East Asian Languages and Literatures
308 Hall of Graduate Studies, 432.2860
M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D.
Chair
John Whittier Treat
Director of Graduate Studies
Kang-i Sun Chang [F] (306 HGS, 432.2865, kang-i.chang@yale.edu)
Edward Kamens [Sp] (310 HGS, 432.2862, edward.kamens@yale.edu)
Professors
Kang-i Sun Chang, Edward Kamens, Hugh Stimson, John Whittier
Treat
Associate Professor
Charles Laughlin
Assistant Professors
Aaron Gerow, Christopher Hill, Carlos Rojas (Visiting)
Lecturers
Pauline Lin, Xinmin Liu
Senior Lectors
Wen-tao Cheng, Seungja Choi, Koichi Hiroe, Zhengguo
Kang, Yoshiko Maruyama, John Montanaro, Ling Mu, Michiaki
Murata, Masahiko Seto, Mari Stever, Wei Su, William Zhou
Lectors
Angela Lee-Smith, Rongzhen Li, Ninghui Liang, Hiroyo
Nishimura, Jianhua Shen, Li-li Teng, Peisong Xu
Fields of Study
Fields for doctoral study are Chinese literature and
Japanese literature. Although the primary emphasis is on these
East Asian subjects, the department welcomes applicants who
are seeking to integrate their interests in Chinese or Japanese
literature with interdisciplinary studies in such fields as
history, history of art, linguistics, religious studies, comparative
literature, film studies, literary theory and criticism, and
the social sciences.
Special Admissions Requirements
The department requires entering students in Chinese
or Japanese to have completed at least three years of study,
or the equivalent, of either Chinese or Japanese. Students
applying in Chinese are expected to have completed at least
one year of literary Chinese. Students applying in premodern
Japanese are expected to have completed at least one year
of literary Japanese. This is a doctoral program; no students
are admitted for master’s degrees.
Special Requirements for the Ph.D. Degree
During the first three years of study, students are
required to take at least fourteen term courses. Two of these
courses must be seminars or tutorials taken in the third year
of study. (If a student’s qualifying exam is scheduled
in the sixth term, both of the third-year courses should be
taken in the fifth term.) Students concentrating in Chinese
or Japanese literature are encouraged to take at least one
term course in Western literature or literary theory. All
students must prove their proficiency in French, German, Russian,
or another European language that the director of graduate
studies deems appropriate by the beginning of their second
year. In some cases, with the approval of the director of
graduate studies, students in Chinese literature may substitute
Japanese and students in Japanese literature may substitute
Chinese (modern or literary Chinese) for a European language.
At the end of each academic year until a student is admitted
to candidacy, a faculty committee will review the student’s
progress.
At the end of the second full academic year, the student
must take a written examination in the language of his or
her specialization, including both its modern and premodern
forms. The faculty will also conduct a review of each student’s
progress and promise by the end of the second year. By the
end of the third year, students specializing in premodern
Japanese literature must pass a reading test in literary Chinese.
Ideally, by the end of the sixth term, but in no case later
than the end of the seventh term, each student will be required
to complete a dissertation prospectus and two research papers,
and submit them for review by the faculty as part of a qualifying
oral examination ranging over the entire field (Chinese language
and literature or Japanese language and literature), with
emphasis on the student’s area of concentration, dissertation
topic, and course work. In order to be admitted to candidacy
for the Ph.D. (normally by the end of the third year), students
must earn at least four grades of Honors during the first
two years of study and must complete all predissertation requirements,
including the prospectus.
Opportunities to obtain experience in teaching language
and literature form an important part of this program. Students
in East Asian Languages and Literatures normally teach in
their third and fourth years in the Graduate School.
Joint Ph.D. Program
The Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures also
offers, in conjunction with the Program in Film Studies, a
joint Ph.D. in East Asian Languages and Literatures and Film
Studies. For further details, see Film Studies on page 177.
Applicants to the joint program must indicate on their application
that they are applying both to Film Studies and to East Asian
Languages and Literatures. All documentation within the application
should include this information.
