USC Catalogue 2024-2025
East Asian Languages and Cultures
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Return to: USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
East Asian Languages and Cultures offers undergraduate and doctoral programs in Chinese, Japanese and Korean studies. The department fosters original approaches in East Asian studies. With an emphasis on interdisciplinary and innovative research, the program provides students with systematic training in East Asian languages, literatures and cultures. The faculty is committed to intra-regional and interdisciplinary studies of East Asia, which includes critical interaction among the cultures of China, Japan and Korea across historical times and through diverse media. The department engages the arts, languages, literatures, theatre and performance, histories, media, religions, visual and material cultures of East Asia.
Taper Hall of Humanities 356
(213) 740-3707
Email: ealc@dornsife.usc.edu
dornsife.usc.edu/ealc
Chair: Sonya Lee, PhD
Faculty
University Professor, The T.C. Wang Family Endowed Chair in Cinematic Arts, Professor of Cinema and Media Studies, Comparative Literature, and East Asian Languages and Cultures: Akira Mizuta Lippit, PhD (Cinema and Media Studies)
Gordon L. MacDonald Chair in History and Professor of History and East Asian Languages and Cultures: Joan R. Piggott, PhD (History)
Professors: Bettine Birge, PhD; Joshua Goldstein, PhD (History); Sonya Lee, PhD (Art History); Brett Sheehan, PhD* (History); Duncan Williams, PhD (Religion)
Associate Professors: Brian Bernards, PhD; David Bialock, PhD; Jenny Chio, PhD; Youngmin Choe, PhD; Lori Meeks, PhD (Religion); Sunyoung Park, PhD; Kerim Yasar, PhD
Assistant Professors: Mengxiao Wang, PhD; Jessica Xu, PhD (Religion)
Artist in Residence: John Alexander, MFA
Associate Professor (Teaching): Yi-Hsien Liu, PhD
Assistant Professors (Teaching): Masako Tamanaha, PhD; Tin-Yu Tseng, PhD
Master Lecturers: Yuka Kumagai, MA; Hsiao-Yun Liao, MA; Eunju Na, MA
Senior Lecturers: Maki Irie, MA; Yu-Chi Kuo, MA; Yumi Matsumoto, MA
Lecturers: Xiang Jian, EdD; Bo hyun Kim, MA; Woojoo Kim, MA; Mamiko Konno, MA; Mitsuhiro Kono, MA; Shanshan Li, MA; Christopher Magriney, MA; Seojin Park, PhD; Kin Tak Raymond Tsang, PhD
Adjunct Associate Professor (Teaching): Miya Elise Desjardins, PhD
*Recipient of university-wide or college teaching award.
Undergraduate Degree
The core requirements for the EALC major allow students flexibility in designing their own courses of study. Majors typically select one language and cultural area (Chinese, Japanese or Korean) in which they do most of their course work. Majors are encouraged to explore beyond their individual language focus by enrolling in the full range of EALC courses available in literature, film, history, media and other aspects of East Asian cultures.
All EALC majors and minors are required to take at least one course in each of the following two categories. Cross-Cultural Survey courses, to be taken within the first two years, offer students a broad, interregional introduction to East Asian philosophy, literature, film and culture. Cultural Studies courses, also to be completed before advancing to more theme-specific courses, provide students with an in-depth introduction to a cultural tradition within its regional context. For specific courses in these categories as well as upper-division electives (four for majors and two for minors), please refer to the course list on the department’s website and the Schedule of Classes.
Study Abroad Programs
East Asian Languages and Cultures majors and minors are encouraged to take advantage of the numerous semester and year-long study abroad opportunities sponsored by the Office of Overseas Studies. Currently, the office offers programs in China (Beijing and Nanjing), Taiwan (Taipei), Korea (Seoul), and Japan (Tokyo, Nagoya). Each of the programs is affiliated with a world-class institution, such as Waseda University in Tokyo, National Chengchi University in Taipei or Yonsei University in Seoul. Contact the Office of Overseas Studies at (213) 740-3636 for further details or visit online at dornsife.usc.edu/overseas.
The majority of course work offered by these programs may be counted toward the EALC major or minor requirements. Students who receive major credit from any of these programs must still take at least eight units of non-language courses within EALC at the upper-division level while at USC (specifically an EALC civilization and an EALC literature course). Students interested in attending one of these programs must meet with an EALC academic adviser to ensure that the courses enrolled in overseas will meet EALC major or minor requirements.
Chinese Summer Programs in Beijing and Taipei
The Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures offers its Chinese language summer courses in Beijing and Taipei. Participants can transition seamlessly to the next level courses upon returning to campus. Cultural visits and excursions are included in the tuition fee. All courses count toward a major and minor in East Asian Languages and Cultures.
Graduate Degrees
EALC offers graduate students advanced training in the languages, literatures, and cultures of China, Japan and Korea. Our students have combined approaches from cultural studies, literature, film and media studies, theater and other disciplines to broaden more traditional paradigms and provide a different perspective on the reading of the texts in their fields. By allowing a greater degree of flexibility, our interdisciplinary approach enhances students’ research skills and enables them to become well-rounded scholars. Appropriate cross-registration with other departments allows students to enhance their theoretical and methodological training.
