Difference between revisions of "East Asian Languages and Cultures Department"
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{{Chinese}}The '''East Asian Languages and Cultures Department (EALAC)''' is located in [[Kent Hall]]. The department is called the 东亚语言文化系 in Chinese. | {{Chinese}}The '''East Asian Languages and Cultures Department (EALAC)''' is located in [[Kent Hall]]. The department is called the 东亚语言文化系 in Chinese. | ||
− | The department teaches [[Chinese]], [[Japanese]], | + | The department teaches [[Chinese]], [[Japanese]], [[Korean]], and Tibetan as well as many literature courses. Other languages are present but somewhat deprecated. For example, [[Cantonese]] is available only through cross-registration at [[NYU]]. |
The major requires a [[senior thesis]]. | The major requires a [[senior thesis]]. | ||
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+ | The faculty has occasionally been marred by disputes between those affiliated with Taiwan vs. those affiliated with mainland China. | ||
[[Category:EALAC|*]] | [[Category:EALAC|*]] |
Latest revision as of 09:50, 30 November 2013
This article contains Chinese text. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Chinese characters. |
The East Asian Languages and Cultures Department (EALAC) is located in Kent Hall. The department is called the 东亚语言文化系 in Chinese.
The department teaches Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Tibetan as well as many literature courses. Other languages are present but somewhat deprecated. For example, Cantonese is available only through cross-registration at NYU.
The major requires a senior thesis.
The faculty has occasionally been marred by disputes between those affiliated with Taiwan vs. those affiliated with mainland China.