Course Resources
Lectures will be available via podcast at https://podcast.ucsd.edu. Prof. Magagna’s notes from each
lecture will be posted to TritonEd as well.
Readings
Weeks 1 – 5:
• Yao, X. 2000. An Introduction to Confucianism. Cambridge University Press. (Read entire book.)
• C.C. Tsai. 2018. The Analects: An Illustrated Edition. Princeton University Press. (Read entire book.)
Weeks 6 – 10:
• de Bary, W.T. et al. 1999. Sources of Chinese Tradition, Volume 1: From Earliest Times to 1600. Columbia University Press. (Read sections on Mencius, Xunzi, Confucius and the Analects, plus either Zhu Xi or
Wang Yangming sections.) ∗Office: SSB 375; Phone: (858) 337-1926.
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http://academicintegrity.ucsd.edu
http://commons.ucsd.edu/students/writing/index.html
https://podcast.ucsd.edu
Teaching Assistants
The TAs for this course are Mariana Carvalho Barbosa, Todd Levinson, Stan Oklobdzija, Michael Seese, and
Liesel Spangler. The TAs will not hold regular office hours. At least one TA will be present at every lecture;
students are encouraged to approach the TA with questions either before or after the class session.
Please send all email communication to Michael Seese at mseese@ucsd.edu.
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mailto:mseese@ucd.edu
Midterm Exam
Directions
• The midterm exam is due Friday, 9 November at 2:00pm.
• You will be required to submit a digital copy of your paper to the Turnitin link on TritonEd. Please retain a copy of your submission confirmation, in case there are any technical issues with your submission.
• Please write 6–7 pages for each response, except for Prompt 1. If you select Prompt 1, you must write 8–10 pages.
• Use standard formatting with:
– Double spacing,
– 11 or 12 point font (Times, Helvetica, Calibri, etc.),
– 1 inch margins,
– No more than 1 inch of space dedicated to title and header,
– No extraneous space between paragraphs or headers.
• Please include the number of the prompt you are responding to.
• Cite lecture and class readings where appropriate;
– Include a bibliography and in-text citations,
– You may use any standard citation style, (MLA, APA, Chicago, etc.),
– Please do not use outside sources,
– Plagiarism will not be tolerated.
• Please do not include pictures, charts, or figures in your responses. Please do not copy / paste lecture notes into the text of your response.
• Please stay on topic.
• You must turn your exam in by the deadline to receive full credit. Any late exams (even by 1 minute late) will incur a penalty.
– Papers will be penalized by 13 of a letter grade for each day late (e.g., A– −→ B+, etc.). – The system will not accept late submissions. If you need to turn your paper in after the deadline,
please email a .pdf copy to mseese@ucsd.edu.
Prompts
Choose and respond to one of the prompts below.
1. Explain the paradox of proper order and illustrate it with the work of the district magistrate. (8-10 pages, source: lectures)
2. Explain the core concepts of East Asian thought. (6-7 pages, sources: Yao and lectures)
3. Explain the Analects used in the lectures and the illustrated Analects. (6-7 page, sources: lectures, Illustrated Analects)
4. Explain the problem of elite regulation. (6-7 pages, sources: lectures, de Bary, Yao)