Bachelor’s Degree
Minor
Master’s Degree
Doctoral Degree
East Asian Languages and Cultures
- • EALC 101x Conversational Chinese and Intercultural Communication
- • EALC 102 Language, Art and Culture: Calligraphy
- • EALC 103a Fundamental Chinese I
- • EALC 103b Fundamental Chinese I
- • EALC 104 Chinese I
- • EALC 106 Chinese II
- • EALC 108 Reading and Writing Chinese
- • EALC 110gp East Asian Humanities: The Great Tradition
- • EALC 115 Korean I
- • EALC 117 Korean II
- • EALC 118 Essential Communications in Korean I
- • EALC 119 Essential Communications in Korean II
- • EALC 120 Japanese I
- • EALC 121 Extensive Reading in Japanese I
- • EALC 122 Japanese II
- • EALC 125g Introduction to Contemporary East Asian Cinema and Culture
- • EALC 130gp Introduction to East Asian Ethical Thought
- • EALC 145g Introduction to Chinese Culture, Art and Literature
- • EALC 150gw Global Chinese Cinema and Cultural Studies
- • EALC 202 Language, Art, and Culture: Calligraphy II
- • EALC 204 Chinese III
- • EALC 206 Chinese IV
- • EALC 207a Intermediate Chinese: Reading and Oral Communication
- • EALC 207b Intermediate Chinese: Reading and Oral Communication
- • EALC 215 Korean III
- • EALC 217 Korean IV
- • EALC 220 Japanese III
- • EALC 221 Extensive Reading in Japanese II
- • EALC 222 Japanese IV
- • EALC 250 Nation, Culture and Power in East Asia
- • EALC 255gw Southeast Asian Literature and Film
- • EALC 264g Asian Aesthetic and Literary Tradition
- • EALC 266 Science Fiction in East Asia
- • EALC 304 Advanced Modern Chinese I
- • EALC 306 Advanced Modern Chinese II
- • EALC 315 Advanced Korean I
- • EALC 317 Advanced Korean II
- • EALC 318 Readings in Contemporary Korean
- • EALC 320 Advanced Japanese I
- • EALC 322 Advanced Japanese II
- • EALC 324gw Contemporary China: Cultural Politics and Social Realities
- • EALC 331 Encountering Japanese Religions
- • EALC 332 Modern Korean Literature in Translation
- • EALC 333g Introduction to Korean Film
- • EALC 334 Chinese Language Through Films and Television
- • EALC 335m Korean American Literature
- • EALC 336 Chinese Language through Films and Television II
- • EALC 340gp Japanese Civilization
- • EALC 342gp Japanese Literature and Culture
- • EALC 344gp Korean Culture from Ancient to Modern Times
- • EALC 345 Korean Civilization
- • EALC 346g Hallyu, the Korean Wave
- • EALC 350gp Chinese Civilization
- • EALC 352g Chinese Literature and Culture
- • EALC 354g Modern Chinese Literature in Translation
- • EALC 355 Studies in Chinese Thought
- • EALC 358g Transnational Chinese Literature and Culture
- • EALC 360g Performing Japan: Bodies, Media, and Textuality
- • EALC 361 Global East Asia
- • EALC 365 Studies in Japanese Thought
- • EALC 366 Chinese Professional Internship: Communication and Culture
- • EALC 374 Language and Society in East Asia
- • EALC 375 Women and Gender in China: Past and Present
- • EALC 377 Law and Society in Premodern China and Japan
- • EALC 380 Cultural Topics in East Asian Literature
- • EALC 381g Visual Cultures of Asia
- • EALC 382 Art and Cultural Heritage in East Asia
- • EALC 383 Later Chinese Art
- • EALC 384 Early Chinese Art
- • EALC 385 Myth, Folklore, and Fantasy in Japanese Literature and Film
- • EALC 386 Readings in Modern Korean Literature
- • EALC 387 Early Japanese Art
- • EALC 388 Later Japanese Art
- • EALC 390 Special Problems
- • EALC 400 Classical Chinese I
- • EALC 402 Classical Chinese II
- • EALC 404 Advanced Modern Chinese III
- • EALC 406 Advanced Modern Chinese IV
- • EALC 407 News and Web Chinese
- • EALC 410 Chinese-English Translation
- • EALC 412a Business Chinese
- • EALC 412b Business Chinese
- • EALC 413 Business Japanese
- • EALC 415 Advanced Korean III
- • EALC 416 Advanced Chinese Oral Communication
- • EALC 417 Advanced Korean IV
- • EALC 418 Korean Writing in Mixed Script
- • EALC 419 Newspaper and Documentary Korean
- • EALC 422 Advanced Japanese III
- • EALC 424 Advanced Japanese IV
- • EALC 426 Classical Japanese
- • EALC 427 Women’s Lives in Premodern Japanese Literature
- • EALC 428 Nature and the Ecological Imagination in Japanese Literature
- • EALC 429 Gender in Korean Film and Literature
- • EALC 430 Gender and Sexuality in Korean Literature and Culture
- • EALC 431 The Taoist Tradition
- • EALC 435 Ethnic Identity and Minority Politics in China
- • EALC 438 The Tale of Genji and its Worlds
- • EALC 440 Current Topics in Japanese
- • EALC 450 Contemporary Japanese Literature and Global Modernity
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