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Although Yale does not offer a degree
in Southeast Asia Studies, for those students interested
in this area of specialization, the courses below are fully,
substantially, or partially Southeast Asian in Content.
Course numbers: 001-499 undergrad *; 500-800 graduate;
a/b - spring/fall
*Summer
Abroad in Singapore is an undergraduate program for
Yale College credit
ANTHROPOLOGY
*(SEAS
Council member Erik
Harms [Anthropology] on leave 2010-2011. Scroll
down to 2009-10 Course
archives below for samples of Harms courses offered
other years.)
ANTH
382a, Environmental Anthropology
(also EVST 345a, F&ES 384a)
Carol
Carpenter
(Substantial Southeast Asian content)
This is an upper-division undergraduate course on the history
of the anthropological study of the environment. It is organized
around a number of key, persisting themes in the field,
including the Nature-Culture Dichotomy, Ecology and Social
Organization, Methodological Debates, the Politics of the
Environment, and Knowing the Environment. Each theme is
examined through writings that are theoretically important
but also readable, interesting, and relevant. . No prerequisites.
ANTH 408/608a,
Politics and Culture in Indonesia
J.
Joseph Errington
Course description tba
ANTH
tba, (pending
approval) Anthropology
of Climate and Climate Change
also EVST , F&ES
Michael
R. Dove
(Substantial
Southeast Asian content)
This
is an undergraduate, upper-division seminar on the history
of anthropological approaches to the study of climate and
climate change. Beginning with an overview of classical
works and early anthropology on the broad relationship between
climate and culture, subsequent sections will deal with
impact of climatic perturbation and change on society, social
systems of knowledge pertaining to climate, and questions
of methodology. The readings will be case-study based and
are partly drawn from the draft of a reader on this topic
that the instructor is preparing for publication. No prerequisites.
ANTH 541a, Agrarian
Societies: Culture, Society, History, and Development
(See also F&ES
753a /HIST 965a / PLSC 779a
Michael McGovern, Elisabeth Wood, James
C. Scott
(some/partial
Southeast Asian content)
An interdisciplinary examination
of agrarian societies, contemporary and historical, Western
and non-Western. Major analytical perspectives from anthropology,
economics, history, political science, and environmental
studies are used to develop a meaning-centered and historically-grounded
account of the transformation of rural societies. Four-hour
lecture-plus-discussion. (open to undergraduates with special
permission)
ANTH
561b, Global
Economy for Development and Conservation (See
also F&ES
80061a)
Carol
Carpenter
(Partial
Southeast Asian content)
This
course is an intermediate level course for master's and
doctoral students.
ANTH
581a, Society
and Environment: Introduction to Theory and Method
See
also F&ES
83050a
Michael
R. Dove
(Substantial
Southeast Asian content)
This
is an introductory course on the scope of social scientific
contributions to environmental and natural resource issues.
It is designed to be the first course for students who will
be specializing in social science approaches as well as
the last/only course for students who take only one course
in this area. The approach taken in the course is inductive,
problem-oriented, and case study-based. Enrollment limited
to thirty.
ANTH
572b, Disaster, Degradation, Dystopia: Social Science Approaches
To Environmental Perturbation and Change.
F&ES
80176b Michael
R. Dove
(Substatial
Southeast Asian content)
There is a long tradition of social science scholarship
on environmental perturbation and natural disasters, the
relevance of which has been heightened by the current global
attention to climate change. This advanced seminar is designed
to review seminal works in this field and analyze some of
the current theoretical debates. Prerequisite: F&ES
84056a/ANTH 597a, or F&ES 83050a/ANTH 581a, or F&ES
83073b/ANTH 582b. Enrollment limited to twenty.
