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         Chinese Asian Americans:     more books (100)
  1. And China Has Hands (Asian-American Heritage Collection) by H. T. Tsiang, 2003-09
  2. Claiming America Pb (Asian American History & Cultu) by K. Wong, 1998-02-05
  3. Sui Sin Far / Edith Maude Eaton: A LITERARY BIOGRAPHY (Asian American Experience) by Annette White-Parks, Roger Daniels, 1995-07-01
  4. Asian Americans and Alzheimer's disease: Assimilation, culture, and beliefs [An article from: Journal of Aging Studies] by R.S. Jones, T.W. Chow, et all
  5. Asian Americans: Achievement Beyond Iq by James R. Flynn, 1991-10-01
  6. Archaeological Perspectives on Ethnicity in America: Afro-American and Asian American Culture History (Baywood Monographs in Archaeology, 1)
  7. Nu Sun: Asian-American Voyages, 500 B.C. by Gunnar Thompson, 1989-04
  8. Melus: Asian American Literature (The Journal of the Society for the Study of the Multi-Ethnic Literature of the United States, Volume 24, Number 4, Winter 1999))
  9. Seattle's International District: The Making of a Pan-Asian American Community by Doug Chin, 2002-03
  10. Amy Tan (Asian Americans of Achievement) by Susan Muaddi Darraj, 2007-02-28
  11. Dynamics of Ethnic Identity: Three Asian American Communities in Philadelphia (Asian Americans, Reconceptualizing Culture, History, Politics) by Jae-Hyup Lee, 1998-09-01
  12. Yo Yo Ma (Asian-American Biographies) by Mary Olmstead, 2005-09-30
  13. America's China Trade in Historical Perspective: The Chinese and American Performance (Harvard Studies in American-East Asian Relations)
  14. Driven Out: The Forgotten War Against Chinese Americans by Jean Pfaelzer, 2007-05-29

81. Ling Essay: Teaching The American Literatures
anthology in the field, asian American Authors (1972) brought to light two generationsof American writers from three asian traditions chinese, Japanese, and
http://www.georgetown.edu/tamlit/essays/asian_am.html
Essays on Teaching the American Literatures
(from the Heath Anthology Newsletter
Teaching Asian American Literature
by Amy Ling
University of Wisconsin-Madison

I find it useful to begin my Introduction to Asian American literature classes with a discussion of terminology. First, I deconstruct the term oriental, explaining that as a signifier of someone or something of Asian origin it is no longer viable since it is burdened with all the negative connotations of inferiority, irrationality, and exoticism that Edward Said clearly delineated in his groundbreaking cultural history Orientalism. (NY: 1978) By contrast, the term Asian is a neutral geographical designation and therefore more acceptable. Next, I explore the rather fluid boundaries of the terms Asian, American, and literature. Asia, as the world's largest continent, stretches from what used to be the U.S.S.R, west of the Ural Mountains, as far east as the Bering Strait, and as far south as the Indian Ocean; it is separated from Africa by the Suez Canal, includes all of the Middle East as well as the islands of the South Pacific. However, the boundaries of Asia as employed by scholars of Asian American literature have been much more limited, focused primarily on writers of so-called East Asian origins. [East Asia is only east in relation to Europe, of course; from an American perspective, China, Japan, and Korea are the Near West.] Kai-yu Hsu and Helen Palubinskas, editors of the first anthology in the field

82. CMMR - Asian - Pacific Island Resources
colleges and universities in North America that teach Distributor of asian materialsfor libraries, schools ROM s are available in chinese, Vietnamese, Japanese
http://www-rcf.usc.edu/~cmmr/Asian.html
ASIAN - PACIFIC ISLAND RESOURCES
Sites and articles listed here are not necessarily endorsed by the CMMR; they are listed for informational purposes only. Full text articles and resources are also provided. If you would like to suggest a site to be added to this listing please visit our " Submit a Site " page.
Specific cultural / linguistic sections have been provided to facilitate additional internet investigations including: Cambodian/Khmer Chinese Hmong Japanese ... Vietnamese These sections will be updated and expanded regularly.
Asia-Pacific Network
Asia-Pacific Network provides independent journalism on social, political, environmental, media and development issues in the Asia-Pacific region.

