Postgraduate Courses
a) Under a policy approved by the Senate, exceptions to the general University policy stating that English is the medium of instruction will be permitted when the courses are related to the area of Chinese studies and are approved by the School of Humanities and Social Science. Courses approved to be taught in Chinese carry a [PU] or [CA] notation in the course description, which indicates the spoken language used in teaching: [PU] stands for Putonghua; and [CA] for Cantonese.
b) Courses marked with a [C] in the course description are not taught in Chinese but may require students to read materials in Chinese. Students who have difficulty reading materials in Chinese should consult the instructor concerned prior to enrolling in these courses.
- HUMA 5160Chinese Phonetics and Phonology[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 516Exclusion(s)HMMA 5002Medium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThis course is an introduction to the study of sounds in Mandarin Chinese. The course will cover fundamental concepts in phonetics and phonology and compare the sounds of Mandarin with those of other languages. Other topics include: methodology, the typology, learning and evolution of sounds, the subgrouping of Chinese dialects, etc.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Describe the characteristics of sounds in Mandarin and by extension to other languages with the learnt concepts.
- 2.Apply various methods to the study of sounds in languages.
- 3.Identify the rules governing sound change in languages.
- HUMA 5170Chinese Historical Lexicology[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 517Medium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThis course provides a theoretical and practical introduction to Chinese historical lexicology, dealing with various issues of Chinese words including word formation, semantic structures and sense relations of words, x-bar analysis of Chinese words, lexicalization, cultural component of words, and lexical variation among dialects of Chinese.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Be familiar with the fundamentals of Chinese historical lexicology.
- 2.Distinguish these basic concept pairs including zi (Chinese character) and word, word syllable and structural word, lexical meaning and grammatical meaning, and word structure and word formation.
- 3.Have an overall understanding of Chinese word development over history.
- 4.Be equipped with new approaches and methodologies including sememic analysis, prosodic approach to Chinese words and x-b analysis of Chinese words.
- 5.Be familiar with the methods adopted by traditional scholars in this field.
- HUMA 5180Chinese Historical Morphology[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 518Medium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThis course aims to provide a rigorous and critical introduction to Chinese historical morphology, dealing with various issues including affixing, reduplication, derivation by ablaut and tone change, formation of etymological words, interaction between morphological and phonological components. For comparative purposes, this course will also deal with the relevant morphological issues in modern dialects.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Obtain a good comprehension of the present research development of Chinese historical morphology.
- 2.Get familiar with the pioneering works in the field, thereby understanding the most present progress, the new approaches, and the issues that remain unsolved.
- 3.Well informed of the facts in the Chinese morphological system, especially those unfound in other languages.
- 4.Enhance students’ learning and expressive abilities through discussion, presentation and investigation.
- 5.Expected to be very much involved in the course through discussion, presentation, and investigation, which will help in developing learning abilities.
- HUMA 5230Languages of China: Anthropological and Cognitive Dimensions[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 523, HUMA 600DExclusion(s)HMMA 5008Medium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionA cross-disciplinary discussion of issues pertaining to social, historical, cultural, and cognitive aspects of languages and dialects of China, approached from perspectives of areal linguistics, linguistic anthropology, and cognitive linguistics.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Enhance awareness of linguistic and cultural diversity in China.
- 2.Explain how language as a complex adaptive system is shaped by sociohistorical, cultural, and cognitive processes.
- 3.Identify the structural components of Chinese languages that are determined or influenced by extralinguistic factors.
- 4.Apply the core concepts, theories, and methods employed by cognitive-functional linguists and linguistic anthropologists in the analysis of structuring principles of Chinese and non-Han minority languages of China.
- 5.Analyze Chinese languages, particularly their grammars and lexicons, in a cross-linguistic and cross-cultural comparative perspective.
- HUMA 5240Chinese Dialectology[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 524Medium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThis course will provide an introductory survey of the phonology of Chinese dialects, including Mandarin, Wu, Xiang, Gan, Hakka, Yue and Min.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Obtain a holistic perspective on linguistic diversity of China.
- 2.Understand the geographical distribution, grouping/subgrouping, synchronic characteristics and diachronic evolution of major regional varieties of the Chinese language.
- 3.Be acquainted with fundamental concepts, theories, and methods in the field of Chinese dialectology.
- 4.Analyze dialectal data of Chinese from synchronic and diachronic perspectives, and evaluate controversial issues in the study of Chinese dialects.
- HUMA 5270Cantonese Linguistics[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 527Medium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThis course deals with various issues of Cantonese, including sounds and tones, word formation, syntax and pragmatics. It will review the history of the language by studying texts from the early 19th century to the present; and examine the current linguistic changes that have redefined Hong Kong speech as a special variety of Cantonese.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Acquire the basic concepts and skills in conducting linguistic research.