ANTH
597a, Social
Science of Development and Conservation
(See
also F&ES
83056a)
Carol
Carpenter
(Partial
Southeast Asian content)
This
course provides a fundamental understanding of the social
aspects involved in implementing sustainable development
and conservation projects. Social science provides ways
of thinking about, researching, and working with social
groupings - including rural households and communities,
but also development and conservation institutions, states,
and NGOs. Second, social science tackles the analysis of
the knowledge systems that implicitly shape development
and conservation policy and impinge on practice. The goal
of the course is to stimulate students to apply informed
and critical thinking to whatever roles they play in sustainable
development and conservation, in order to move toward more
environmentally and socially sustainable projects and policies.
951a or b Directed Research in Ethnology & Social Anthropology
952a or b Directed Research in Linguistics
ECONOMICS
ECON 899a or b Individual Reading
and Research
by arrangement with
faculty
ENVIRONMENTAL
STUDIES
EVST
285a, Political
Ecology: Nature, Culture and Power
F&ES 285a Amity
Doolittle
(some/limited
Southeast Asian content)
Study
of the relationship between society and the environment.
Global processes of environmental conservation, development,
and conflicts over natural resource use; political-economic
contexts of environmental change; ways in which understandings
of nature are discursively bound up with notions of culture
and identity.
EVST
345a, Environmental
Anthropology
See ANTH 382
for course description
Carol
Carpenter
(Substantial Southeast Asian content)
EVST tba,
Anthropology
of Climate and Climate Change .
Michael
R. Dove
(Substantial
Southeast Asian content)
See
ANTH
tba
for course description
EVST
424a,
Rivers: Nature and Politics James
C. Scott
also PLSC 420a
The natural history of rivers and river systems and the
politics surrounding the efforts of states to manage and
engineer them.
(some/partial
Southeast Asian content)
EVST
420b, Asian
Environments and Frontiers.
HIST 313Jb Peter
Perdue
(some/partial
Southeast Asian content)
The
impact of Asian farmers, merchants, and states on the natural
world. Focus on imperial China, with discussion of Japan,
Southeast Asia, and Inner Asia in the early modern and modern
periods. Themes include frontier conquest, land clearance,
wate conservancy, urban foodprints, and relaitons between
agrarian and nonagrarian peoples. Attention to environmental
movements in Asia today.
FORESTRY
& ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
F&ES
285a, Political
Ecology: Nature, Culture and Power
See
EVST 285a for
course desription
Amity
Doolittle
(some/limited
Southeast Asian content)
F&ES
384a,
Environmental
Anthropology
See
ANTH 382 for
course description
Carol
Carpenter
(Substantial Southeast Asian content)
F&ES tba,
Anthropology
of Climate and Climate Change.
See ANTH
tba
for course description
Michael
R. Dove
(Substantial
Southeast Asian content)
F&ES
80176b, Disaster,
Degradation, Dystopia: Social Science Approaches To Environmental
Perturbation and Change.
See ANTH 572a
for course description
Michael
R. Dove
(Substantial
Southeast Asian content)
F&ES
753a, Agrarian
Societies: Culture, Society, History, and Development
See
ANTH
541a for course description
F&ES
80061b,
Global
Economy for Development and Conservation
See
ANTH 561a
for course description
Carol Carpenter
(Partial
Southeast Asian content)
F&ES 83050a, Society and
Environment: Introduction to Theory and Method
See ANTH 581a
for course description
Michael
R. Dove
(Substantial
Southeast Asian content)
F&ES
83056a, Social
Science of Development and Conservation
(See also ANTH
597a for course description)
Carol
Carpenter
(Partial
Southeast Asian content)
HISTORY
*(SEAS
Council member Ben
Kiernan [History] on leave 2010-2011. See Course
archives
below for samples of Kiernan History and International Studies
courses offered other years.)
HIST
313Jb, Asian
Environments and Frontiers.
Peter
Perdue
See
EVST 420b
for course description
(some/partial
Southeast Asian content)
HIST
965a, Agrarian
Societies: Culture, Society, History, and Development
See
ANTH
541a
998a/b
Directed Readings
999a/b Directed Research
Offered by arrangement
with instructor and permission of Director of Graduate Studies
(Some
graduate and professional school courses are open to qualified
undergraduates with permission of the instructor and the
DGS)
INDONESIAN
(Click on ->
Indonesian Studies at Yale)
INDN
110a/120b/ 520a/b,
Elementary Indonesian.