Asia Society
The Asia Society was founded to foster understanding between Asians and Americans. Since the founding of the Asia Society, its programming has encompassed the public affairs, arts and cultures of all of the diverse countries of Asia, and, in response to changing demographics in the U.S., has expanded to include programs relating to Asian American issues. The Asia Society looks at all of Asia, without excluding any country, area or issue from its mandate. Dedicated to fostering an understanding of Asia and communication between Americans and the peoples of Asia and the Pacific. A nonprofit, nonpartisan educational institution, the Asia Society presents a wide range of programs including major art exhibitions, performances, international corporate conferences and contemporary affairs programs.

83. Asian Americans, Race, And Citizenship In The Late Nineteenth Century
This category of whiteness in turn had a profound effect on the struggle by ChineseAmericans and other asian immigrants to gain the rights of American
http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/historymodules/modules/mod20/main.htm
Asian Americans, Race, and Citizenship in the Late Nineteenth Century
History Skill: Interpreting Documents; Media Type: Documents
Quiz Short Answer Project Resources The immigration of Asians to America brought about a redefinition of the concepts of race and citizenship in the United States. Many Chinese immigrants went to the Pacific Coast to work in railroads and mining, decisively altering the politics of that region. These Chinese immigrants received lower wages than their fellow workers of European ancestry. Non-Asian workers formed unions to oppose both the companies that sought to employ the Chinese, and the fact of Chinese immigration itself. The labor movement on the West Coast thus emerged as a response to the very existence of the Chinese. Yet the implications for racial identity were felt well beyond the labor movement. Where people of European background had previously been divided along ethnic lines, distinguishing, for example, between people of Irish and German ancestry, the presence of the Chinese led to the emergence of a larger category of “whites.” This category of whiteness in turn had a profound effect on the struggle by Chinese Americans and other Asian immigrants to gain the rights of American citizenship. Until 1898, Asian immigrants could not become citizens of the United States. Asians fought their exclusion from the civic life of the nation in a series of legal and political battles that culminated in the case of

84. Beyond Culture: Communicating With Asian American Children And Families
asian children. Like middleclass americans, East asians, particularlyChinese, highly value formal education. They often consider
http://www.casanet.org/library/culture/communicate-asian.htm
Library: Cultural Competency Beyond Culture:
Communicating with Asian American Children and Families
Document Author : Gary Huang, Teachers College, Columbia University,
Date Posted: Introduction
The API Community

API Cultures and Communication

Overt Culture

Hidden Culture
...
References

Introduction In recent decades, migration waves have brought to the United States large numbers of Asians and Pacific Islanders (API) Well over two-fifths of all nonamnesty persons admitted in the U.S. in 1991 were API ( Barkan. 1992) The trend of increasing API immigration is clear the API portion in the U S. total immigration steadily grew from the 1972's 28.7 percent to 1985's 44 2 percent (Barkan, 1992) Consequently, API student enrollment has been increasing drastically. In 1979, 217,000 enrolled 8-15 year old APIs were identified as language minorities; by 1989, the number had reached 547,000 (National Center for Education Statistics. 1992) With their drastically different cultural backgrounds, API children's schooling poses a challenge to educators and the society
The API Community
It is important not to generalize an understanding of one group to another. For example, the Vietnamese and Hmong, though both Indochinese, differ in their basic cultural patterns The Vietnamese, many with a (Chinese ancestry. have a sophisticated literate culture and strong abilities to adapt to the market society; the