Master's Degrees
M.Phil. The successful completion of all predissertation
requirements, including the qualifying examination, will make
a student eligible for an M.Phil. degree. M.A. (en route to
the Ph.D.). The successful completion of twelve term courses
and languages required in the first two years of study will
make a student eligible for an M.A. degree.
Program materials are available upon request to the Director of Graduate Studies,
Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures, Yale University, PO Box
208236, New Haven CT 06520-8236, and at the department Web site, www.yale.edu/eall/.
Courses
CHNS 500au, Man and Nature in Chinese Poetry. Kang-i
Sun Chang. TTh 1–2.15
An exploration of concepts of man and nature in traditional
Chinese poetry and criticism, with special attention to historical
contexts and cultural meanings. Topics include the centrality
of lyricism and Taoism; depictions of nature and self-cultivation;
travel in literature; the relation of poetry to painting;
images of utopian communities as compared to the Western notion
of Utopia; poets’ strategies of self-canonization and
identity. All readings are in translation; no knowledge of
Chinese is assumed. For those who read the language, additional
readings in Chinese are assigned.
[CHNS 501bu, Men, Women, and Gender in Chinese Poetry.]
CHNS 515u, Elementary Modern Chinese. John
Montanaro, William Zhou.
515–1: MTWThF
9.30–10.20
515–2: MTWThF
9.30–10.20
515–3: MTWThF
10.30–11.20
515–4: MTWThF
10.30–11.20
515–5: MTWThF
11.30–12.20
515–6: MTWThF
11.30–12.20
Intended for students with no background in Chinese.
An intensive course with emphasis on spoken language and drills.
Pronunciation, grammatical analysis, conversation practice,
and introduction to the reading and writing of Chinese characters.
To be followed by CHNS 530.
CHNS 518u, Elementary Modern Chinese for Advanced Learners. Ninghui
Liang, William Zhou.
518–1: MTWThF
9.30–10.20
518–2: MTWThF
10.30–11.20
First level of the advanced learner sequence. Intended
for students with some background in Chinese. An intensive
course with emphasis on spoken languages and drills. Pronunciation,
grammatical analysis, conversation practice, and introduction
to reading and writing Chinese characters. To be followed
by CHNS 533. Placement confirmed by placement test on first
day of class and by instructors.
CHNS 530u, Intermediate Modern Chinese. Ling
Mu and staff.
530–1: MTWThF 10.30–11.20
530–2: MTWThF 10.30–11.20
530–3: MTWThF 11.30–12.20
530–4: MTWThF 11.30–12.20
An intermediate course that continues intensive training
in listening, speaking, reading, and writing, and consolidates
what students have achieved in the first year of study, allowing
students to improve oral fluency, study more complex grammatical
structures, and enlarge both reading and writing vocabulary.
To be followed by CHNS 550. Prerequisite: CHNS 515 or equivalent.
CHNS 533u, Intermediate Modern Chinese for Advanced
Learners. Peisong Xu, Ling Mu.
533–1: MTWThF 8.30–9.20
533–2: MTWThF 9.30–10.20
The second level of the advanced learner sequence. Intended
for students with intermediate to advanced oral proficiency
and high elementary reading and writing proficiency. Students
receive intensive training in listening, speaking, reading,
and writing, supplemented by audio and video materials. The
objective of the course is to balance these four skills and
attain an advanced level in all of them. To be followed by
CHNS 553. Prerequisite: CHNS 518 or equivalent.
CHNS 545u, Cantonese. Wei Su. MWF 9.30–10.20
Introduction to the Cantonese language for learners of
(Mandarin) Chinese. Expands students’ knowledge of the
Chinese language through study of one of its most influential
regional variations. Focus on listening and speaking skills,
from practical daily communication to the discussion of topics
of general interest. Prerequisite: CHNS 530, CHNS 518, or
equivalent.
CHNS 548, Directed Reading of Scholarly Materials. Wen-tao
Cheng.
For Ph.D. students working toward dissertations or master’s
candidates working on special interests that involve original
materials from classical Chinese, as well as modern sources.
CHNS 550u, Advanced Modern Chinese. Li-li
Teng.