- 2.Analyze the structure of the Cantonese language, and by extension other languages, with the learned skills and analytic tools.
- 3.Articulate the major linguistic changes undergone by Cantonese since the 19th century.
- HUMA 5280Cantonese Grammar in Contemporary Linguistic Theories[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 528, HUMA 600FMedium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionA survey of contemporary linguistic theories with special emphasis on the application of these theories to the study of Cantonese grammar.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Understand the characteristics of the Cantonese language from a linguistic perspective.
- 2.Acquire knowledge of contemporary linguistic concepts and theories.
- 3.Examine a linguistic phenomenon from different perspectives critically.
- HUMA 5300Chinese Literary History[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 530Exclusion(s)HMMA 5003Reading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThis course aims at familiarizing students with the history of Chinese literature from literary, historical and theoretical perspectives. Emphasis is on the recent scholarship of major genres in Chinese literary history and their interactions in the context of cultural tradition.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Identify, explain and use cultural concepts and literary theories.
- 2.Analyze significant literary phenomena and texts.
- 3.Analyze Chinese literature and culture in a global and cross-cultural comparative perspective based on the knowledge and skills of the Humanities.
- 4.Conduct original cultural research using an enhanced knowledge of Chinese literature gained from the course.
- HUMA 5310Traveling Texts and Images: Modern Chinese Literature and Print Culture[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 6001UReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThis course employs an interdisciplinary approach to examine literary and pictorial magazines and journals from the late Qing to the Republican era. In light of contemporary theories of the public sphere, travel, and the interaction between image and text, we will explore critical issues around the innovative writing practices associated with new print media, the formation of a literary public space, the role of the editor, publisher and reader, as well as the dynamics between image and word.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Enhance their critical thinking abilities and writing skills.
- 2.Gain an overview of image and literati cultures during the late Qing and Republican eras.
- 3.Master some fundamental concepts in literary and cultural studies.
- 4.Learn how to design a research project through a critically refreshing perspective.
- 5.Acquire professional skills (writing, speaking and thinking) and prepare for professions in various cultural fields.
- HUMA 5330Traditional Chinese Literary Theory and Criticism[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 533Medium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionAims to familiarize students with the traditional Chinese theories and criticism of literature; advantages and limitations of the various modes of discourses such as prefaces to books, poetry-talks, poems on poetry, literary anthologies, stray remarks and commentaries.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Understanding the different stages and their features of the development of Chinese literary theories.
- 2.Having exposure to current research trends and methodologies.
- 3.Conducting preliminary research.
- HUMA 5340Modern Chinese Literary Criticism[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 534Medium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionExamines the transformation of Western literary theories in the Chinese context. Focuses on practices of individual Chinese literary theorists and the relationship between literary criticism and socio-cultural criticism from historical and comparative perspectives.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Examine closely the development of Chinese literary criticism from the 1960s to the present.
- 2.Identify the theoretical trends that have influenced and shaped the scholarship on modern Chinese literature and culture.
- 3.Analyze critically representative critics’ application of literary theories in their various interpretations of Chinese modernity against historical, cultural and political backgrounds.
- 4.Understand the cultural significance of literary criticism.
- HUMA 5350Socialist Film Culture[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 6001XDescriptionThis graduate course concentrates on the film culture in socialist China (1949-1976). The major theoretical problematic of the course resides in the convoluted relationship between totalitarian politics and film as propaganda and art. Focusing on live-action feature films, model operas, animated films, and documentaries, this course will explore aspects of film industry, aesthetics, authorship, projection and viewing, soundscape, and internationalism. It will also discuss conceptual issues regarding national identity, ethnicity, gender, children, machines, and animals against the backdrop of an authoritarian regime. Following a chronological order, the course will begin with the socialist transition in 1949, and then move to the Seventeen Years (1949-1966) and the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976).Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Track the development of socialist cinema under Mao.
- 2.Be familiar with major film directors, their representative work, and the socio-historical context in which they emerged.
- 3.Analyze particular films (identify their directors, analyze their aesthetics, filming technology/techniques, visual and auditory styles, and socio-historical condition).
- 4.Understand related theories and concepts.
- 5.Use a professional and theoretical vocabulary to discuss films.
- 6.Sharpen critical thinking and enhance academic writing skills in film studies.
- 7.Enter the field of socialist film studies, familiar with major debates and arguments, identify a gap in existing scholarship, formulate an original research question, complete an innovative research paper that will make an intervention in the field.
