LING 042. Voices of the Silk Road: Languages, Literatures, and Cultural Exchange in Central Asia


CHIN 042  
This team-taught course leads students to survey the languages and literatures of the diverse peoples who have inhabited the "Silk Road" region-an area of Eurasia spanning the Pacific to the Middle East-focusing on cultural exchange and transformation in the region between the 2nd and 14th centuries as understood from different perspectives within those societies.  Rather than view cultures of this region as peripheral or the Silk Road as a mere transit corridor between empires, our goal is to enable students to understand the region as a cultural, economic, and scientific center in its own right whose linguistic and artistic diversity has had an enduring impact in world history and on current events.

The course will provide breadth and depth of understanding for these societies by incorporating a series of case studies.  We will introduce students to various types of analysis of original sources, including paleographic analysis of writing systems, linguistic analysis of authentic texts in various languages, and literary analysis of texts supported by English translations to grasp the impact that the writers from different places and backgrounds, as well as the medium and genre of texts has on their message.  By interacting with such texts and building analytical skills in these areas, students will be able to appreciate and explore the interconnectivity of this region throughout history.
Social Sciences.
1 credit.
Eligible for ASIA, CPLT with permission, GLBL-paired, MDST.
Spring 2025. Ridgway. Washington.


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