From the Silk Road to the Great Game: China, Russia, and Central Eurasia
21H.580 · History · Undergraduate · Fall 2003
Prof. Peter C. Perdue
This subject examines interactions across the Eurasian continent between Russians, Chinese, Mongolian nomads, and Turkic oasis dwellers during the last millennium and a half. As empires rose and fell, religions, trade, and war flowed back and forth continuously across this vast space. Today, the fall of the Soviet Union and China’s reforms have opened up new opportunities for cultural interaction.
The syllabus, on MIT OpenCourseWare
The full course — syllabus, assigned readings, problem sets, exams, and lecture notes — lives on OCW. These open the real thing:
Syllabus ↗
Course overview, grading, schedule
Readings ↗
The assigned reading list, session by session
Assignments ↗
Problem sets and projects
Full course on OCW ↗
Everything, including lecture materials
Attribution
Prof. Peter C. Perdue. 21H.580 From the Silk Road to the Great Game: China, Russia, and Central Eurasia. Fall 2003. Massachusetts Institute of Technology: MIT OpenCourseWare, https://ocw.mit.edu. License: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.
Course materials are © their authors and licensed CC BY-NC-SA 4.0. CurrMana links to the source and does not re-host them.