- HUMA 5360History and Theory of Comparative Literature[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 536, HUMA 601JReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThis course offers a critical assessment of the development and methodology of the comparative study of literature as an academic discipline with special emphasis on Chinese-Western comparative studies.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Have a clear idea of the emergence and development of Comparative Literature as a discipline.
- 2.Apply the methodologies of Influence studies, Thematic studies, and Genre studies to discuss literary relations between different texts.
- 3.Analyze critically the issues of comparative literature related to translation, identity, intertextually, and globalization.
- 4.Formulate their own comparative perspective in a research project on literary texts from different cultural traditions.
- HUMA 5370Animation Theories[3-0-0:3]DescriptionAnimation existed as optical toys long before the birth of cinema, but it was not until the digital age that animation experienced its explosive boom. Recently animation theories began to emerge as a new field of research, offering critical interventions in film studies and even challenging our conventional views of the world. This course explores various theoretical issues in animation studies, such as movement, stasis, affect, automation and agency, TV serialization, digitality, media mix, sound, authorship and spectatorship, animals, race, gender, cuteness, animism and environment. Animated films made in China, Japan, and other parts of the world will be analyzed as case studies.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Analyze particular animated films, identify their directors, technology/techniques, audio-visual styles, and socio-historical condition.
- 2.Use a theoretical film vocabulary to discuss animated films.
- 3.Sharpen critical thinking and develop perceptive insights of our society through critical analyses of animated films.
- 4.Develop a strong sense of teamwork and social responsibility.
- 5.Conduct independent research and write a research paper.
- HUMA 5410Modern Chinese Fiction: Comparative Perspectives[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 6001AMedium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionIn this course, we will approach a number of representative fictions by contemporary Sinophone authors and their foreign counterparts. Through a parallel and comparative reading on the storytelling, form, and content, this course will analyze the differences and diversity between the East and the West, as well as Chinese literature and world literature.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Identify, explain, and use cultural and literary concepts, theories, and models.
- 2.Analyze particular literary works and identify their stylistic and aesthetic attributes.
- 3.Develop knowledge and skills to approach fiction and stories through hand-on practice on Chinese culture and literature area.
- 4.Implement the knowledge of Chinese culture critically and analytically, enhance their creativity, writing and presentation skills, including writing a short novel independently.
- 5.Conduct original cultural and literary research and participate effectively in project teams using an enhanced knowledge of Chinese culture and literature gained from this course.
- HUMA 5440Contemporary Chinese Fiction[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 544Medium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionA critical study of development, trends, characteristics of the Chinese fiction of the People's Republic from the early 1980s to the present.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.To gain an overview of contemporary Chinese novels and recent critical interest.
- 2.To master some fundamental concepts in literary and cultural studies.
- 3.To design a research project through a critically refreshing perspective.
- HUMA 5450Taiwan and Hong Kong Fiction[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 545Medium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionA critical study of development, trends, characteristics of narrative literature in Taiwan and Hong Kong from the late 1960 to the present from cultural, historical, and gender perspectives.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Examine the development, trends, and characteristics of fiction in Taiwan and Hong Kong from the 1960s to the present in comparative perspective.
- 2.Understand the specific historical, socio-political, and linguistic contexts of both literary traditions.
- 3.Learn to read texts both aesthetically and critically as well as to demonstrate thoughtful readings in discussion and writing.
- 4.Experiment with various interpretive strategies drawn from current literary and cultural theories.
- HUMA 5490Liaozhai and Story Creation[3-0-0:3]Medium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionStrange Tales from a Chinese Studio, or Liaozhai Zhiyi, is the most outstanding short story collection in classical Chinese literature. Crafted by Pu Songling (1640-1715) during the Kangxi period of the Qing Dynasty, this book contains more than 500 stories and depicts an array of characters in the society, such as court officials, civilians, intellectuals, merchants, peasants, pawns, and labours. It tells various stories about fox fairies, ghosts, gods from heaven in spatial settings including city and village, earth and ocean, the human world and the hell. Strange Tales from a Chinese Studio also brings a rich touch of humanities in plurality and diversity. Accordingly, this course intends to evoke students' imaginability as well as creativity in novel creation through analyses on Pu Songling's Strange Tales from a Chinese Studio and investigations on the contemporary Chinese short stories and traditional Chinese literary cannons.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Develop a life-long love for reading and writing literature.
- 2.Develop an interest in literary classics and traditional Chinese literature, especially the academic interest in Chinese folk culture, which is an essential factor to be a further literature writer.
- 3.Be aware of the Chinese literary progression in history and the future of our mind and heart, and know Pu Songling’s story to excite them to be creative writers.
