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Asian Studies FAQs1. Why study Asia? What is it's significance for the U.S.? Japan's gross industrial economy is larger than the United States' in absolute terms for 2001, not per capita. While China's GNP is currently about 1/6th of Japan's, at current growth rates it is forecast to surpass Japan in the 2030s. East Asia surpassed Europe as the United States' largest trading partner in the 1970s. Global impact on markets, environment, competition for resources both human and natural will reshape the geopolitical map as China fully enters the market. The cultural contribution of these countries on the ground here in the United States cuts across the board from the visual arts, architecture, cinema, and literature, to new media forms such as animation and computer gaming. A map of the earth that sizes countries not according to physical size but according to any selection of factors relating to industrial or information economies will portray a shift in the center of gravity of the globe occurring during your students' lifetimes ( Oxford World Atlas , 2003). 2. Why study Asian languages? Well, one, they are interesting. Additionally, according to the Modern Language Association's 2004 Report on Foreign Language Enrollments in United States Institutions of Higher Learning, Chinese and Japanese are no longer considered less-commonly taught languages (LCTL) at either the secondary or university level, and both have experienced double-digit enrollment growth for the last ten years. On the other hand, with the exception of Spanish, enrollments in major European languages such as French, German, and Russian at the university level have been declining since the 1970s (MLA Profession 2004, pp. 128-153). Projections to 2050 of the number of native speakers globally in the 15-24 cohort show the top two and 5 of the top 10 languages being Asian: Chinese, Hindi, Bengali, Japanese, and Malay (“The Future of Language,” Science , v. 303, 27 Feb 2004, pp. 1329-31). Insofar as the mission of the university is to prepare its students for the 21st, and not the 19th or 20th century, it must include in every discipline the capacity to make sense of the long-term cultural, historical, and social processes that have produced these new facts. 3. What can I do with a major in Asian Studies?
4. That's work the Asian Studies major specifically positions you for, but what if I want to go on to graduate or professional schools?
5. But I'm afraid a CLAS major will limit my options later, like if I want to go into the business world.
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Last Updated 03/31/2006 Have a Question? Contact us. |
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