550–1: MTWThF 10.30–11.20
550–2: MTWThF 11.30–12.20
Third level of the standard foundational sequence of
modern Chinese language study in the areas of speech, listening,
reading, and writing. Use of audio-visual materials, oral
presentations, skits, and longer and more frequent writing
assignments to assimilate more sophisticated grammatical structures.
Introduction to a wide variety of written forms and styles.
Use of both traditional and simplified forms of Chinese characters.
After CHNS 530.
[CHNS 551bu, Chinese Modernism.]
CHNS 553u, Advanced Modern Chinese for Advanced Learners. Zhengguo
Kang.
553–1: mwf 9.30–10.20
553–2: mwf 10.30–11.20
Third level of the advanced learner sequence in Chinese.
Intended for students with advanced speaking and listening
skills (able to conduct conversations fluently on broad topics)
but with high intermediate reading and writing skills (able
to write 1,000 to 1,200 characters). Readings on contemporary
life in China and Taiwan, supplemented with authentic video
and other selected reading materials. Class discussion, presentations,
and regular written assignments. Texts in simplified characters
with vocabulary in both simplified and traditional characters.
After CHNS 533 or equivalent.
CHNS 556u, Readings in Contemporary Chinese Texts. Wei
Su.
556–1: mw 11.30–12.45
556–2: tth 11.30–12.45
Completes the standard sequence in Chinese. Selected
readings in Chinese fiction, essays, and articles of the past
twenty years. Lectures, discussion, and written work in Chinese
aim at integrated mastery of the modern language. Prerequisite:
CHNS 550 or equivalent.
CHNS 557u, Readings in Modern Chinese Short Stories. Wen-tao
Cheng. TTh 9–10.15
An advanced language course designed to further develop
students’ overall language skills through reading and
discussion of modern short stories. Focus on Lu Xun, Lao She,
Shen Congwen, and Zhang Ailing. Conducted in Chinese. After
CHNS 550 or equivalent.
CHNS 560u, Introduction to Literary Chinese. Pauline
Lin. TTh 2.30–3.45
Reading and interpretation of texts in various styles
of literary Chinese (wenyan), with attention to basic problems
of syntax and literary style. After CHNS 533 or 550.
CHNS 562u, Intermediate Literary Chinese: Old Chinese
Prose and Poetry. Hugh Stimson.
Close reading of texts of the first millennium B.C.E.
with attention to syntax and style. Prerequisite: CHNS 560
or equivalent.
CHNS 565u, Chinese Composition. Zhengguo
Kang. TTh 2.30–3.45
Intended for advanced students with solid oral and reading
proficiency but who want to improve their writing skills.
The course offers a systematic writing program, from simple
assignments like descriptions, narratives, and expositions
to more sophisticated critical essays. Prerequisite: CHNS
553, 556, 557, or equivalent.
CHNS 574au, The Revolutionary Tradition in Modern Chinese
Literature. Ximin Liu. MW 2.30–3.45
An introduction to modern Chinese literary culture from
the perspective of its central, revolutionary tradition. Exploration
of ways that Chinese writers have attempted to change society
through writing; the relationships between realism, romanticism,
and revolution; and the consequences of the Chinese Communist
Party’s institutionalization of revolutionary literature.
No knowledge of Chinese required.
[CHNS 575, Wenxin Diaolong: Literary and Cultural Readings.]
[CHNS 578a, Shishuo xinyu and Six Dynasties Aesthetics.]
[CHNS 580, Chinese Poetry from Ancient Times to the Song Dynasty.]
[CHNS 600, Seminar in Tang Poetry.]
[CHNS 605au, Materials and Methods for Research in Chinese
Literature and Art.]
[CHNS 634, The Canon of Poetry (Shi Jing).]
[CHNS 635, The Tradition of the Song Lyric (Ci).]
[CHNS 638b, Chinese Love Poetry: From Six Dynasties to the
Qing.]
CHNS 639a, Canon and Gender in Ming-Qing Poetry and Drama.