- 4.Write a piece of short story and develop their imagination and creativity.
- 5.Develop judging skill to prepare them to be literature writers and literature critics.
- HUMA 5510Pre-Modern Chinese History[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 551Exclusion(s)HMMA 5004 (prior to 2021-22)Reading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionExploration of major and substantive issues in pre-modern Chinese history. Approaches to the subject can be political, social, cultural, intellectual, or comparative.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Develop a comprehension of traditional Chinese culture and history from a comparative perspective.
- 2.Identify and describe the mainstream in the research, especially the latest development in the frontier.
- 3.Develop a critical view of sources and an independent perspective to approach the issues in discussion.
- 4.Demonstrate improved writing skills.
- HUMA 5520Modern Chinese History[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 552Reading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionExploration of major and substantive issues in modern Chinese history. Approaches to the subject can be political, social, cultural, intellectual, or comparative.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Analyze critically the post-modernist discourse of historical narrative.
- 2.Deconstruct the different historiographical traditions in official Chinese history in late-imperial and modern period.
- 3.Explain how political persuasions are implanted into official/semi-official narratives of modern historical events and characters through in-depth analysis of those late-Qing and Republican-time episodes and personalities presented in Chinese history textbooks and movies.
- 4.Learn and apply the skills of presenting one’s arguments in academic seminars and the techniques of writing a history paper appropriately.
- HUMA 5530Chinese Diasporas: A Global History[3-0-0:3]DescriptionBefore 1700, the Chinese population was concentrated in core areas of China Proper. Nonetheless,significant numbers of Chinese people moved to the frontiers of an expanding empire and across it borders, while Chinese families adapted to migration as a way of life. Critically employing the notion of "diasporas," this course traces this worldwide circulation of Chinese people over the ensuing three centuries.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Critically analyze contrasting categories and explanatory approaches to the history of Chinese migration: diaspora, Chinese overseas, transnationalism, Sinophone studies, and ethnic studies; push and pull factors, family strategies, and “cultures of migration”.
- 2.Analyze the role of family practices, social networks, and institutional formations in the shaping of Chinese migrant trajectories between 1700 and the present day.
- 3.Critically assess the importance of states, and national boundaries in particular, in shaping migration, and the conceptual categories of internal and external migration.
- 4.Clearly and persuasively convey an argument in a written essay.
- 5.In oral discussions, clearly summarize and effectively comment on historical primary sources, ethnographic observations, and scholarly interpretations.
- HUMA 5590Southwest China and Southeast Asia[3-0-0:3]Reading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThis course explores new ways of understanding the history of Southwest China and mainland Southeast Asia (SEA), 8th–19th centuries. In the past, Southwest China, particularly Yunnan, has been conceptualised as an area both remote from the Chinese political centre and isolated from the outside world, but an analysis of historical data concerning the formation of kingdoms and polities, trade routes, and the movement of people offers a different interpretation. It demonstrates that far from being isolated, the two areas overlap, and in reality are bonded by political, cultural and ethnic ties. Analysis of historical data provides a vibrant perspective for understanding Southwest China, not as an area at the margins of Chinese and SEA history, but as a vital link in a chain that connects SEA with the worlds of China and Tibet. Emphasis on interconnection highlights a fundamental relationship between both regions, and offers students a framework for understanding the increased presence of China in mainland SEA in recent years.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Demonstrate enhanced critical understanding of the history of Southwest China and mainland Southeast Asia in pre-modern times.
- 2.Critically understand the factors that have shaped China’s relations with the kingdoms and polities of mainland SEA.
- HUMA 5620Chinese Painting: Meanings and Uses[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 562Medium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThis course will examine Chinese painting from the Song through the Qing dynasties by categories based on function and meaning, trying to understand how, within each category, the forms of the painting carry a variety of private or public meanings and enable it to perform its symbolic, discursive, social or political functions.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Students will gain knowledge about the development of Chinese painting and the important concepts related to it meanings and functions throughout the dynasties.
- 2.Students will gain familiarity with the major methodologies adopted in researches on Chinese painting.
- 3.Improve their ability in conducting critical reading and discussion of studies on Chinese painting.
- 4.Apply the research methods they have learned to writing a research paper on a topic of their choice.
- HUMA 5625Painting and Modernity in China: Qing and After[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 6002FMedium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThis course examines the manifestations and expressions of modernity, both as artistic subjectivity and socioeconomic condition, in Chinese painting. Issues such as tradition and innovation, artistic autonomy and commercialization, reform and western influence, etc., will be discussed by looking at painters and their artistic productions from the late Qing to the post-Mao era.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Describe the development of Chinese painting in the 19th and 20th centuries.
