Undergraduate Research Grant
GRANT OVERVIEW
The Undergraduate Research Grant offered by the Department of
Asian Languages is used to support a select number of Stanford
students to carry out research in China (including Hong Kong and
Taiwan ), Japan , Korea , or domestically on an academic topic
of their interest. One of the major goals of this grant is to encourage
students to perform research using an Asian language that may eventually
lead to an honors thesis.
This grant may be used to defray travel and living expenses overseas
or domestically. The exact amount for each award will depend upon
the quality of a given project proposal as well as the total number
of grants the Department chooses to award.
In 2004, funded by the VPUE Department Grants for undergraduate
education, the Department of Asian Languages was able to fund five
undergraduate research projects. These projects were: “A
Dish is Just a Dish?: What Western Food Means to Japanese Youth” by
Salome Sherre (supervised by Prof. Reichert); “Japanese Gardens:
History, Design, and Aesthetics” by Karen Loh (supervised
by Prof. Carter); “Dialects in Japan” by Alex Gorman,
Nathan Powell Shockey, Christine Lee Mee Jung, Chieze Okoye, and
Ryan Sands (supervised by Prof. Matsumoto).
This year, again, grants will be provided under the two categories:
- Internship with Asian Languages faculty member (faculty
designed)
Internships in 2005 will be available:
- with Prof. Lewis on the topic of “Emotions in Early
China,”
- with Prof. Carter on the topic of “ Japanese Gardens
: History, Design, and Aesthetics,”
- with Prof. Levy on the topic of “History of Japanese
Feminism.”
- with Prof. Matsumoto on the topic of “Dialects in
Japan .” (in progress)
- Individual research project (student designed, with
faculty supervision)
Students will design and propose projects to be supervised
by the Asian Languages faculty members listed on the next page
with appropriate specialization.
Recipients of the awards will be expected to work closely with
their faculty supervisors during all stages of planning, conducting,
and concluding the research. The results of each project must be
presented to the department in a format deemed suitable by the
supervising faculty member; possibilities include a research paper,
compilation of an annotated bibliography, creation of a web page,
a short film etc. All students will be expected to participate
in a Departmental undergraduate studies forum in Fall 2005 (unless
otherwise noted), to which all students and faculty will be invited.
The benefits of these research projects are numerous. Not only
will an internship or research project provide you with an opportunity
to accelerate your Chinese, Japanese, or Korean language study,
it will also provide you with the tools and opportunities you need
to conduct research that moves beyond English-language secondary
source materials and into the realm of primary sources and on-site
fieldwork.
PROPOSAL GUIDELINES
Project proposals
describe your research project and are submitted as a supplement
to the Application Form. The proposal should include, but is not
limited to, the following elements:
• Title of Project-
Name of the project
you are proposing.
• Summary Description-
A brief summary
of your proposed research.
• Background and Objective-
A statement
about your work on the project thus far -- including relevant readings
and the project's background as a whole. Cite any relevant course
work, other experience or skills which you may have. Briefly describe
the overall objectives and goals for the project. This section
should be supplemented with a transcript and resume.
• Methodology-
A brief description of how
you are proposing to explore your objective or answer your research
question
• Time frame and Itemized Budget -
When
do you expect to be working on your project? When, and for how
long, do you expect to be preparing for your research? Collecting
data? Writing up your results? This section should be written in
tabular, or outline form, and should include a general identification
of how many days or weeks you have budgeted for each aspect of
your plan (travel and living expenses overseas, research materials,
etc.)
• Bibliography–
Include a short bibliography
of publications germane to the proposed study.
• Letter of Recommendation-
Include at least
one letter of recommendation for the proposed project from a language
instructor or supporting faculty member.
• Signatureof Supervising Faculty
Member-
This must be a member of the Asian Languages
faculty with expertise in the field you wish to study. The following
faculty members are available as supervisors for individual projects:
- Prof. Mark Lewis - any aspect of early or medieval
Chinese society (B.C. 500 to 1000 A.D.)
