preview_program.php?catoid=6&poid=535
Extractions: Please confirm courses by referring to course bulletin. Course No. Title Days / Time Instructor Art History 310 Ancient Art: Ancient Egypt / Near East MW 11:00-12:20 Yasin Comp Lit 271-3 Japanese Literature in Translation TTH 11:00-12:20 Lyons Comp Lit 274-1 Chinese Literature MW 3:00-4:20 Econ 361 International Trade MW 12:30-2:00 Olszewski English 275 Introduction to Asian American Literature TTH 11:00-12:30 Wang French 366 Southeast Asian Literature and Culture TTH 2:00-3:00 Winston History 270 Middle Eastern / Islam Civilization MWF 10:00 Petry