- 2.Identify major issues in Chinese painting’s search for modernity.
- 3.Identify and use methodologies adopted in researches on Chinese painting.
- 4.Critique and discuss readings from secondary and primary sources.
- 5.Conduct independent research and write a research paper.
- HUMA 5630Digital Humanities[3-0-0:3]BackgroundExperience in Python is desirable but not required.DescriptionThe course introduces tools and methods of the Digital Humanities as they can be used in literary, historical, art historical, linguistic, and cultural studies. Students will learn how to apply data analysis, text mining, visualization tools and StoryMaps to explore a variety of research questions pertinent to the use, sharing and presentation of cultural and historical data. Special attention will be given to the application of such tools and methods to China-related subject areas.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Organize and manipulate data from various sources for humanities research.
- 2.Analyze data using Python for humanities research.
- 3.Use text mining to analyze large bodies of text.
- 4.Create data visualizations.
- 5.Create StoryMaps and Timeline.
- 6.Create online exhibition.
- 7.Complete a digital humanities project, and explain its significance to academic and lay audiences.
- HUMA 5655Contracts and Order in Chinese Local Society, 600-1911 AD[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 6002RReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThis course explores the role played by contracts and agreements in maintaining order in local society in pre-modern China, with an emphasis on demonstrating their value as sources for historical analysis. Main themes include use of contracts in daily life, categorization of contracts, functions of oral agreements and written contracts, settlement of disputes by customary law and civil litigation, power of local elites and the hierarchical background supporting contractual relations. Contracts and documents concern multi-ethnic areas in Southwest China, and students must possess the ability to read them in the original. Discussions will include not only deep reading of contracts, textual and historical analysis, but also their role as instruments of social control. This course is designed to guide students in creatively using contracts as sources for social history and is not a mere factual and descriptive account of Chinese contracts.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Analyze contractual relations in pre-modern China.
- 2.Recognize the complexity of factors behind the maintenance of social order in Pre-Modern Chinese local society.
- 3.Apply written contracts and agreements to the study of pre-modern Chinese social history.
- 4.Create arguments based on contracts and social agreements.
- 5.Evaluate research concerning contracts and local society in pre-modern China.
- HUMA 5660City and Urban Life in Late-Imperial and Modern China[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 566Reading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThe complexity of urban realities in the Chinese city will be revealed through examining the general perceptions and attitudes toward it, and studying its certain features of everyday existence.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Understand some of the fundamental principles (political, socio-economical, and cultural) in Han-Chinese capital city plans, city/town plans from antiquity to the Republican times.
- 2.Have learnt about the cultural differences between pre-modern European cities and Chinese cities, and the long-term social and political consequences of such divergence between the two regions, including the controversial debate on the different paths of development of civil society between the East and the West.
- 3.Obtain a better and a deeper understanding of selected historical topics and issues of modern China history covered in this course, such as the true impact of foreign imperialism on Chinese economy and society, characteristics of treaty-port cities, urban architecture in the early modern period, consumerism and nationalism in modern metropolis, urban problems in modern China, conditions of urban workers and labour unrest, expansion of the Party state in urban society, etc.
- 4.Master some of the basic skills of how to conduct historical research, and have the opportunity of learning the communicative skills by writing academic papers on a history subject appropriately, and to discuss their ideas with their peers in classroom.
- HUMA 5685Peasants and the Chinese Communist Party[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 6002PReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThis course examines the historical origins and evolution of the complex relations between Chinese peasants and the Chinese Communist Party in the 20th century. It explores some of the most important events, persistent issues, and recurring themes through the Communist revolution and post-revolution. It also introduces students to major competing interpretations by Chinese and western scholars.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Analyze the origin and process of the Chinese Communist revolution and the complex relations between peasants and the CCP.
- 2.Identify underlying dynamics, enduring patterns, and persistent issues of this relations.
- 3.Critically evaluate competing historical interpretations.
- 4.Apply analytical skills in writing.
- 5.Demonstrate oral presentation skills .
- HUMA 5690Major Issues in the History of U.S.-China Relations[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 602HReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThis course examines the historical origins and evolution of the complex relations between China and the United States from the early 19th century to the late 20th century. It explores some of the most important events and persistent issues in political, military, economic, and cultural relations between the two countries. It also introduces students to major competing interpretations by American and Chinese scholars.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Have gained a better understanding of U.S.-China relations from diplomatic, military, cultural, and personal perspectives.
- 2.Have identified underlying dynamics, enduring patterns, perceptions and/or misconceptions, and persistent issues, including Taiwan, North Korea, human rights, etc.
