Department of Central Eurasian Studies, Indiana University Bloomington
The Department of Central Eurasian Studies, often abbreviated as CEUS, is a specialized academic department in the Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies, at the Bloomington campus of Indiana University, in Bloomington, Indiana. Since its original formation in 1943 as a language-training program for the U.S. military, the department has become the sole independent degree-granting academic unit staffed with its own faculty dedicated to Central Eurasia in the country. Due to the department and the presence of several additional centers - the Inner Asian & Uralic National Resource Center, the Denis Sinor Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies, and the Center for Languages of the Central Asian Region - Indiana University currently hosts the premier program of Central Asian studies in the United States.
CEUS is home to many notable scholars of Central Eurasian studies, past and present, including Christopher Beckwith, Yuri Bregel, Jamsheed Choksy, Devin Deweese, William Fierman, György Kara, Nazif Shahrani, Denis Sinor, and Elliot Sperling. The department teaches many less commonly taught languages, including Azerbaijani, Kazakh, Kurdish, Pashto, Tajik, Turkmen, Uyghur, and Uzbek.
History of the department
In 1942, after the entry of the United States into World War II, an Army Specialized Training Program was created to provide training in several Eurasian languages, including Russian, Turkish, Finnish, and Hungarian. As such, the department was founded in 1943 as an "Army Specialized Training Program for Central Eurasian languages". It was formally organized as the Program in Uralic and Altaic Studies in 1956. In 1965 it became the Department of Uralic and Altaic Studies. Since 1993 it has been known under its current name.Professor Denis Sinor arrived from Cambridge University in the academic year of 1962–63. On his initiative, in 1965, the Program in Uralic and Altaic Studies was recognized as a graduate department. Professor Sinor was appointed the first chairman of the department and he held this position until 1981.
Degrees and scope of coverage
The Department of Central Eurasian Studies offers a Bachelor of Arts, a Master of Arts and a PhD track of study, including a PhD minor. The department's area studies program emphasizes language proficiency and familiarity with indigenous cultures. The degree program requires students to select a language of specialization local to the region and a specific region of specialization within Central Eurasia.Languages covered are Iranian languages, Mongolian, Semitic languages, Tibetic languages, Turkic languages, Uralic languages.
The following geographical areas, both political and cultural, are considered to fall within the scope of the department: Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Buryatia, Estonia, Finland, Hungary, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Tajikistan, Tatarstan, Tibet Autonomous Region of China, Turkmenistan, Turkey, Uzbekistan, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region of China, and Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region of China.