Metadata
Title
Brown University
Category
general
UUID
53e60234997e49adbd151a67c456b5da
Source URL
https://bulletin.brown.edu/the-college/concentrations/east/
Parent URL
https://bulletin.brown.edu/the-college/concentrations/
Crawl Time
2026-03-16T05:00:35+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Brown University

Source: https://bulletin.brown.edu/the-college/concentrations/east/ Parent: https://bulletin.brown.edu/the-college/concentrations/

East Asian Studies is a multidisciplinary concentration designed for students wishing to attain reasonable fluency in Chinese,  Japanese, or Korean with specialized exposure to selected East Asian subjects. It serves students with two types of interests: those who aim to pursue active professional careers related to the East Asian region; and those who want to pursue graduate study in the humanities or social sciences with particular emphasis on China, Japan or Korea. Students in East Asian Studies will gain language proficiency and familiarity with East Asia through advanced courses in a variety of disciplines. Concentrators are strongly encouraged, but not required, to study in East Asia for one or two semesters. The concentration requires students to demonstrate a basic proficiency in Chinese, Japanese, or Korean.

The Language Requirement

The concentration requires students to demonstrate a basic proficiency in Chinese, Japanese, or Korean. For the purposes of the concentration, proficiency is determined to be consistent with successful completion of the Department’s third-year course sequence in Chinese, Japanese, or Korean (0500-0600), or its equivalent. Native speakers of these languages may, for example,  demonstrate competency such that language courses may be unnecessary.  Department language instructors may also determine that course work completed at one of the language-intensive  study abroad programs attended by our undergraduates is comparable to courses offered at Brown. Up to three upper level (700-999) language courses may count as electives for the Focus concentration credit. (Lower-level language courses do not count as concentration electives).

Note that we do not equate completion of third-year Chinese, Japanese, or Korean with fluency in these languages. Rather, we believe that students who have demonstrated the skills  associated with third-year Chinese, Japanese, or Korean have acquired a foundational understanding of the languages’ grammar, vocabularies, and conversational patterns, such that they are able to make themselves understood in everyday situations, and to understand both spoken and written communication.

For the purposes of the concentration, language courses through the third-year are treated as an accompanying requirement.

Language Prerequisites (demonstrating proficiency through the third-year or 0600 level in one of the three languages below)
Chinese
CHIN 0100CHIN 0200 Basic Chinese and Basic Chinese
CHIN 0300CHIN 0400 Intermediate Chinese and Intermediate Chinese
CHIN 0350CHIN 0450 Elementary to Intermediate Chinese for Advanced Beginners and Advanced Chinese for Heritage Learners
CHIN 0500CHIN 0600 Advanced Modern Chinese I and Advanced Modern Chinese I
Japanese
JAPN 0100JAPN 0200 Basic Japanese and Basic Japanese
JAPN 0300JAPN 0400 Intermediate Japanese and Intermediate Japanese
JAPN 0500JAPN 0600 Advanced Japanese I and Advanced Japanese I
Korean
KREA 0100KREA 0200 Korean and Korean
KREA 0300KREA 0400 Intermediate Korean and Intermediate Korean
KREA 0500KREA 0600 Advanced Korean and Advanced Korean
KREA 0912 Business Korean
Language Electives (language courses that may be counted for concentration credit)
Chinese
CHIN 0700CHIN 0800 Advanced Modern Chinese II and Advanced Modern Chinese II (either course may be taken for one semester)
CHIN 0911 Business Chinese
CHIN 0912 Chinese Language and Culture
CHIN 1040 Modern Chinese Literature
Japanese
JAPN 0700JAPN 0800 Advanced Japanese II and Advanced Japanese II (either course may be taken for one semester)
JAPN 0711 Japanese Linguistics
JAPN 0810 Classical Japanese
JAPN 0811 Business Japanese
JAPN 0812 Japanese Language and Society through Contemporary Film
JAPN 1010 Readings in Contemporary Japanese Fiction

Electives

The concentration requires that students complete a total of eight electives tied to their course of study, which may be defined in linguistic, chronological, thematic, or cultural terms. Students\ should choose their courses with the following four requirements in mind.

