971113 Thesis (Global Asian Studies)
Warning: The information on this page is indicative. The subject outline for a
particular session, location and mode of offering is the authoritative source
of all information about the subject for that offering. Required texts, recommended texts and references in particular are likely to change. Students will be provided with a subject outline once they enrol in the subject.
Subject handbook information prior to 2025 is available in the Archives.
Credit points: 0 cp
Result type: Pass fail, no marks
Description
The thesis in Global Asian Studies allows students to focus on dynamic dimensions of people and places in Asia. Through the thesis they conduct interdisciplinary research addressing the economic, political, social, and transcultural influence of Asian states and societies. Thesis supervision and research seminars centre on contemporary research design, including multi-sited frameworks, everyday multilingualism, digital humanities, and theory-building. Students are encouraged to develop approaches beyond Eurocentrism and descriptive area studies, to conduct original research for instance focused on Asia in the world, Asian contexts of globalising issues, comparative urbanisms and ways of life, connectivity among Asian societies, regional environmental change, and pathways to political futures. Topics may include cinema, cities, education, the environment, gender, geography, governance and international affairs, labour and social movements, sociolinguistics, media studies, and politics and political economy, and with particular emphasis on China, Japan, Korea, and Indonesia. Advancing a critically insightful understanding of contemporary Asia, based on an intellectual foundation for connectedness in an uneven world, the thesis prepares students for postgraduate research and professional careers in the arts, business, education, government and non-government sectors, international affairs, media, politics, and public policy.