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Faculty

Professors
 
Susanna Fessler, Ph.D.
  Yale University
 James M. Hargett, Ph.D.
  Indiana University
 Charles M. Hartman, Ph.D.
  Indiana University

Associate Professors
 Andrew Sangpil Byon, Ph.D. (Department Chair)
  University of Hawai’i at Manoa
 Fan Pen Chen, Ph.D.
  Columbia University
 Anthony DeBlasi, Ph.D.
  Harvard University

Assistant Professor
 John Person, Ph.D.
  University of Chicago

Visiting Assistant Professors
 Michael Chan, M.A.
  Columbia University
 Minggang Li, Ph.D.
  The Ohio State University

Lecturers
 Michiyo Kaya Wojnovich, M.S.
  University at Albany
 Shu-Han Yeh, M.A.
  National Taiwan Normal University

Affiliated Faculty
 Michitake Aso, Ph.D., Department of History
  University of Wisconsin at Madison
 Cheng Chen, Ph.D., Department of Political Science
  University of Pennsylvania
 Angie Y. Chung, Ph.D., Department of Sociology
  University of California, Los Angeles
 Youqin Huang, Ph.D., Department of Geography and Planning
  University of California, Los Angeles
 Monica Kim, Ph.D., Department of History
  University of Michigan at Ann Arbor
 Christopher J. Smith, Ph.D., Department of Geography and Planning
  University of Michigan at Ann Arbor
 Kwan Koo Yun, Ph.D., Department of Economics
  Stanford University

Instructors: 64



The Department of East Asian Studies offers courses in the languages and cultures of the three major civilizations of East Asia: China, Japan and Korea. The department provides instruction in elementary, intermediate and advanced Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. There are also courses taught in English on Chinese, Japanese, and Korean literature, philosophy, history, geography, economics and political science.

Careers
Graduates of the Department traditionally enter careers in teaching, international trade, U.S. government, and the travel industry. The degree is also excellent preparation for professional graduate programs in business administration (M.B.A.), law, librarianship, and Teaching English as a Second Language. The department strongly encourages students interested in East Asian Studies to double-major within a separate department or college. Combinations with particularly strong employment potential are East Asian Studies and economics, business, and political science.

Special Programs or Opportunities
The University maintains exchange programs in China with Beijing University, Beijing Normal University, Fudan University, East China Normal University, and Sichuan University. These programs provide students an opportunity to study Chinese language and selected topics in the humanities and social sciences in China for summers, one semester, or an entire academic year. The university also maintains similar exchange programs with Kansai Gaidai and Tokyo University of Foreign Studies in Japan and with Yonsei University in Seoul, Korea. All departmental majors are strongly encouraged to participate in these exchange programs in order to gain first-hand experience of life in contemporary East Asia.

Degree Requirements

The Department of East Asian Studies offers three concentrations or degree tracks. Each is a separate and distinct course of study leading to the B.A. degree. These are 1) the Major in Chinese Studies, 2) the Major in East Asian Studies, and 3) the Major in Japanese Studies. Students may not double-major in East Asian Studies and Chinese Studies or Japanese Studies. Requirements for these programs are as follows:

Requirements for the Major in Chinese Studies (34 credits)

Requirements for the Major in East Asian Studies (34 credits)

Requirements for the Major in Japanese Studies (34 credits)

Honors Program in the Three East Asian Studies Majors

Students with 3.50 grade point average in one of the department’s majors are eligible for its Honors Program. In addition to completing the regular requirements for the major in Chinese Studies, East Asian Studies, or Japanese Studies, students in the Honors Program complete a further six credits of A EAS 495, Colloquium in East Asian Studies.

At the beginning of the fall semester (preferably of the senior year), students will submit their honors proposals to the faculty. If the faculty approves a proposal, the student will be permitted to enroll in A EAS 495 (3 credits), which consists of directed readings and conferences involving appropriate members of the faculty. The project will be evaluated by the project adviser at the end of the fall semester and if the student is making appropriate progress, they will be permitted to enroll in A EAS 495 (3 credits) again in the spring semester. The project will be formally evaluated by the Department Honors Committee no later than the mid-term point in the second semester of the senior year. The final version of the project must be submitted by the last day of classes during the second semester of the senior year.