As is common in multidisciplinary concentrations, a wide range of courses, including many taught by faculty in other departments, may be counted toward the concentration. These include\ courses offered by East Asian Studies faculty, faculty with courtesy appointments in the Department, and courses with a significant focus on East Asia offered in such disciplines such as\ American Studies, Art History, Economics, International Relations, and many others.

Sample Electives offered by East Asian Studies
EAST 0140 Childhood and Culture in Japan
EAST 0304 Words on Things: Literature and Material Culture in Early Modern China
EAST 0307 China Through the Lens: History, Cinema, and Critical Discourse
EAST 0406 Foreign Bodies in Japan, 600–1600
EAST 1505 Two Koreas
For additional elective choices, visit http://brown.edu/academics/east-asian-studies/courses/more-course-offerings.

Senior Seminars

At least one of the eight elective courses must be an advanced research seminar, usually taken in the senior year. The research seminar will normally provide students with the opportunity to develop a project or paper focusing on one or more of their areas of inquiry within the concentration. Students are strongly encouraged to find ways to incorporate the use of Chinese-, Japanese-, or Korean-language materials in their research and learning in these courses. Courses falling into this category include EAS seminars over the 1000 level, as well as designated seminars offered by affiliated faculty in such departments as History, Religious Studies, and Comparative Literature, among others. The Department will provide a list of pre-approved senior seminars every semester. Students wishing to add courses to that list must submit their requests in writing to the Director of Undergraduate Studies at the start of the  semester.

Sample advanced seminars offered by East Asian Studies
EAST 1931 Market Economy, Popular Culture, and Mass Media in Contemporary China
EAST 1942 Queer Japan and Beyond

Double Concentrations

Students who are interested in developing a double concentration, including East Asian Studies as one of the two concentrations, should bear in mind that normally no more than two courses\ may be double-counted toward satisfying the course requirements of either of the two concentration programs involved.

Study Abroad

Concentrators are strongly encouraged, though not required, to study in East Asia for one or two semesters during their undergraduate years. Course credits earned abroad are generally transferable to Brown. However, a maximum of three courses taken abroad, of genuine intellectual substance and significantly related to East Asian Studies, may be considered for\ concentration credit.

Summary of requirements:

Please note: EAS does not currently offer a concentration in Vietnamese. Students who take Vietnamese language in EAS may wish to consider completing a Certificate in Intercultural Competence through the Center for Language Studies.

Honors

East Asian Studies offers qualified students, in their senior year, the opportunity to undertake a sustained research and writing project that, ideally, will result not merely in a long term paper, but in a piece of original scholarship. To enroll in the Honors Program, the student must be a senior East Asian Studies concentrator, and have earned an A or an S with Distinction in  the majority of courses for the concentration. Candidates for Honors are required to have developed a competence in an East Asian language sufficient to allow them to use East Asian  language materials in carrying out their research. Students must also successfully obtain the support of at least two faculty members who will agree to serve as primary and secondary advisors for the thesis. Prospective writers submit a thesis prospectus, brief bibliography, and completed application forms (with signatures), ordinarily late in the student’s six semester, to the  Director of Undergraduate Studies, who provides the final permission to proceed. Synopses of successful thesis proposals will be distributed to Department faculty.

Thesis writers enroll in advisor-specific sections of the thesis-writing course EAST 1980 (Fall) and EAST 1981 (Spring), meet regularly with their advisors over the course of both semesters,\ and submit final versions of their theses to the Department in mid-April. Advisors and students are required to provide updates of their progress to the Director of Undergraduate Studies at\ regular intervals.

The completed thesis is evaluated for Honors by the thesis director and by the second reader. In case of a difference of judgment between the two readers, a third opinion may be sought.  EAST 1981 counts as one concentration elective credit. The awarding of Honors in East Asian Studies will occur only if the Honors Thesis receives a final grade of A. If an A is not received, the\ student will still receive University academic credit for EAST 1980-81. Students are notified in mid-May whether the Department has recommended the awarding of Honors. Copies of  readers’ comments are provided to the student.

Graduating concentrators may have the ability to present the results of their senior theses in the department’s Senior Project Forum. The Forum will usually take place at the end of the spring semester, but may also occur at the end of the fall semester to accommodate mid-year graduates.