85. Asian-Pacific American Heritage Month - 2004
chinese American Museum), one of the National Register listed properties featuredfor asianPacific Heritage Month Photo courtesy of chinese American Museum,
http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/feature/asia/
The National Register of Historic Places is pleased to promote awareness of and appreciation for the historical contributions of Asian and Pacific peoples in the United States and its associated territories. From the early 1800s to the 21th century, Asian and Pacific peoples have played a vital role in the development of the United States and made lasting contributions in all elements of American society. The month of May is recognized as Asian-Pacific American Heritage Month and this site showcases historic properties listed in the National Register and National Park units highlighting important aspects of the Asian and Pacific experience in America. Join the National Register in commemorating just a few of the places where Asian and Pacific people have made history.
Garnier Building (Chinese American Museum)
, one of the National Register listed properties featured for Asian-Pacific Heritage Month
Photo courtesy of Chinese American Museum
Garnier Building (Chinese American Museum) in the Los Angeles Plaza Historic District

Los Angeles, California

86. Asian American Children's Books Overview
Japanese, chinese, and Korean characters while still limited in number arefar more prevalent than those reflecting any other asian or asian American
http://www.cynthialeitichsmith.com/AsianAmerican.htm
Page Updated April 25, 2004
Author Cynthia Leitich Smith

Cyn's Books, Articles, Stories

Cyn's Teacher/Reader Guides

Cyn's Writing Life
...
Contact Cyn
Children's and YA Books With Asian American Themes
Introduction Asian American Overview Asian American Bibliography Asian American Book Links ... For Grown-Ups Introduction by Children's Author Greg Leitich Smith (Japanese-German American) The field of Asian American children's and young adult literature includes many wonderful books poetically written and exquisitely illustrated. The number of children's authors and illustrators working from the relevant communities is steadily on the rise, and some of these folks like Yumi Heo, Allen Say, An Na Linda Sue Park , Janet Wong, Lisa Yee, and Laurence Yep have received great critical acclaim.
Books featuring Japanese, Chinese, and Korean characters while still limited in number are far more prevalent than those reflecting any other Asian or Asian American community, especially the Southeast Asian. We hope to see more quality books reflecting the diversity of Asian American life in the future.
Read An Interview With Linda Sue Park
Highlighted Books
A SUITCASE OF SEAWEED AND OTHER POEMS by Janet S. Wong (McElderry, 1996). Drawing on her Chinese, Korean, and American backgrounds, poet Wong offers an insightful, sometimes poignant, sometimes funny voice to children's poetry. Free verse. Highly recommended for ages 10-up.

87. Asian/Asian American Links
an exciting, informative online source K-12 asian and asian American studies. chineseCulture Center. The chinese Culture Center of San Francisco is a major
http://www.wesleyan.edu/psyc/asam.html

88. ASIAN-AMERICAN STUDIES
History, culture, social organization, leadership patterns and interethnic relationsof asianAmerican (chinese, Filipino, Japanese, and Korean) communities.
http://www.washington.edu/students/crscat/asamst.html
Search Directories Reference Tools UW Home ... Student Guide Course Catalog Glossary Search Course Catalog UW Bothell Course Catalog UW Tacoma Course Catalog

AMERICAN ETHNIC STUDIES
ASIAN-AMERICAN STUDIES
Detailed course offerings (Time Schedule) are available for To see the detailed Instructor Class Description, click on the underlined instructor name following the course description. AAS 101
Asian-American subcultures; evolution of Asian-American cultures in the United States from 1850 to 1950-immigration patterns, evolution of subcultures, evacuation, interracial relations, assimilation, and signs of social disorganization. AAS 206
Recent Asian-American issues from 1950 to the present. Topics include ghetto communities, civil rights, identity problems and ethnicity, social organizations, political movements, and recent immigration. AAS 210
Examines the nature of Asian-American identity from a multidisciplinary approach. Explores influences and manifestations of Asian-American identity, using literature, history, and other texts. Topics to include gender issues, interracial relationships, and Amerasians. Recommended: AAS 101; AAS 206. AAS 220
Asian stereotypes popularized by American literature, film, radio, and television and their effects on Asian American history, psychology, and community.

