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University Graduate School 2002-2004 Academic Bulletin |
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Central Eurasian Studies
College of Arts and Sciences Bloomington
Chairperson
Departmental E-mail
Departmental URL
Graduate Faculty
Distinguished Professor
Professors
Associate Professors
Academic Advisor
The department offers a comprehensive program on the study of Central Eurasia, the vast heartland of Europe and Asia. Students are introduced to the area as a whole and specialize in one of the major regions within Central Eurasia. The degree program consists of two interconnected elements: a language of specialization (LOS), which gives a student access to the culture of a given region through the voices of its people; and a region of specialization (ROS), which includes courses on various aspects of the region's culture. The LOS may be any language offered regularly in the department including Estonian, Finnish, Hungarian, Mongolian, Persian, Tibetan, Turkish, and Uzbek. Some regions and languages such as the Siberian region (including the Buryat, Evenki, Yakut, and other languages) and the Volga-Kama region (including the Mari, Mordvin, and other languages) are available only as individualized specializations at the Ph.D. level.
Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy. CEUS also offers a dual M.A./M.P.A. degree with the School of Public and Environmental Affairs.
Special Departmental Requirements
See also general University Graduate School requirements.
The degree requirements are subdivided into fields based on the region of specialization, one of the following: the Baltic-Finnish region (including primarily Estonian or Finnish as LOS), the Central Asian region (including primarily Uzbek as LOS), the Hungarian region (including Hungarian as LOS), the Iranian region (including Persian as LOS), the Mongolian region (including primarily Mongolian as LOS), the Tibetan region (including Tibetan as LOS), and the Turkish region (including Turkish as LOS).
Admissions Requirements
Course Requirements
Thesis
Dual Master of Arts in Central Eurasian Studies and Master of Public Affairs (M.A./M.P.A.) Degree
The Department of Central Eurasian Studies and the School of Public and Environmental Affairs jointly offer a three-year program that qualifies students for a dual master's degree. One semester, preferably the first semester, of course work toward the dual degree should be completed in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs in order to complete prerequisite courses that are only offered in the fall.
Admissions Requirements
CEUS Course Requirements
Public and Environmental Affairs Course Requirements
Admission Requirements
Course Requirements
Minors
Minors by Students from Other Departments
Research Language Requirement
Qualifying Examination
The oral examination will be given within one week after the written examination. It will cover the same fields, with no fewer than 40 minutes devoted to each. At least three examiners will be present at the oral examination.
Marks of "high pass," "pass," and "failure" will be assigned to each field in the written and oral examinations. Unsatisfactory performance in one field of the written examination will require repetition of the examination in that field before the orals may be taken. Failing marks received in two fields of the written examination will constitute failure in the written part, and the student will not be allowed to retake the written examination during the same semester. If the student fails the written examination twice, consent to continue work in the department will be withdrawn.
Unsatisfactory performance in one field of the oral examination will require the repetition of the examination in that field. Failing marks received in two fields of the oral examination will constitute failure in the oral part, and the student will not be allowed to retake the oral examination during the same semester. If the student fails the oral examination twice, permission to continue work in the department will be withdrawn.
Dissertation
Final Examination
Languages
Chaghatay
Estonian
Finnish
Hungarian
Kazak
Mongolian
Tibetan
Turkish
Uygur
Uzbek
U502 Introduction to Yakut (3 cr.)
U504 Introduction to Mari (Cheremis) (3 cr.)
U520 Selected Topics in Central Eurasian Studies (1-6 cr.)1
U568 Mongolian Dialects (3 cr.)
U571 Uralic Languages (3 cr.)
U581 Languages of Eastern Inner Asia (3 cr.)
U584 Introduction to Manchu (3 cr.)
U600 Advanced Readings in Central Eurasian Studies (1-6 cr.)
U670 Comparative Uralic Linguistics I (3 cr.)
U671 Comparative Uralic Linguistics II (3 cr.)
U673 Typology of Central Eurasian Languages (3 cr.)
U674 Comparative Finnic (3 cr.)
U683 Altaic Linguistics (3 cr.)
U690 Comparative Turkic Linguistics (3 cr.)
U710 Seminar in Uralic Studies (3 cr.)
U720 Seminar in Inner Asian Studies (3 cr.)
U800 Research in Central Eurasian Studies (1-6 cr.)
U345 Finno-Ugric and Siberian Mythology and Religion (3 cr.)
U368 The Mongol Conquest (3 cr.)
U370 Uralic Peoples (3 cr.)
