ABSTRACT

As countries across Asia continue to rise and become more assertive global powers, the role that Higher Education has played, and continues to play, in this process is an issue of growing pertinence. Furthermore, understanding the relationship between Europe and Asia fostered by historical and contemporary knowledge transfer, including Higher Education, is crucial to analysing and encouraging the progress of both regional integration and inter-regional cooperation.

With a specific focus on international Higher Education, European Studies in Asia investigates knowledge transfer and channels of learning between Europe and Asia from historical, contemporary and teaching perspectives. The book examines a selection of significant historical precedents of intellectual dialogue between the two regions and, in turn, explores contemporary cross-regional discourses both inside and outside of the official frameworks of the European Union (EU) and the Asia--Europe Meetings (ASEM). Drawing on extensive case studies based on many of his own teaching experiences, Georg Wiessala addresses key questions, such as the nature and construction of the European Studies in Asia curriculum; aspects of ‘values’, co-constructed learning and adult pedagogy in the discipline of European Studies in Asia; the politics of Asian host cultures, the ‘internationalization’ of Asian Higher Education and the experiences and expectations of tertiary sector students of this subject in Asia, Australia and New Zealand. In doing so, the author articulates a range of outcomes for the further development of Higher Education cooperation agendas between Asia and Europe, in the discipline of European Studies, and in related fields such as International Relations.

This case study-led book makes an original and novel contribution to our understanding of European Studies in Asia. As such, it will be of great interest to students and scholars of Asian Education, Comparative Education, European Studies and International Relations.

chapter 1|14 pages

The globalization of knowledge and the subject of European Studies in Asia

Themes and theoretical frameworks

part I|80 pages

Theoretical aspects and historical predecessors

chapter 2|23 pages

An ocean of emptiness – and a steppe in time

Central Eurasia and the geography of knowledge along the Silk Roads

chapter 3|29 pages

Hearts and souls – silver and spice – missionaries and Mandarins

Portuguese knowledge management and Jesuit missionary enterprise in Asia

chapter 4|26 pages

Finding Europe in Nagasaki and Ayutthaya

The Japanese Leonardo and the Siamese falcon

part II|49 pages

Contemporary representations and actors

chapter 5|23 pages

Travels of the mind

Exhibitions, websites and public events connecting with European Studies in Asia

chapter 6|24 pages

Contemporary actors, networks and institutions in the European Studies in Asia discipline

Co-constructed curriculum leadership and Higher Education regionalism

part III|81 pages

Teaching Europe in Asia

chapter 7|30 pages

Teaching comparative regionalism and the EU in South East Asia

‘Sons of the soil', student politics and European Studies in Malaysia

chapter 8|22 pages

The art of good Feng Shui in Brussels

Taking European Studies in Asia to the capital of Europe, 2002–2012

chapter 9|22 pages

‘Between Vladivostok and Africa' 1

Teaching and debating EU studies in New Zealand and Australia, 1999–2014 2

chapter 10|5 pages

Overall conclusions

Priorities and pedagogies of the ‘European Studies' discipline in Asia