89. Census Bureau Facts For Features: Asian Pacific American Heritage Month: May 200
A total of 2.7 million asian American residents reported as chinese (except Taiwanese)or chinese (except Taiwanese) in combination with one or more other
http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/2003/cb03-ff05.html
CB03-FF.05 April 17, 2003
Asian Pacific American
Heritage Month: May 2003 In 1978, a joint congressional resolution established Asian Pacific American Heritage Week. The first 10 days of May were chosen to coincide with two key anniversaries: the arrival in the United States of the first Japanese immigrants (May 7, 1843) and the completion of the transcontinental railroad (May 10, 1869). In 1992, Congress expanded the week to a month-long celebration. 12.5 million
Estimated number of U.S. residents as of July 1, 2001, who say they are Asian or Asian in combination with one or more other races. This group comprises 4.4 percent of the total population. During the preceding 15 months, the number of people who were part of this group increased 3.8 percent, more than triple the growth rate of the entire U.S. population.
http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/2003/cb03-16.html

Estimated number of U.S. residents as of July 1, 2001, who say they are native Hawaiian and other Pacific islander or native Hawaiian and other Pacific islander in combination with one or more other races. This group comprises 0.3 percent of the total population. During the preceding 15 months, the number of people who were part of this group increased 3.2 percent.
http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/2003/cb03-16.html

90. US Census Press Releases
A total of 2.7 million asian American residents are chinese (excluding Taiwanese)or chinese (excluding Taiwanese) in combination with one or more other races
http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/releases/archives/facts_for_features_spe
Newsroom Releases Tip Sheets Facts for Features ...
Return to Main Releases Page
CB04-FF.06 April 19, 2004 Photos Radio Feature Asian Pacific American
Heritage Month: May 2004 In 1978, a joint congressional resolution established Asian Pacific American Heritage Week. The first 10 days of May were chosen to coincide with two important anniversaries: the arrival in the United States of the first Japanese immigrants (May 7, 1843) and the completion of the transcontinental railroad (May 10, 1869). In 1992, Congress expanded the 10-day observance to a monthlong celebration.
13.1 million
http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/releases/archives/hispanic_origin_population/001130.html

The estimated number of U.S. residents who say they are native Hawaiian and other Pacific islander or native Hawaiian and other Pacific islander in combination with one or more other races. This group comprises 0.3 percent of the total population. Since Census 2000, the number of people who are part of this group has increased 4 percent.
http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/releases/archives/hispanic_origin_population/001130.html

91. Asian American History
Interactive chinese American History, a project of the asian American Studies121 chinese American History, a course given at UC Berkeley.
http://www.jue.org/jue/docs/asam.html
Asian-American History Jue Family Web Site Joe Tong Shue Branch Jue Family Web Site Home Page Asian-American History Page Home Events Photo Album Family Tree ... Site Map Update Thu 8 Oct 1998: Theo Feng's Asian/Asian American Music Reviews Ignorance is no excuse. Know the How's and Why's. Learn all you can when you can. Send me your links to Asian-American History sites on the Web. Thanks! The Los Angeles Times had a series on Asian Americans in California: See the link to the Los Angeles Times' Reaching Critical Mass Asian American in California Check out these sites you probably haven't seen anything like them elsewhere. And if you have, look at them anyway. Theo Feng's Asian/Asian America Music Reviews Check this out for "reviews, calendar, acquisitions, article summaries, interviews, pictures, annotated links" AND it loads FAST! Wataru's Wonderful Web Page this is the home of the Asian American Cybernauts Asian American Sites of Interest Aileen sent me this link on the PBS Web site. Interactive Chinese American History , a project of the Asian American Studies 121: Chinese American History, a course given at UC Berkeley. Asian-American Oral History Web Site , a project that grew out of the Asian American Studies 150: Gender and Generation in Asian American Families, a course given at UC Berkeley.