Kang-i Sun Chang. T 2.30–4.30
A seminar on the problems of canon-formation with regard
to Ming-Qing literati and women writers, especially on how
aesthetic, power, and cultural principles have influenced
canonical inclusions and exclusions. Readings from the poetic
works of Qian Qianyi, Liu Rushi, Wu Weiye, Shang Jinglan,
Wang Shizhen, Wang Duanshu, Yuan Mei, Xi Peilan, Gong Zizhen,
Gu Taiqing. Two dramatic plays, Mudan ting (Peony Pavilion)
and Taohua shan (Peach Blossom Fan), are also included.
CHNS 660bu, The Visual Imagination in Chinese Art. Pauline
Lin. W 2.30–4.20
A study of Chinese visual and cultural materials from
the Shang bronzes of the twelfth century B.C. to modern film.
Exploration of the aesthetic values, social realities, and
cultural aspirations represented by these works. Topics include
depictions of ancestral portraits, paradise and hell in Buddhist
cosmology, fictive landscapes, garden designs, imperial architecture
and city planning, and everyday life.
[CHNS 671b, Anti-Romanticism: The Tradition of Irony
in Twentieth-Century Chinese Women’s Writing.]
[CHNS 672a, Modern and Contemporary Chinese Poetry.]
CHNS 673b, The Chinese Body Politic. Carlos
Rojas. M 3.30–5.20
Science, politics, subjectivity, and corporeality in
modern China. Readings of literary texts and consideration
of nonfictional writings, cinema, graphic art, and performance
art.
[CHNS 692a, Rereading the Six Dynasties Anthology, the
Wen Xuan.]
[CHNS 693b, Seminar on Anthologies of Tang and Song Poetry.]
[CHNS 695a, The Poetics of Place in Modern Chinese Literature.]
[CHNS 696a, Chinese Literary Criticism.]
[CHNS 697b, Critical Debates in Modern Chinese Literary Studies.]
[CHNS 698, Women Poets of the Qing: Methodological and Critical
Inquiry.]
[CHNS 704, Ming-Qing Literary Theory and Poetics.]
[CHNS 706b, Du Fu: Poetic Innovations and Influences.]
[CHNS 707a, Literature, Culture, and Myth in Ancient China:
From Chuci to Han Poetry.]
[CHNS 728, Six Dynasties Poetry.]
[CHNS 840, Seminar in Qing Poetry.]
CHNS 900a, Chinese Seminar. Hugh Stimson.
JAPN 501bu, The Tale of Genji and The Pillow Book. Edward
Kamens. TTh 2.30–3.45
Close study of nearly contemporaneous and distinctive
works by the two outstanding women writers of Japan’s
classical age—Murasaki Shikibu’s The Tale of
Genji and Sei Shonagon’s Pillow Book. All
readings in English, including many critical studies. Formerly
JAPN 572b.
JAPN 515u, Elementary Japanese. Michiaki Murata,
Mari Stever.
515–1: MTWThF 8.30–9.20
515–2: MTWThF 8.30–9.20
515–3: MTWThF 9.30–10.20
515–4: MTWThF 9.30–10.20
515–5: MTWThF 9.30–10.20
An introductory course in spoken Japanese. Drills in
pronunciation and conversation; lectures on grammar; and an
introduction to reading and writing, including hiragana,
katakana, and 200 kanji.
JAPN 540u, Intermediate Japanese. Yoshiko Maruyama,
Masahiko Seto, and staff.
540–1: MTWThF 10.30–11.20
540–2: MTWThF 10.30–11.20
540–3: MTWThF 10.30–11.20
540–4: MTWThF 11.30–12.20
540–5: MTWThF 11.30–12.20
Emphasis on continued development in both written and
spoken Japanese with reinforcement of previously learned patterns
and structures. Besides the text, teaching materials include
audio and video tapes for listening comprehension and speaking
practice, as well as multi-media materials. Prerequisite:
JAPN 515 or equivalent.
JAPN 550u, Advanced Japanese. Koichi Hiroe
and staff. MWF 1–2.15
An advanced Japanese language course designed to develop
further students’ proficiency in aural and reading comprehension,
as well as speaking and writing skills. Reading and discussion
of short stories, essays, and journal articles. Listening
to and discussion of television and radio broadcasts. Writing
practice includes diary, letters, essays, and criticism. Prerequisite:
JAPN 540 or equivalent.
[JAPN 551bu, Japanese Literature after 1970.]