- 3.Have improved their critical skills in evaluating competing historical interpretations.
- 4.Have improved their analytical writing skills through completing three short writing assignments and a multi-draft historiographic paper.
- HUMA 5695Fascism[3-0-0:3]Exclusion(s)HUMA 602NDescriptionThis course aims to provide students with an introduction to the comparative study of twentieth-century dictatorships. Course readings will focus on Italian Fascism and National Socialism, but the overarching theoretical perspectives will be relevant to students of non-European dictatorships as well.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Understand the narrative history of Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany.
- 2.Master the theories that have been put forward by social scientists to explain the phenomenon of fascism.
- 3.Write thesis-driven analytical essays about the explanatory power of social scientific theory as applied to history.
- HUMA 5696The Culture of Capitalism[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 6002I, HUMA 602IDescriptionThis course surveys classic works of European social thought on the nature of capitalism and its relationship with culture, where culture is understood in both aesthetic and anthropological senses. What is capitalism? What kind of culture – attitudes, human relationships, and values – does it promote or presuppose? What impact has it made on cultural artifacts such as literature, art, philosophy, and social thought? These are some of the primary questions we shall consider. No previous background in European history or social thought is required.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Understand some of the fundamental arguments of modern social theory and their relevance for contemporary capitalism.
- 2.Evaluate the plausibility of these theories by judging them in the light of current historical and social scientific research.
- 3.Write thesis-driven analytical essays about primary sources in social theory.
- HUMA 5700Anthropological Studies of China[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 5540, HUMA 554Exclusion(s)HMMA 5006, MGCS 5031 (prior to 2018-19)Reading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionAnthropological consideration of Chinese culture and society. Special topics in Chinese anthropological studies, such as kinship, ethnicity, religion, and regional system.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Identify basic terms, concepts and theories in cultural anthropology about Chinese cultures and societies in ethnographic writings.
- 2.Write critical essays on the development of particular topics in anthropological studies of Chinese societies.
- 3.Develop appreciation and respect of fieldwork research, cultural diversity and identify the importance of cultural awareness for social interaction in contemporary daily life.
- HUMA 5750Family and Lineage in South China[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 575Reading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionStudies the basic social structure of South China in its cultural context, focusing on the creation of descent groups and their interaction with local societies and the state. Field research is required.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Master the basic concepts of family and lineage.
- 2.Understand the lineage model in Chinese context.
- 3.Master the technique of studying family organization.
- 4.Master field research techniques.
- HUMA 5755Ethnicity in Chinese Context[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 602GDescriptionThis course explores the issue of ethnicity in China in the context of a nation-state. Issues of nationalism, ethnic identities, and ethnic diversity will be examined from anthropological perspectives.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Understand the major ethnic issues such as identity formation, ethnic classification system, ethnic relations, assimilation, social conflicts, nation-building, and ethnic hierarchy.
- 2.Learn the approaches to study the multiethnic history of Chinese society, the Communist and Western theories on nationality and ethnicity, and the formation of distinctive minority cultures in the context of the Chinese nation-state.
- 3.Appreciate ethnic diversity in Chinese society.
- HUMA 5770Field Research: Theory and Practice[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 5550, HUMA 555Exclusion(s)MGCS 5031 (prior to 2018-19)DescriptionTheories, methods, and techniques in ethnographic field research are explored. Students conduct individual and group research projects.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Understand the anthropological approaches in field research.
- 2.Develop an appreciation of the diversity of human societies and understand the meanings of different cultural and social practices.
- 3.Acquire a holistic perspective in understanding human society.
- 4.Master the basic field research techniques.
- HUMA 5800Fundamentals of Chinese Philosophy[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 580Exclusion(s)HMMA 5007Medium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThis course is designed to guide students to in-depth researches into important issues in Chinese philosophy. The subject matter of the course may vary from one year to another depending on the particular interests of the instructors.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Analyze Chinese philosophy, discovering how Chinese philosophers make sense of the universe in which they live, how they position themselves both as individuals and as members of the society, and what ideals are they committed to, on both personal and societal levels.
- 2.Investigate into both the primary and secondary sources fundamental to the study of Chinese philosophy.
- 3.Present their points of view and comment on those of others in front of an audience.
- 4.Think critically when conducting their research on the subjects they choose and write professionally when delivering their findings.
- 5.Evaluate and apply the philosophies they have learnt to reflect upon their own lives and behavior.