92. ED462510 2002-02-00 Stereotypes Of Asian American Students. ERIC Digest.
Lee, E. (1997). chinese American families. In E. Lee (Ed.), Working with AsianAmericans A guide for clinicians (pp. 4678). New York Guilford.
http://www.ericfacility.net/databases/ERIC_Digests/ed462510.html
ERIC Identifier:
Publication Date:
Author:
Kim, Angela - Yeh, Christine J.
Source: ERIC Clearinghouse on Urban Education New York NY.
Stereotypes of Asian American Students. ERIC Digest.
THIS DIGEST WAS CREATED BY ERIC, THE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES INFORMATION CENTER. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT ERIC, CONTACT ACCESS ERIC 1-800-LET-ERIC This digest discusses the various negative and positive Asian American stereotypes. It also explores how school practices and individual educatorsconsciously or unconsciouslymay reinforce them. Doing so has important negative social, political, and economic ramifications for Asian Americans. Indeed, while Asian Americans are often characterized as the "model minority" (Lee, 1997, p. 442), many have serious psychological and emotional concerns which are not being addressed.
GENERAL STEREOTYPES
MODEL MINORITY STEREOTYPES
SOCIAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL CONCERNS
The model minority stereotype that Asian American students are "whiz kids" (Brand, 1987) and immune from behavioral or psychological distresses prevents them from acknowledging academic and emotional problems and seeking help. S. Lee (1996) reports on a Cambodian student named Ming who was failing his classes but refused to seek help for his academic difficulties, believing that admitting his academic failure would cause his family to lose face (be ashamed). He was trying to live within the boundaries of the model minority stereotype, and as a result was perpetuating his academic problems, leaving him feeling isolated and depressed.

93. Asian Pacific American Firsts
MILITARY 1863 chinese American William Ah Hang one of the first asian Americansto enlist in the US Navy during Civil War 1942 US War Department authorizes
http://www.capaa.wa.gov/APA_firsts.html
Asian Pacific American Firsts
The following is not an exhaustive list, and is provided here to give examples of Asian Pacific American firsts in their field. Arts
Education

Journalism

Military
...
Sports

ARTS

Anna May Wong
Mako
Toshiko Akiyoshi Chinese American Anna May Wong
- first Asian American movie star with the movie Bits of Life
Chinese American James Wong Howe - first Asian American to win two Academy Awards in cinematography Japanese American Mako - founded East West Players, the first Asian American theater in the U.S. Japanese American Seiji Ozawa - first person of Asian ancestry and youngest person to serve as director and conductor of Boston Symphony Orchestra, one of America's major orchestras Japanese American Toshiko Akiyoshi - first woman in jazz history to be awarded the Best Arranger and Best Big Jazz Band by Down Beat Reader's Poll; received award for four consecutive years Cambodian American Haing Ngor - first Asian American to win an Academy Award for his role in the Killing Fields Chinese American Bradley Darryl Wong - first Asian American actor to receive awards from Actor's Equity, Theatre World, Outer Critics, and Drama Desk; won a Tony Award as best featured actor for his performance in M Butterfly

94. AsiaSource: AsiaLINKS - A Resource Of The Asia Society
tours, and presents exhibitions and public programs at the chinese Historical Society magazinethat strives to celebrate the asian and asian American experience
http://www.asiasource.org/links/al_mp_03.cfm?TID=21,24

95. Asian American Film: Features
to disassociate from my asian culture is the experience of a typical asian Americankid, then that s how I grew up.”. “I’m ethnic chineseVietnamese, so
http://www.asianamericanfilm.com/archives/000686.html

