EALC004 - Mongol Civ Nomad & Sed

Status
O
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
301
Title (text only)
Mongol Civ Nomad & Sed
Term
2022A
Syllabus URL
Subject area
EALC
Section number only
301
Section ID
EALC004301
Course number integer
4
Registration notes
Permission Needed From Instructor
Penn Global Seminar
Meeting times
MWF 12:00 PM-01:00 PM
Meeting location
COHN 337
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Christopher Pratt Atwood
Description
This course will explore how two intertwined ways of life - pastoral nomadism and settling down for religious, educational, and economic reasons - have shaped the cultural, artistic, and intellectual traditions of Mongolia. In this course students will learn about Mongolian pastoral nomadism, and how the Mongolian economy, literature, and steppe empires were built on grass and livestock. We will also explore how Mongolians have also just as consistently used the foundations of empire to build sedentary monuments and buildings, whether funerary complexes, Buddhist monasteries, socialist boarding schools, and modern capitals. Over time, these cities have changed shape, location, and ideology, all the while remaining linked to the mobile pastoralists in the countryside. We will also explore how these traditions of mobile pastoralism and urbanism were transformed in the 20th century, by urbanization, communist ideology, and the new reality of free-market democracy, ideological pluralism, and a new mining dependent economy. We will meet modern painters and musicians who interweave Mongolian nomadic traditions with contemporary world trends, and consider the future of rural traditions in a modern world. As a Penn Global Seminar, students will be selected in coordination with the Global Seminar Program, prioritizing students who can demonstrate interest in and some preliminary thought about he course topics and issues.
Course number only
004
Fulfills
Cross Cultural Analysis
Use local description
No