- HUMA 5810Confucianism: Classical Period[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 581Medium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionPhilosophies of Confucius, Mencius and Hsiin Tzu. The major Confucian concepts that have significant impact on the formation of the Chinese minds.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Gain an overview of Classical Confucianism, discovering how pre-Ch’in Confucian thinkers made sense of the universe in which they lived, how they positioned themselves both as individuals and as members of the society, and what ideals were they committed to, on both personal and societal levels.
- 2.Familiarize themselves with both the primary and secondary sources fundamental to the study of Classical Confucianism.
- 3.Strengthen their ability to present their points of view and comment on those of others in front of an audience.
- 4.Learn how to think critically when conducting their research on the subject they choose and to write professionally when delivering their findings.
- HUMA 5820Confucianism: Song and Ming Periods[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 582Medium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionA course on the Song and Ming Neo-Confucianism as a revivalist movement. Close reading and exploration of a selected number of texts.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Have basic knowledge of the philosophies of some great Neo-Confucian thinkers and important concepts and issues of Neo-Confucianism.
- 2.Be familiar with secondary resource on the topic they have chosen for their term paper.
- 3.Acquire basic technique in giving a oral academic presentation and writing an academic paper.
- 4.Evaluate and apply the philosophies they have learnt to reflect upon their own lives and behavior.
- HUMA 5830Confucianism: Contemporary Period[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 583Medium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionA critical study of Contemporary Neo-Confucianism. Topics such as 'intellectual intuition', 'transcendent immanence', 'ineffability', and 'the new kingliness without' will be explored.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Have basic knowledge of the philosophies of the representative thinkers of Contemporary New Confucianism that enables them to have further research on the subject.
- 2.Acquire basic technique in giving an oral academic presentation and writing an academic paper.
- 3.Evaluate and apply the philosophies they have learnt to reflect upon their own lives, behavior and the problems of Chinese culture.
- HUMA 5840Chinese Buddhism[0-3-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 584Medium of Instruction[PU] PutonghuaReading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThis course provides a critical survey of the basic problems and ideas of various schools of Chinese Buddhism based on an analytical study of their writings. It includes an exposition of the characteristics of Chinese Buddhism through a comparative study with Indian Buddhism.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Have basic knowledge of the philosophies of some important schools and philosophical debates in Chinese Buddhism that enables them to have further research on the subject.
- 2.Be familiar with the secondary source on the topic they have chosen for their term paper.
- 3.Acquire basic technique in giving a oral academic presentation and writing an academic paper.
- 4.Evaluate and apply the philosophies they have learnt to reflect upon their own lives and behavior.
- HUMA 5842Buddhist Philosophy[3-0-0:3]Exclusion(s)MGCS 6000CDescriptionThis course provides an introduction to selected canonical and non-canonical sources of Buddhist thought and practice. It offers a critical examination of the philosophical ideas and arguments of Buddhist traditions in South Asia and East Asia and an exploration of the history of Buddhism with an emphasis on its basic doctrines, interpretive strategies, and philosophies.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Recognize key moments in the history of Buddhist philosophy in their Indian and Chinese developmental contexts and in light of their global implications.
- 2.Interpret Asian philosophical texts and sources.
- 3.Analyze the logical structures of arguments and systematic conceptions in either Buddhist or in related critical sources.
- 4.Express ideas of one’s own orally in discussions.
- 5.Develop skills in academic and philosophical writing.
- HUMA 5850Taoism[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 585, HUMA 603CDescriptionThis course introduces the students to the Taoist tradition through guiding them to the major Taoist texts, their representative commentaries, and the important scholarly works in the field.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Demonstrate an understanding of the philosophies of some important schools of Taoism.
- 2.Analyze some key philosophical claims and concepts related to themes in Taoism.
- 3.Critically evaluate some of the original texts, commentaries and secondary literature in Taoism.
- HUMA 5900Fundamentals of Comparative Philosophy[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 590Reading Material[C] Require Chinese readingDescriptionThis course invites students to such comparative philosophical themes as Transcendent and Immanent, Fate and Free Will, Death and Rebirth, Faith and Reason, Spirituality and Morality, and Logic and Language.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Gain knowledge of the Philosophy of the Zhuangzi in comparison with Confucianism.
- 2.Gain a critical understanding of particular methodologies in the study of the Zhuangzi.
- HUMA 5910Philosophy of Religion: East and West[3-0-0:3]DescriptionIn this course, we will explore classic questions in the philosophy of religion from a comparative and intercultural perspective. We will examine topics such as the scope and limits of religious experience and argumentation, the relationship between ethics and religion, the existence and nature of God and the soul, the problem of evil and suffering, and conceptions of salvation and existence of after death. This course will involve a comparative and intercultural approach to Eurasian traditions, drawing on atheistic, Buddhist, Christian, Confucian, Daoist, Hindu, Islamic, and Jewish philosophical sources.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Critically, comparatively, and interculturally analyze the forms of religious experience, interpretation, and argumentation presented in the course readings.
