Page 58 - HKSYU Prospectus 2018-19
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Shue Yan University Prospectus 2018-19

GEA 103 The Origins and Transformation of East Asian Food Culture (EAFC)
                                                                                                     1 Term; 3 Credits

       To get to know a country, studying its food culture is a good starting point. Food culture
reflects not only national lifestyles and preferences, but also traditional culture. Today, East
Asian food culture (EAFC) plays an important role worldwide. For example, Chinese regional
cuisines, Korean barbecue (gogigui) and kimchi and high-end Japanese cuisine are all very
popular among international diners. Many East Asian restaurants and lovers of East Asian
food can be found around the globe. The countries of East Asia are important food-culture
exporters, with world-leading soft power. Their great range of food and diverse cultures play a
part in their success. What are the components of these unique cultures?

       This course will probe the following dimensions of global history and cultural studies: 1)
the historical influence of Confucian culture on EAFC; 2) modern forms of EA cultural
exchange, such as immigration, and their effects; and 3) the worldwide dissemination of EAFC
as soft power in today’s globalised era, the factors leading to its success, and how EAFC has
been reshaped into hybrid multicultural forms via localisation.

GEA 104 Knowing Hong Kong through Historical Sites
                                                                                                     1 Term; 3 Credits

       This course will offer an introduction to cultural heritage in Hong Kong. Through field-trip
activities, students will enrich their knowledge of cultural-heritage development in Hong Kong.
Hong Kong combines Western and Eastern cultures, with the influences of both traditional
Chinese culture and a former British colonial government. The course is designed to enable
students to explore several historical routes and heritage sites in Hong Kong. A combination of
teaching, learning and practical activities will help students understand the history and culture
of Hong Kong Island, Kowloon and the New Territories. The theories learned in class will be
applied on field trips, giving students direct contact with the environment under study and
stimulating them to acquire and develop knowledge, skills and interests relating to Hong
Kong’s economic, historical, cultural and social development.

GEA 105 The Making of Hong Kong Chinese Culture
                                                                                                     1 Term; 3 Credits

       The rise of Hong Kong Chinese culture involves an intricate interplay in relation to Can-
tonese praxis, colonial modernity and cosmopolitan identification. By focusing upon family life,
religious beliefs, arts and literature, this general education course examines how Hong Kong
Chinese create a unique version of Chinese culture through varying cultural innovations and
creative practices, particularly what distinctive ingenuity and flexibility are in question. The
general objective is not to trace the presence of a constant Chinese culture from the estranged
past, but to demonstrate the innovative transformation of Chinese culture in the Hong Kong
context.

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