Teaching Resources
Author: EAA Editorial Office
The term Asia is both, at one level, geographically accurate, and conceptually useful in understanding specific cultures but at another level, the concept of “Asia” is limiting because of regional and global connections that have existed since antiquity. The focus of the January 2021 EAA Digest Exclusive was intercultural contacts, as is the case with this month’s column. Given the subjects most EAA readers teach, understanding the humanities and social sciences means realizing the power of intercultural contacts.
Keywords: Central Asia, China, China and Inner Asia, Economic History, India, International Relations, Korea, South Asia
How to Cite: Editorial Office, E. (2021) “Intercultural Contacts 2: Visual Learning, Belief Systems, and the Silk Roads”, Education About Asia. doi: https://doi.org/10.65959/eaa.1742
Intercultural Contacts 2: Visual Learning, Belief Systems, and the Silk Roads
The term Asia is both, at one level, geographically accurate, and conceptually useful in understanding specific cultures but at another level, the concept of “Asia” is limiting because of regional and global connections that have existed since antiquity. The focus of the January 2021 EAA Digest Exclusive was intercultural contacts, as is the case with this month’s column. Given the subjects most EAA readers teach, understanding the humanities and social sciences means realizing the power of intercultural contacts. Rachel Ball-Phillips’ “Digital Archives: Teaching Indian Colonial History Through Photographs”(volume 20, number 3, winter 2015) is a short, but useful teaching resources essay whose narrative and photographs assist instructors in understanding mid-nineteenth century colonial India through analyzing both British perceptions of India during this period and viewing a unique historical record compiled at the dawn of photography on the subcontinent. Readers particularly interested in the topic can digitally access a link in the article for many more photographs from the William Johnson Collection archived at Southern Methodist University's DeGolyer Special Collections Library. Readers interested in comparative cultural content that transcends East Asia can also access the online supplement for the article and examine a course syllabus. Professor Ball-Phillips and her colleague Neil Foley taught a course at SMU that included Mexico and the American Southwest, as well as India. The late Jean Elliott Johnson’s "China 1905–1908: Harrison Sacket Elliott’s Letters and Photographs" (volume 11, number 3, winter 2006) is probably the best article in the entire EAA archives that combines rare photographs of the last days of the Qing dynasty and masterful integration of primary source excerpts from letters the man who would become her father wrote to his family about his experiences in China. Presuming high school and beginning university students are familiar with rudimentary content on early twentieth century China, this is a superb student reading. Students can read and see a twenty-one-year-old American’s impressions of Chinese culture including commentary on daily life as well as a chronicle of major events like the Boxer Rebellion, and the 1905–1906 government transition from Confucian-based civil service examinations to a more “modern” assessment process. Elliott served for three years as stenographer and aide for the American Methodist Bishop to China.
OTHER TEACHING RESOURCES: The Carolina Asia Center’s Along the Silk Road: A Journey of Global Exchange – Middle/High School