Department of History Spring 2000
HISTORY 251: THE MAKING OF MODERN ASIA
Instructor: SANJAY JOSHI Meeting time: T-Th. 9:35 - 10:50
Office: LA 206 Office Hours: T-Th. 11:00-12:00,
Phone: 523-6216 or 523-4378Wed. 11:00 - 12:30, and by appt.
Web page: http://jan.ucc.nau.edu/~sj6E-mail: Sanjay.Joshi@nau.edu
Course
Description
This course examines transformations in
the lives of people and governments in Asia from the 18th century to the
mid-20th century. Focusing on China, India, and Japan, we explore a history
where all three societies, in different ways, were brought in contact with,
and then subordinated to the interests of more powerful Western powers.
We examine the transformations these societies underwent as a result of
their interaction with Western colonialism, and the different strategies
they adopted to overcome and/or adapt to the changes they confronted. The
first part of the course deals with the emergence of Western hegemony over
India, Japan, and China. The second part of the course will look at changes
that came with foreign interventions. The third and final part of the course
examines the very different results produced by interactions with and/or
resistance to colonialism in India, China, and Japan. Taken together these
histories of colonialism and nationalism, social reform and revolution,
seek to explain the factors contributing to the making of modern Asian
society and politics.
Course Structure/Approach
The format of the course consists of lectures and formal and informal discussions. Students are encouraged to raise questions and make comments throughout the course.
Required Textbooks
1. Sugata Bose and Ayesha Jalal. Modern South Asia: History, Culture, Political Economy. London and New York: Routledge, 1997.
2. Ranbir Vohra. China's Path to Modernization. Third Edition. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 2000.
3. Kenneth B. Pyle. The Making of Modern Japan. Second Edition. Lexington, Mass., Toronto: 1996.
IN ADDITION, other sections of books, journal articles, short stories, films or videos may be put on reserve in Cline Library and will be REQUIRED reading or viewing for this course.
Assessment
of Outcomes
The course uses
primarily three types
of instruments to assess your achievement of the learning objectives listed
above: two examinations ( 20% and 25% of the total points for the course),
one medium-length paper (30% of the total course grade), and the notes
you prepare to participate in class discussions (20%). Five percent of
your course grade will be evaluated on the basis of your class and discussion
participation. The examinations will consist of short answer, essay, and
map questions to test your grasp of factual details and interpretive insights
into modern Asian history. The paper is designed to test your ability to
critically read and think creatively about the material on modern Asian
history, and to be able to present it effectively in appropriate prose.
The discussion notes are a test of your ability to think creatively and
critically about the subject, and to present your own arguments on a subject
well supported by data.
Learning
Portfolio
The paper as well
as your discussion notes could form a part of your learning portfolio.
Assignments and
Exams
ITerm
Paper
II.Mid-Term and Final Exams: There will be one final and one mid term exam. The exams may have an essay component, as well as other sections including short-answer or map-based questions.
III. Scheduled Discussions: TWO formal discussions have been scheduled as part of this course. The class will be divided into small groups to facilitate discussion. You will be given specific questions or topics around which to frame the discussions a few days in advance of the discussion day. On the day of the discussion you need to come prepared with TWO copies of your notes on the discussion topics. You will hand one copy of that to me, and use the other to participate in the discussion.
Grading System
Grades for the course will be determined
according to the following criteria:
Term Paper 30%
Final Exam 25%
Mid-Term Exam 20%
Written Discussion Notes 20%
Class & Discussion Participation 05%
TOTAL FOR COURSE 100%
The grading scale for the course will be
as follows:
90%+ = A; 80 - 89%= B; 70-79%=
C; 60-69%= D; below 60%= F.
Frequent absence from class may result in grade penalties
Course Policies
ALL WRITTEN ASSIGNMENTS ARE DUE IN CLASS
PLEASE NOTE: I do not give extensions, incompletes, or make-up exams, except in cases allowed for by University Policy.
Plagiarism or other forms of academic dishonesty will not be tolerated in any of the assignments, and will result in failing the course. Please consult the section on "Academic Integrity" in the NAU Policy Statements appended to this syllabus for further details. IT IS THE STUDENTS' RESPONSIBILITY TO FAMILIARIZE HERSELF/HIMSELF WITH THESE MATTERS AS DEFINED BY THE UNIVERSITY.
Attendance
and Punctuality
Absences and lack
of punctuality will be penalized at the Instructor's discretion. Whatever
your reasons for arriving late or missing a class, it is YOUR RESPONSIBILITY
to arrange to meet or call a classmate and find out what happened in that
class. I encourage you to form small "study groups" or at least make a
"class buddy" whom you can contact for information about classes missed,
study with for the exams, or more generally discuss the proceedings of
the class.
In General
I expect you to
come to class having done all the required reading and prepared to engage
in discussion. I also expect you to be motivated to learn about the subject
and to improve your skills as a historian. I will do my best to help you
understand more about the subject. What you make of this course however,
is ultimately entirely up to you.
PROVISIONAL COURSE SCHEDULE (Subject to Modification)
Introduction
January 18 Introduction to the Course.