[JAPN 552au, The Atomic Bombings of Japan in World Culture.]
[JAPN 553au, Modern Japanese Fiction and Its Margins.]
JAPN 557u, Readings in Contemporary Media and Literature. Masahiko
Seto. TTh 1–2.15
Close reading in modern Japanese writings in current
affairs, social science, cultural history, and modern literature.
Students develop their speaking, listening, and writing skills
through discussion and written exercises. Conducted in Japanese.
After JAPN 550 or equivalent.
JAPN 559au, Readings in Literature and the Humanities. John
Whittier Treat. TTh 11.30–12.45
Canonical Japanese short stories and essays read in line-by-line
translation. Use of reference works and the Internet to research
structures and vocabulary. Intended for those at the fourth-year
level in their study of modern Japanese, this course is designed
to help students prepare for either graduate-level courses
in Japanese literature or independent study of written
Japanese.
JAPN 560bu, Introduction to Literary Japanese. Edward
Kamens. MW 2.30–3.45
Introduction to the grammar and style of the premodern
literary language (bungotai) through a variety of texts.
Prerequisite: JAPN 550 or equivalent.
[JAPN 561bu, Readings in Literary Japanese.]
[JAPN 576bu, Popular Culture from Late Edo to the Present.]
JAPN 578au, Modern Japanese Fiction. Christopher
Hill. TTh 1–2.15
An introduction to Japanese fiction from the 1890s to 1960s.
Novels and stories by such writers as Natsume Soseki, Tanizaki
Junichiro, and Oe Kenzaburo, and discussion of major trends
such as modernism and writing by women. No knowledge of Japanese
is required.
JAPN 585bu, Naturalist Literature in the Global Frame. Christopher
Hill. W 2.30–4.20
The dissemination of naturalist literature worldwide,
from France in the 1850s to Asia and the Americas in the 1900s.
Main focus on France, the United States, Japan. Local and
global socioeconomic conditions supporting naturalist schools.
Major writers include Zola, Maupassant, Dreiser, Norris, Katai,
Toson.
JAPN 587bu, Japanese Cinema after 1970. Aaron
Gerow. MW 11.30–12.45
The development of Japanese cinema after the breakdown
of the studio system, through the revival of the late 1990s,
to the present.
JAPN 700b, Readings in Premodern Japanese Literature. Edward
Kamens. F 1.30–3.20
Close reading of Japanese prose and/or poetry of various
periods; research in traditional commentary and contemporary
criticism.
[JAPN 830b, Literature, Culture, and Thought in Modern
Japan.]
JAPN 835b, Modernity and Culture in Imperial Japan. Christopher
Hill. T 4–6
Formations of modernity in Japan from the late Meiji
to the early Shôwa period and their political and economic
contexts. Materials include literature, essays, philosophy,
and other sources such as visual texts according to student
interest.
JAPN 885b, Modern Japanese Novel. John Whittier
Treat. W 2–4.30
A seminar primarily designed as a three-year course in
which graduate students specializing in Japanese literature
are required to read major works of modern Japanese fiction
in the original.
KREN 515u, Elementary Korean. Angela Lee-Smith
and staff.
515–1: MTWThF 9.30–10.20
515–2: MTWThF 10.30–11.20
A beginning course in modern Korean. Pronunciation, lectures
on grammar, conversation practice, and introduction to the
writing system ( ).
Section 515–2 is for students with elementary aural
proficiency but little training in written Korean.
KREN 535u, Intermediate Korean. Seungja Choi
and staff.
535–1: MTWThF 9.30–10.20
535–2: MTWThF 10.30–11.20
Continued development of skills in modern Korean, spoken
and written, leading to intermediate-level proficiency. Students
admitted to section 535–1 after KREN 515–1; students
admitted to section 535–2 after KREN 515–2 or
with permission of instructor.
KREN 550u, Advanced Modern Korean. Seungja
Choi and staff. TTh 11.30–12.45
An advanced Korean language course designed to further
develop students’ aural and reading comprehension, as
well as speaking and writing skills. Reading and discussion
of short stories, essays, and journal articles. Writing practice
includes letters and essays. After KREN 535 or equivalent.
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