Learning Outcomes:
-a sensibility to themes and actors that pull together or drive apart Asian and international actors and institutions in past and present
-the skillset to choose levels of analysis according to deep historical knowledge. National, transnational, international, regional and global levels of analysis lead to different conclusions.
-a keen awareness to how state narratives and official interests support or impede international cooperation
-an appreciation of why regionalism and globalization have been and remain contested, conflictual and far from straightforward solutions to stability and peace.
Indicative Module Content:
This module will explore and explain the following themes and approaches in historical analysis by week:
W1 Regionalism as a Revolt, 1: The Anti-Imperialist Trigger in Pacific Asia
W2 Regionalism as a Revolt, 2: The Anti-Imperialist Trigger in Southeast Asia
W3 Pan-Asianism before Japanese Aggression: The case of China’s 1911 Revolution
W4 Early Disappointments with American Globalism: The Korean Case
W5 When Regionalism is too imperial:
W6 Looking North: The Soviet Impact in Chinese Nationalism
W7 World War II or Pacific War?
W8 The Enemy within, 1: Threatening foreign elements in China
W9 The Enemy within, 2: Threatening foreign elements in the US
W10 Unexpected Stalemates: Continental East Asia from the Chinese Communist Revolution to the Korean War
W11 Has the Cold War ended in Asia? The absence of regionalism