- 2.Explain the role and significance of religion in human life from diverse perspectives.
- 3.Develop a well-informed account of questions in the philosophy of religion.
- HUMA 5930Classical Chinese Philosophy[3-0-0:3]DescriptionThis course examines the intellectual development of early Chinese by focusing on four major schools: Confucianism, Mohism, Daoism, and Legalism. This course will introduce representative philosophers in ancient China, such as Confucius, Mozi, Laozi, Zhuangzi, Xunzi, Hanfeizi, and Mencius. We will explore their thoughts in ethics, human nature, metaphysics, and self-cultivation. We will read translations of major texts with commentaries and interpretations.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Understand the main concepts in Chinese Confucian, Mohist, Daoist and Legalist philosophy.
- 2.Figure out the basic structure, hidden assumptions, and fallacies involved in the arguments of the philosophers.
- 3.Compare the ideas and arguments put forward by the philosophers.
- 4.Explore and appreciate the intellectual development of Chinese culture.
- 5.Address and incorporate the variety of metaphysical and ethical questions and insights developed by ancient Chinese thinkers.
- HUMA 6000-6003Special Topics[3-0-0:3]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 600-603DescriptionCoherent collection of topics selected from the humanities. The course may be repeated for credit if the topics studied are different. (Some of the Special Topic courses may require students to read materials in Chinese. Students who have difficulty reading materials in Chinese should consult the instructor concerned prior to enrolling in these courses.)Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Focus on a specific topic, which can be in History, Linguistics, Literature, Philosophy or Religion, and conduct independent research on it.
- 2.Master the primary sources or data necessary for the research and apply appropriate methodologies or tools to analyze and interpret them.
- 3.Examine major narratives, themes, concepts and theories related to the research.
- 4.Present and discuss the research findings in a highly professional manner, both spoken and written.
- HUMA 6100Independent Study[1-3 credit(s)]Previous Course Code(s)HUMA 610Exclusion(s)HMMA 6200DescriptionIndependent study on a particular subject under the supervision of a faculty member; requires readings, tutorial discussions, and submission of one or more research papers; may be repeated for credit if different topics are studied. Regular students are required to enroll in a 3-credit course. Enrollment in a course below 3 credits requires the Division's approval.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Gain in-depth understanding of the subject studied.
- 2.Familiarize with both primary and secondary sources related to the subject.
- 3.Develop approaches and methodologies appropriate for studying the subject.
- 4.Nurture abilities and skills to express professionally their ideas, both verbally and in written.
- HUMA 6200Research Project in Humanities[0-3-0:3]Corequisite(s)HUMA 6300DescriptionThis course provides a systematic skill-based training in the production of publishable research output and an independent research project on chosen topic conducted under the supervision of the student's academic supervisor. The student is required to produce a substantial research paper at the end of semester, make an oral presentation at the Division's PG Seminar, and submit it to a journal in due course. Mandatory for PhD students in Humanities.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Acquire the ability to conduct an in-depth research on a specialized subject.
- 2.Be capable of producing a substantial paper on the subject, which is publishable.
- HUMA 6300Postgraduate Seminar[0-1-0:1]DescriptionStudents are required to register in HUMA 6300 Postgraduate Seminar for two regular terms. Students are expected to attend public lectures/seminars organized in each regular term and then present a research paper and serve as discussant in a one-day symposium to be held in the second term. Graded PP, P or F.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Learn how to absorb the insights of other researchers working in the field of humanities.
- 2.Learn how to articular their views in a professional manner, both verbally and in written.
- HUMA 6990MPhil Thesis ResearchPrevious Course Code(s)HUMA 699DescriptionMaster's thesis research supervised by a faculty member. A successful defense of the thesis leads to the grade Pass. No course credit is assigned.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Produce a thesis that shows a level of originality appropriate to the Master’s degree.
- 2.Be fully aware of the conceptual and methodological problems relating to the chosen research topic.
- 3.Possess a solid command of bibliographical materials in the field of study.
- HUMA 7990Doctoral Thesis ResearchPrevious Course Code(s)HUMA 799DescriptionOriginal and independent doctoral thesis research. A successful defense of the thesis leads to the grade Pass. No course credit is assigned.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Produce a scholarly work on the basis of original research, the level of originality of which is appropriate to the doctoral degree.
- 2.Be fully aware of the conceptual and methodological problems relating to the chosen research topic.
- 3.Possess a solid command of bibliographical materials in the field of study.