U394 Islam in the Soviet Union and Successor States (3 cr.)
U423 Hungary between 1890 and 1945 (3 cr.)
U424 Hungarian Literature from Its Beginnings to 1900 (3 cr.)
U426 Modern Hungarian Literature (3 cr.)
U427 Politics, Society, and Culture in Present-Day Hungary (3 cr.)
U430 Finnic Folklore (3 cr.)
U436 Finnish Civilization to 1800 (3 cr.)
U437 Finnish Civilization from 1800 to the Present (3 cr.)
U450 Turkish Oral Literature (3 cr.)
U459 Seminar in Turkish Studies (3 cr.)
U469 The Mongols of the Twentieth Century (3 cr.)
U481 Survey of Tibetan Literature (3 cr.)
U483 Introduction to the History of Tibet (3 cr.)
U484 The Religions of Tibet (3 cr.)
U485 Tibetan Oral Literature (3 cr.)
U489 Tibet and the West (3 cr.)
U490 Sino-Tibetan Relations (3 cr.)
U493 Central Asia in the Sixteenth-Nineteenth Centuries (3 cr.) Graduate P: reading knowledge of a foreign language in which relevant literature exists.
U494 Central Asia under Russian Rule (3 cr.)
U495 Islamic Central Asia to the Sixteenth Century (3 cr.)
U496 Ethnic History of Central Asia (3 cr.)
U497 Inner Asian Peoples and Nationality Policy in the Peoples' Republic of China (3 cr.)
U498 Studies in Inner Asian Religious Traditions (3 cr.)
U518 Empire and Ethnicity in Modern Russian History (3 cr.)
U519 Soviet and Post-Soviet Nationality Policies and Problems (3 cr.)
U520 Selected Topics in Central Eurasian Studies (1-6 cr.)1
U533 Finland in the Twentieth Century (3 cr.)
U534 Classical Finnish Literature (3 cr.)
U535 Modern Finnish Literature (3 cr.)
U543 Estonian Culture and Civilization (3 cr.)
U544 The Baltic States since 1918 (3 cr.)
U550 Turkish Folklore: Methodology and Analysis (3 cr.)
U563 Mongolian Historical Writings (3 cr.)
U564 Mongolian Literature and Folklore (3 cr.)
U565 Mongolian Civilization and Folk Culture (3 cr.)
U569 Modern Inner Mongolia (3 cr.) Introduction to the modern history of the area of Inner Mongolia. Surveys major trends, ideas, personalities, and events; places Inner Mongolia within the context of both China and Inner Asia; uses the history of Inner Mongolia to explore current general theories of nationalism, development, and culture change.
U574 The Ecology of Central and Northern Asia (3 cr.)
U588 Chinese Inner Asia to 1949 (3 cr.) History of Chinese Inner Asia from the rise of the Qing dynasty to the Chinese Communist victory in 1949-1951. Focus includes Qing systems of indirect rule, colonization, the New Policies, religion and modernity, indigenous nationalist movements and their interaction with both outside powers, and the Soviet and Chinese Communist movements.
U590 Shamanism in Central Eurasia (3 cr.)
U595 Introduction to Central Eurasian Studies (3 cr.)
U596 Post-Soviet Transition in Central Asia (3 cr.) Examines problems of transition since 1991 in Kazakstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. Topics include political systems, economic change, emergence of national identities, foreign policy (with "near" and "far" abroad), social welfare and education, demography, language policy, citizenship, military (including military conflict), and borders.
U597 Politics and Society in Central Asia (3 cr.)
U598 Peoples and Cultures of Central Asia (3 cr.)
U599 Seminar on Social Change in Central Asia (3 cr.)
U600 Advanced Readings in Central Eurasian Studies (1-6 cr.)
U601 M.A. Thesis Research (3 cr.)
U698 Islamic Hagiography of Central Asia (3 cr.) P: reading knowledge of Persian or Chaghatay Turkic.
U710 Seminar in Uralic Studies (3 cr.)
U720 Seminar in Central Eurasian Studies (3 cr.)
U730 Seminar in Hungarian Studies (3 cr.)
U785 Seminar in Tibetan Literature (3 cr.)
U790 Colloquium in Central Eurasian Studies (1 cr.)
U797 Seminar on Comparative Study of Muslim Societies of Central Asia and Middle East (3 cr.)
U798 Seminar on Central Asian Nomadic Pastoral Societies (3 cr.)
U800 Research in Central Eurasian Studies (1-6 cr.)
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