EAA Digest Exclusive
Author: EAA Editorial Office
Engaged reading, and at least some knowledge of any culture’s written communications, is imperative for basic knowledge and understanding of other cultures, as well as our own. The following five varied selections from the EAA archives will hopefully inspire both instructors and students who seek to learn and reflect upon the profound impact of written communication and reading.
Keywords: Asia General
How to Cite: Editorial Office, E. (2022) “Learning About Asia and Ourselves: Written Communication and Reading”, Education About Asia. doi: https://doi.org/10.65959/eaa.1788
Engaged reading, and at least some knowledge of any culture’s written communications, is imperative for basic knowledge and understanding of other cultures, as well as our own. The following five varied selections from the EAA archives will hopefully inspire both instructors and students who seek to learn and reflect upon the profound impact of written communication and reading. Cheryl Crowley and Yu Li’s “Calligraphy in East Asia: Art, Communication, and Symbology” (Vol. 21, No. 3, Winter 2016), is a succinct but image-rich introduction to the communicative, educational, historical, aesthetic, moral, and contemporary aspects of calligraphy. This is the most classroom-friendly teaching resources essay I’ve ever read. Sarah Schneewind in “The Analects in the Classroom: Book Four as a First Step” (Vol. 16, No. 1, Spring 2011) re-translates what is arguably the oldest part of the Confucian Analects, and creates an imagined dialogue that will help students in history or philosophy survey courses build bridges to their counterparts 2,500 years ago, and to the complete Analects. Kristin Stapleton in “Fiction: A Passport to the Past (Vol. 23, No. 3, Winter 2018)” discusses her experiences incorporating not only novels (and some poetry) from several cultures into history survey courses, but also recommends accessible guides written by scholars that illumine both instructors and students about topics ranging from the early Heian Period to the Pacific War. Molly DeDona’s review of Waka T. Brown’s award-winning young adult middle school novel While I Was Away (Vol. 27, No. 2, Fall 2022) highlights the author’s memoir of leaving her Kansas home in 1984 to live in Tokyo with her strict Japanese grandmother, and attending a Japanese middle school. Issues ranging from dissimilar meanings derived from language to the author’s struggles with literacy and reading comprehension permeate this book that is suitable for adults as well as students.