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ASIA3026 Special Topics in Asia and the Pacific

Later Year Course

Offered By School of Culture, History and Language
Academic Career Undergraduate
Course Subject Asian Studies
Offered in Summer Session, 2012, First Semester, 2012, Autumn Session, 2012, Winter Session, 2012, Second Semester, 2012, Summer Session, 2013, First Semester, 2013, Winter Session, 2013, Winter Session, 2013, Second Semester, 2013, and Spring Session, 2013
Unit Value Range 6 units to 12 units
Course Description

This is a 'special topics' course that can deliver courses on emerging issues;enable new courses to be trialled as opportunities arise, or allow small groups of advanced undergraduates to work closely with an active researcher from the College of Asia and the Pacific in some field of current research.  The topics will vary for year to year and will generally be announced in the October before teaching begins.

Topics

Introductory Tibetan - Offered Summer Session 2012 - Mon 16 Jan - Fri 3 Feb 2012.

Tibetan is the most widely spoken language in the Himalaya, with its dialects being used all the way from Baltistan in Pakistan to the Chinese city of Chengdu.  Tibetan was also the target language of one of the largest translation projects in history, in which thousands of Indian and Chinese Buddhist texts were rendered in Tibetan; the results of which often providing scholars with access to texts and traditions that were not preserved anywhere else.

This intensive, introductory course will first provide the students with the basic tools to read, write and communicate in this language. This course will explain and assist its students to read and write the dBu chen Tibetan script, and based on this knowledge be able to conduct basic conversations in Tibetan. It will also focus, through continued supervision and assessment, on the pronunciation of Tibetan, as this usually proves difficult for most Tibetan learners. Based as it is around the commonalities between colloquial and literary Tibetan – particularly the common grammatical particles and structures – this course will provide an introduction to both these interdependent aspects of Tibetan language studies. This follows a model of teaching Tibetan that has been highly successful at both the School of African and Oriental Studies in London, and the Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales in Paris.  What is more, these common grammatical events will be contextualised within everyday situations, enabling the students to develop their language skills in “workshop” sessions.

The opportunity to learn to speak, read and write Tibetan will be appealing to a number of groups within the Australian community.  To begin with it provides an opportunity for language students to study an influential, linguistically hybrid language. It will provide access to the inner workings of Tibetan culture for those involved in NGOs that focus on the region, including Tibet support networks.  It is an opportunity to learn the source language of the texts used by those involved with Tibetan Buddhism.  And it is also an opportunity for those in the Australian Tibetan community who have never learnt to read, write and speak central, standard Tibetan.

Contact: Ruth Gamble ruth.gamble@anu.edu.au

Web: chl.anu.edu.au/china/tli.php

Learning Outcomes

Generic

Due to the individual nature of this course it is not possible to provide an exclusive list of learning outcomes. However, the following is an indicative list of possible outcomes. it is expected that on successful completion of this course students should be able to:
1. identify issues of interest in the field under consideration;
2. discuss these issues coherently and persuasively;
3. assess arguments made in the field;
4. explain the complex attitudes people have to these issues;
5. analyse and compare relevant data;
6. collaborate with other students and staff to select and combine materials for a case study;
7. research, present and justify the results of your collaboration with other students and staff with respect to the case studies;
8. reflect on and articulate how your own views on the field have developed over the course of the semester

Introductory Tibetan

By the end of this course, students will be able to read and write Tibetan in the dBu chen script.  They will also be able to conduct basic conversations in Tibetan, pronounced in modern, standard form.  As this course will focus on the particles that play a predominant role in both contemporary and classical Tibetan composition, they will also be able to read elementary Tibetan texts with the aid of an instructor.

Indicative Assessment

Introductory Tibetan

-Nightly Homework  35%

-Pronunciation Check-up [Friday, Week One] 10%

-Midway exam (includes oral interview) [Monday, Week Three] 15%

-Final exam (including basic translation) [Friday, Weed Three] 20%

-Participation and Attendance 20%

Workload

Varies depending on topic and duration.

Areas of Interest Non Language Asian Studies
Requisite Statement

Departmental consent.

Consent Required Consent is required prior to enrolling in this course.
Prescribed Texts

Introductory Tibetan:

Tournadre Nicolas and Sangda Dorje. 2003. Manual of Standard Tibetan. Ithaca: Snow Lion.

[With supplementary materials supplied in class and via Wattle.]

Majors/Specialisations Indonesian Studies, Japanese Studies, Asia-Pacific Security Studies, South Asian Studies, Southeast Asian Studies, Chinese Studies, and Northeast Asian Studies
Academic Contact peter.hendriks@anu.edu.au

The information published on the Study at ANU 2012 website applies to the 2012 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2011 website.

Updated:   13 Nov 2015 / Responsible Officer:   The Registrar / Page Contact:   Student Business Solutions