PART I: Toward Western Hegemony
January 20 Introduction to India: Region and Society
Readings: Bose and Jalal, pp. 1-7 (from Ch.1), 12-22 (Ch. Two) and SKIM 23-34 (Ch. 3)
January 25-Feb. 1 India: The Emergence and Consolidation of British Power
Readings: Bose and Jalal, pp. 57-87.
Tentative Schedule: Jan. 25: pp. 34-56 (ch. 4-5)
Jan. 27: pp. 57-75 (ch. 6-7)
Feb. 01: pp. 76-96 (ch. 8-9)
February 3-10 China: The Manchu Monarchy, Traditional Chinese Society, and pressure from the West.
Readings: Vohra, chapters 1, 2, and 3. (One chapter per class)
February 15-22 Japan: The Tokugawa Shogunate and it's downfall.
Readings: Pyle, pp. 1-74.
Tentative Schedule: Feb. 15: pp. 1-27 (ch. 1-2)
Feb. 17: pp. 29-54 (ch. 3-4)
Feb. 22: pp. 57-74 (ch.5)
February 24 Comparative Colonial Experiences and Early Responses.
Readings: Revise all chapters from Bose and Jalal, Vohra, and Pyle.
February 29 MID TERM EXAMINATION
March 2 Discussion #1
March 7-9 SPRING BREAK (by this time you
WILL have earned a break!!)
PART II: Colonialism, Reform, and Nationalism
March 14-16 Colonialism and Early Response in India
Readings: Bose and Jalal, pp. 97-145
Tentative Schedule: March 14: pp. 97-106 and SKIM 107-125 (Ch. 11)
March 16: pp. 126-145
March 21-28 Meiji Japan.
Readings: Pyle, chapters 6, 7, 8. (One chapter a class)
March 30-April 6 China: The Nationalist Revolutions
Readings: Vohra, chapters 4, 5, and 6. (One chapter a class)
April 11 Comparative Nationalisms and Discussion
#2
PART III: Asia in the Modern World: Revolutions and Empires
April 13-18 India: Toward Independence.
Readings: Bose and Jalal, pp. 146-199.
Tentative Schedule: April 13: SKIM pp. 146-155 (ch. 14), READ pp. 156-164.
April 15: pp. 165-189 (ch. 15) and SKIM pp. 190-200 (ch. 16)
April 20-25 Japan: Toward Authoritarianism and Imperialism
Readings: Pyle, chapters 9, 10. (One chapter a class)
April 27-May 2 China: From Nationalist to Socialist Revolution.
Readings: Vohra, chapters 7, 8. (One chapter a class)
May 4 End of Term Review
MAY
9 7:30-9:30 AM FINAL EXAM
Thematic Focus
Valuing the Diversity of Human Experience: This period of Asian history demonstrates the ways in which a variety of social groups, economic processes, and cultural influences contributed to the making of modern Asia. The interaction between the West and indigenous societies in Asia produced new forms of economic organization, new politics, new ideologies , and new ways of communicating these to a larger body of people. This interaction also produced three very different forms of political, economic, and ideological systems in the three Asian societies we study. This course seeks to examine the historical processes that led to the emergence of a popular Communist leadership in China, an oligarchy committed to the market economy in Japan, and an elite liberal-democratic leadership in India which tried to run a path between a state-controlled economy and free market principles. Looking for both the similarities and the differences in the experience of China, Japan, and India, this course aims at understanding the factors that link Asian histories together, and those that make them distinct. In this way the course compels students to reflect on the similarities and dissimilarities between these segments of the human experience they learn about in the course and others they may already be somewhat familiar with.
Technology
and its Impact: Technology, broadly defined, is crucial to the understanding
of the changes which produced modern Asia. The course will explore not
only the development of new technologies, but also ways in which technological
innovations shaped the exercise of power in modern Asia. This
involves, for instance, studying the importance of industrial technology
that enabled the Western powers to secure direct or indirect control over
much of Asia, and also the movements that this inspired among Asian nationalists
to "catch up" with such technological prowess. The course examines the
emergence of new technologies of economic planning and state power in modern
Asia, as new states sought to exercise greater control over the lives of
their subjects, exemplified perhaps by the colonial state in India, but
also the Meiji and post-Meiji states in Japan and the modern nation-state
in China which supplanted the ancient monarchical empire in the twentieth
century. However, the course highlights the social and political contexts
of technological changes in Asia. We therefore examine the ambivalence
towards technological progress that was characteristic of colonial societies
in Asia, and the different ways in which the three Asian societies negotiated
and overcame this ambivalence to the use of Western technology.
Distribution
Block: Social and Political Worlds.
Essential
Skills: Critical reading, creative thinking, effective speech and
writing, critical thinking, use of Technology for Learning.
Course Objectives
By the end of the
course, students will not only be familiar with the broad contours of the
political, social, and cultural history of Asia from ca. 1750 to ca. 1945,
but also be able to do the following:
a. Critically read
and interpret histories of India, China, and Japan and make arguments about
the connections between these histories. (Critical reading and thinking,
creative thinking)
b. Combine evidence
from a variety of historical sources to get a sense of life in the times
and places they are reading about. (Creative thinking)
c. Be able to present
a cogent argument well supported by evidence in written essays, discussion
notes, and in discussion groups. (Critical reading and thinking, creative
thinking, effective speech and writing)
d. Use traditional printed material and selective use of the Internet or other digital sources to gather information. (Use of technology for learning)