This Week: Important info for current and prospective EAS concentrators; Apply for Radcliffe Institute paid research assistant positions
Concentration Announcements
Interviews & Course Registration Signatures
 
All undergraduate concentrators and prospective concentrators must schedule an appointment with the undergraduate advising staff before the course registration deadline on August 26th.
 
Please schedule a meeting by e-mailing your Assistant Director of Undergraduate Studies directly.
 
ADUS for First-years/Sophomores:
Jesse LeFebvre | jesselefebvre@g.harvard.edu
Meet with ADUS for Sophomores/First-year students. E-mail to set up Zoom appointment, or attend office hours on Zoom (https://harvard.zoom.us/j/95635688307)
Tuesdays 1:00pm-2:00pm | Wednesdays 11:00am-12:00pm

ADUS for Juniors:
Meet with ADUS for Juniors. E-mail to set up Zoom appointment.
Office hours: Wednesdays 3:00pm-4:00pm | Thursdays 11:00am-12:00pm
 
ADUS for Seniors:
Jonathan Thumas | jthumas@g.harvard.edu
Meet with ADUS for Seniors. E-mail to set up Zoom appointment.
 

Secondary Field
If you are interested in advising for Secondary Field, please contact Nicole Escolas at eas@fas.harvard.edu.
 
EAS 91r Independent Study
If you are interested in an independent study, please contact Nicole Escolas at eas@fas.harvard.edu to fill out the administrative paperwork. You can contact the faculty member with whom you wish to work directly.

Tutorial Staff
 
Director of Undergraduate Studies:
Professor Melissa McCormick
2 Divinity Ave. #219
p: (617) 496-2276
Office hours: Tuesdays 1:30pm-3:00pm by appointment

The Office of East Asian Studies will open for the fall semester on August 16th, 2021. Prior to that, Nicole and Naia are available via e-mail or phone M-F 7:00am-4:30pm. Please call us at 617-495-8365, or e-mail eas@fas.harvard.edu or naia_poyer@fas.harvard.edu.
 
 
Tutorial Offerings 2021-22
 
Fall 2021
 
Senior Tutorial:
EASTD 99a (Part 1 of 2)
A full-year course for those seniors writing honors theses. Students work in individual tutorials with a faculty advisor and a tutor. You are encouraged to make use of materials in East Asian languages in your research to the best of your abilities. Preparing for an honors thesis should begin in the junior year. Students should discuss potential thesis topics with professors and tutorial instructors and further explore these topics in papers written for tutorials or other courses.
 
Spring 2022

Senior Tutorial:
EASTD 99b (Part 2 of 2)
The second half of the full-year course for seniors writing honors theses.

Junior Tutorial:
Economic Governance in East Asia
East Asia has given rise to models of development with distinct visions for the relationship between the state and the market. Hallmarks of the designs are powerful ministries, gigantic conglomerates, state-supervised labor unions, and spectacular corruption. The first part of the tutorial revisits four decades of “miraculous” growth in Japan and the Asian Tiger economies (South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore), in order to illuminate underlying development strategies from a political science perspective, including through theories of late industrialization and varieties of capitalism. The second part of this course focuses on China, whose strategists have drawn on its neighbors’ experience. It highlights the vast differences between economic regions in China (the Pearl River versus the Yangtze Delta, versus lagging Western regions), as well as the significant transformation of the country’s approach over the last three decades. Students will develop a deeper comprehension of phenomena such as national champions, tycoons in the digital economy, Communist party control, international expansion, and slogans such as “Made in China 2025.” Throughout the course, we will occasionally go back in time to historical foundations of economic governance. This junior tutorial provides individualized support in the research process toward a final paper.

Sophomore Tutorial:
Introduction to the Study of East Asia: Issues and Methods
This interdisciplinary and team-taught course provides an introduction to several of the approaches and methods through which the societies and cultures of East Asia can be studied at Harvard, including history, philosophy, literary studies, political science, film studies, anthropology and gender studies. We consider both commonalities and differences across the region, and explore how larger processes of imperialism, modernization, and globalization have shaped contemporary East Asian societies and their future trajectories.
 
 
Advising Events
 
East Asian Languages at the Virtual Language Advising Fair
 
Chinese (Mandarin)
Password: nihao
Monday, August 16, 10:00am-11:00am
 
Literary and Classical Chinese
Thursday, August 12, 10:00am-11:00am
 
Japanese (General)
Monday, August 16, 10:00am-11:00am
 
Japanese (Additional sessions for Elementary Japanese)
Monday, August 16, 2:00-4:00pm & 7:00-8:00pm
Friday, August 20, 9:00am-11:00am
 
Korean
Link TBD
Monday, August 16, 10:00am -12:00pm
 
 
For more information about the Language Advising Fair, visit this page.
Virtual Events This Week
Thursday, August 12

Thursday, August 12, 12:00 p.m.-1:15 p.m.
Dr. Sue Mi Terry, Senior Fellow for Korea at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS)
Markus Garlauskas, independent author, strategic analyst and consultant
Greg Scarlatoiu, Executive Director of the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea (HRNK)
David Maxwell, Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies
Moderator: Dr. Jieun Baek, Fellow with the Korea Project and the Applied History Project, Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School

Thursday, August 12, 8:00 p.m. EDT
Rowena He (CUHK), Taomo Zhou (Nanyang Technological University), Mary Brazelton (Cambridge University), and Charles Chang (Duke Kunshan) in discussion
Supported by the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies
Work Opportunities
Year-long Paid Research Opportunities with Radcliffe Research Partnership
Application deadline: Sunday, August 15 2021
Compensation: $15/hour

The Harvard Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study is looking for undergraduate students for paid research opportunities under the supervision of a Radcliffe fellow. Although the official deadline has passed, applications for the following projects will be accepted until midnight on Sunday, August 15:
 

Each fellow will hire 1-3 undergraduate researchers. Students will be paid $15.00/hour and will have a unique opportunity to explore a field of interest and to build a mentoring relationship with the fellow. Students can apply here for these 2021-2022 research positions. Participants in this program, the Radcliffe Research Partnership, must be active Harvard College students who are registered and enrolled in courses and have legal authorization to work in the United States.
 
Questions? Contact hyun_jin_yoo@radcliffe.harvard.edu
F21 Course Spotlight
Events by Institution
Asia Center Virtual Programs
Experience Harvard Asia Center programming through current and archived digital exhibitions, as well as podcast talk series and author conversation videos! Click here to access virtual programs offered through the Asia Center.


Left: Photo from "Elegy to a Uyghur Dreamscape" (ongoing virtual exhibition)
Student Groups
*Please be aware that student groups may have become inactive during our time off campus. If you are aware of any updates to a group on this list, please let us know by e-mailing naia_poyer@fas.harvard.edu.