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Gender and Sexuality in Asia - 8977 - ASST 2000 - 811 | ||||||||||||||
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CL: GSWS 2000 (811). Topical Section Description: This course examines the ways men and women develop sexual identities through their membership in society, with a particular focus on East, South-East, and South Asian societies. We will analyze historical, cultural, social, and political constructions of gender, sexual knowledge, and identity, exploring how the construction of gender and sexuality has changed within each society as well as across the region. We will also examine the overwhelming heterosexual imperative in Asian societies, as well as the pervasive media influence on gender and sexual expressions. The course involves an analysis of sexual scripts, the production and reproduction of these scripts, and the impact of such scripts and media messages on individuals and society. The class will be conducted on a seminar basis involving presentation and discussion of assigned readings. All students will be assigned in rotation a reading for presentation. In each class, students will be required to submit summaries and discussion questions for the reading assignment in question.
Visit the Bookstore site to view course materials Associated Term: 2019 Summer I Registration Dates: Mar 27, 2019 to May 31, 2019 Registration Levels: Graduate, NonDegree Continuing Undergrad, Undergraduate Japan Campus Base Lecture Schedule Type Classroom In-Person Instructional Method Credit Hours: 3.000 Seats Available: 20 View Catalog Entry and Course Description
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Democratization in Comparative Perspective - From Authoritarianism to the Rule of Law in South Korea - 9403 - ASST 2000 - 812 | ||||||||||||||
CL: Pol Sci 2000 (811). Notes: Permission of major coordinator required. Course requires short-term travel to Korea and other costs not covered by course tuition. Please consult with the instructor for details. Topical Section Description: The Republic of Korea’s democracy is not only working smoothly, but is an exemplar in E Asia, as witnessed by the non-violent “Candlelight Revolution” in late 2016 that led to the successful impeachment of its president in March, 2017, and the lawful election of President Moon Jae-In in May that year. That was hardly the case in the years of military domination and authoritarian regimes – marked by political trials, torture of detainees, blatant suppression of the press, and more – in the decades of the 1970s & ‘80s. As a Comparative Politics’ case study, our course will walk you through the democratization process by which South Korea’s civil society – students, journalists, workers, religious leaders, and others – courageously stood up for human rights & successfully advocated for representative government. We will hear from guest speakers who were active in that effort, will visit key institutions from those times to the present, and plan to be in Kwangju on the 39 th Anniversary of the famed but tragic “Kwangju Uprising” (May 18, 1980). Your instructor was a participant-observer in the democratization movement (1972-1987), invited back by the ROK Govt in recognition of his role therein, and will share insights from a career bridging the passions of those activist years with a Ph.D. – and decades of teaching – in Korean Politics.
Visit the Bookstore site to view course materials Associated Term: 2019 Summer I Registration Dates: Mar 28, 2019 to May 15, 2019 Registration Levels: Graduate, NonDegree Continuing Undergrad, Undergraduate Special Approval: Major Coordinator - JPN ONLY Japan Campus Base Lecture Schedule Type Non-Classroom (Field & I.S.) Instructional Method Credit Hours: 3.000 Seats Available: 11 View Catalog Entry and Course Description
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