Indriyo
Sukmono
An introductory course
in standard Indonesian with emphasis on developing communicative
skills through systematic survey of grammar and graded exercises.
Introduction to reading in the second term, leading to mastery
of language patterns, essential vocabulary, and basic cultural
competence.
INDN
130a/140b/ 527a/b,
Intermediate Indonesian.
Indriyo
Sukmono
Continued practice in
colloquial Indonesian conversation and reading and discussion
of texts. (After INDN 115 or equivalent)
INDN 470a/471b, Independent
Tutorial. Indriyo
Sukmono
For students with
advanced Indonesian language skills who wish to engage in
concentrated reading and research on material not otherwise
offered in courses. The work must be supervised by an adviser
and must terminate in a term paper or its equivalent. (Permission
of instructor/submission of project proposal)
INDN 560 a/b, Readings
in Indonesian. Indriyo
Sukmono
For students
with advanced Indonesian language skills working on modern
Indonesian literature.
MUSIC
*(SEAS
Council member Sarah
Weiss [Music] on leave 2010-2011. See Course
archives
below for samples of Weiss Music courses offered other years.
See also Yale
Gamelan Suprabanggo)
PHILOSOPHY
PHIL 210a Eastern
Philosophy.
Quang
Phu Van
NOT OFFERED THIS YEAR - TO BE OFFERED
FALL 2011 AND ALTERNATE YEARS THEREAFTER - ALSO OFFERED
SOME SUMMER SESSIONS
(Substantial
Southeast Asian content)
An
Introduction to Eastern philosophy through the study of
philosophical and religious texts. Topics include reality
and illusion, knowledge, self, right and wrong, nonattachment,
meditation, aesthetics, meaning of life, and death. (Limited
enrollment)
POLITICAL SCIENCE
PLSC
420a, Rivers: Nature and Politics James
C. Scott
See EVST 424
for course descsription
(some/partial
Southeast Asian content)
PLSC 779a Agarian Societies: Culture, Society, History,
and Development.
See ANTH 541a
for description. (partial
Southeast Asian content)
Kalyanakrishnan
Sivaramakrishnan, Peter Perdue, James
C. Scott
VIETNAMESE
LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
(Click
on -> Vietnamese
Studies at Yale)
VIET
110a/120b/
515a/b,
Elementary Vietnamese.
Quang
Phu Van
Students acquire basic working ability in Vietnamese including
sociocultural knowledge. Attention paid to integrated skills
such as speaking, listening, writing (Roman script), and
reading. No previous knowledge of or experience with Vietnamese
language required.
VIET
130a/140b/
530a/b,
Intermediate Vietnamese. Quang
Phu Van
An integrated approach
to language learning aimed at strengthening students' listening,
speaking, reading, and writing skills in Vietnamese. Students
are thoroughly grounded in communicative activities such
as conversations, performance simulation, drills, role playing,
and games. Discussion of aspects of Vietnamese society and
culture. Prior knowledge of Vietnamese required.
VIET
220b Introduction to Vietnamese Culture, Values, and Literature
Quang
Phu Van
A brief
introduction to Vietnamese culture and values. Topics include
cultural and national identity, aesthetics, meaning of life,
war, and death. Selected readings from Zen poems, folklore,
autobiographies, and religious and philosophical writings.
*
All readings in translation. No previous knowledge of Vietnamese
required.
[ALTERNATE
YEAR COURSE - OFFERED AGAIN IN 2012-2013]
VIET
470a/471b,
Independent Tutorial Quang
Phu Van
For students with advanced Vietnamese language skills who
wish to engage in concentrated reading and research on material
not otherwise offered in courses. The work must be supervised
byan adviser and must terminate in a term paper or its equivalent.
(Permission of instructor/submission of project proposal)
VIET 560 a/b Readings in
Vietnamese Quang
Phu Van
For students with advanced Vietnamese language skills who
wish to engage in concentrated reading and research.
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