- Prof. Yoshiko Matsumoto – Any research related
to the Japanese language and society, which can be conducted
either here or in Japan . Specific research interests include
semantic, pragmatic and sociolinguistic aspects of phenomena
in Japanese including pragmatics of reference, honorifics, speech
acts, bilingualism, and the relation among language, gender and
age. Questions of ideology and identity reflected in teaching
and learning Japanese as a second language are another interest.
- Prof. James Reichert - Research topics related to
modern Japan --literature, history, popular culture, etc.
- Prof.Chao Fen Sun - Any research related
to Chinese linguistics including syntax, semantic, sociolinguistic,
writing, and history.
*** Students applying for internships will be expected to consult
with the relevant faculty member before submitting an application.
Project proposals for internships should indicate that such consultation
has taken place and that the research plan satisfies the expectations
of the supervisor. ***
If you have received any additional funding (grants, scholarships
or other awards) towards your proposed project during the 2004-2005
or 2005-2006 Academic Years, please indicate this in your proposal.
APPLICATION PROCESS
APPLICATIONS ARE DUE APRIL 5, 2005
Applications are available in the Department office (50-51D) or
can be downloaded
at this site.
Project applications and inquiries should be sent to:
Department of Asian Languages
Stanford University
Main Quad Building 50
Stanford, CA 94305-2034
Phone: (650) 725-2742
Fax: (650) 725-8931
Email: asian-languages@stanford.edu
2005 ASIAN LANGUAGES DEPARTMENT UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH
PROJECTS
• The Emotions and Music in Early China (Reed Criddle/Professor
Mark Lewis)
Where there is music, there is chaos. Where there is music, there
is unity. According to early Chinese philosophers of the Confucian
school, which of these statements is true, are they both right,
or are they both wrong? This study investigates the philosophical
underpinnings of music’s societal functions. How do the highly
regarded Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove approach this topic? Were
their theories extensions of traditional values or attacks on established
ideology? Ruan Ji’s treatise on musical theory entitled Discourse
on Music evaluates the validity of traditional
Confucian values, as laid out by the Book of Rites, through
a discussion of the interplay between emotion and song.
• Virtual Sign Systems in Japanese Semiotic Life (Thomas
Gaubatz/Professor Indra Levy)
My goal for this project is to develop a theory to describe the
relationships between literary and social experience. I begin by
considering theories of the literary text that characterize it
alternately as primarily formal or primarily mimetic, and proceed
to look for a theory that describes the interaction of formal and
mimetic elements in the same text. The results of this study suggest
that the tension between formalism and realism in certain genres
can result in an exchange of signs between the space of literary
representation and that of social experience.
With this theory in mind, I look for examples of such an exchange
in the literature and popular culture of Edo Japan. Edo is a particularly
interesting setting, because the literary institution known as
the ukiyo and the social institution of the licensed prostitution
quarter come together to produce a space in which literary representation
and social experience interact dramatically. I describe some of
the forms of this interaction with examples taken from ukiyo literature
such as the sharebon and from the kabuki theatre.
• Dialects of Japan: Age and the Tsugaru Dialect (Evelyn
Chin, Lindsay Gibbon, Jeffrey Hu, Christine Lee/Professor
Yoshiko Matsumoto)
This research is a continuation of the 2004 “Dialects of
Japan” research project. The linguistic features of the Tsugaru
dialect of northern Japan and their variations among different
age groups are examined in a series of case studies featuring urban
and rural three-generation families in Tsugaru. The 2004 findings
showed that younger generations in the area held more pride in
their dialect than did older generations. To determine if this
is the result of a change in dialect or a shift towards the standard
dialect of Japan, dialect features between younger and older generations
were compared. Findings from these case studies show that although
younger generations can use the standard dialect with more ease
than older generations, their version of the Tsugaru dialect is
not necessarily closer to the standard dialect than the older generations.
2005 ASIAN LANGUAGES DEPARTMENT UNDERGRADUATE
RESEARCH SYMPOSIUM
Date: Wednesday,
Nov 30, 2005
Time:
12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
Location: Building 50, Room 51A (Asian Languages Department Library)
Buffet Lunch Provided
Come and hear the recipients of the Department of Asian Languages’
undergraduate research grants present their research findings.
Sponsored by the Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education (VPUE)
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