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Entertainment Minute Movies Haiku Fu Comix Resources Filmmakers Network Film Database About the Site Manifesto Contact Staff/Credits Sign up for the Asian American Film Newsletter! Manifesto Learn more Name: Email: City/State: Asian American Film Home Features > EthnicallyChinese-Vietnamese-American
EthnicallyChinese-Vietnamese-American
Ethnically- -Chinese-Vietnamese-American By Diana Lin and Sophia Nguyen, Writers for the San Diego Asian Film Foundation Tran and the Buddhist monk in THE ANNIVERSARY Many within the Asian film festival community were shocked when Ham Tran’s THE ANNIVERSARY did not make the final Oscar nomination list. Shot on 35 mm and on location in Vietnam, Tran’s UCLA thesis project is an anachronistic journey through post-war Vietnam, interspersed with a Buddhist monk’s memories of war and betrayal on the anniversary his brother’s death. When the Oscar nomination list was released, some pointed to racism, corruption, or just plain ignorance as the deciding factor, but Tran has a different take.

96. African And Asian/Pacific American West
Part of an effort to document the development of asian American Literature.Maxine Hong Kingston, chineseAmerican novelist and non-fiction writer.
http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~amerstu/mw/af_ap.html
The Multicultural American West:
African American West
Featured Site: African Americans in Tucson
Part of a commendable effort to recognize the diversity in Tucson, this site is loaded with stories, photographs, historical essays, and bibliographies, all of which help visitors to understand the contribution African Americans have made to regional history. Well organized and very useful.
  • African Missouri A very informative site, compiled and maintained by Anne Taylor, which draws on variety of sources to provide critical essays, personal narratives, census reports, and other historical information on African Americans in the Show Me State. Includes relevant "extra-Missouri" links as well.
  • Pike's Peak Region Black History Profiles several black Americans who were prominent figures in the Colorado Springs area. Some wonderful photos.
  • How Far Have We Come: Past and Present Media Images of African Americans An exhibition at the UM Riverside Museum of Photography, organized by Shola Lynch, that compares representations of African Americans in "stereographs" with modern media images.
  • Black American West Museum A history of the origin of the museum itself. Includes museum hours and location.

97. Abbott Wool's Market Segmentation Resource Locator
Middle East; Orient Magazine The asianAmerican Experience; PCL RadioVarious multicultural, including chinese, Korean, Phillippine; MCI
http://www.awool.com/awoolasi.html

Abbott Wool's Market Segment Resources . . .
Advertising Agencies Research Suppliers Marketing Consultants ... Government / Academic The 2000 U.S. Census reported 10.6 million Americans of
Asian and Pacific Islander origin in the U.S., or 4% of the population. By 2100, the Census projects an Asian / Pacific Islander population of
75.235 million, 13% of the total U.S.
Advertising Agencies
Full sevice Interactive

98. TIMELINE Of The Asian Pacific American Communities From The 1600's To The Presen
the Naturalization Act where only free white persons can become US citizens,Yung Wing (the first chinese college graduate), asian American soldiers in the
http://us_asians.tripod.com/timeline.html
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Click Here to receive email when this page changes o Powered by NetMind o var test=0; document.write("<");document.write("! "); document.write(" ");document.write(">"); HISTORICAL TIMELINE Asian Pacific American Communities "Those Who Cannot Remember the Past Are Condemned to Repeat It! - George Santayana - "MIH - MISSING IN HISTORY" is what Helen Zia (a prominent activist and book author) stated about the Asian/Asian Pacific American communities. She adds that "I've been struck time and again by how little is really known about us (Asian Pacific American communities) and the America we are part of; how the rich textures of who we are, why we are here, and what we bring to America remain so absent from the picture. But a community as large, diverse, and dynamic as the Asian American and Pacific Islander peoples cannot stay on the edge of obscurity, frustrated by images that have rendered us invisible and voiceless, while other American communities wonder why we are at the center of key issues of the day."

99. Asian American Federation - Health & Human Services Directory
Citizens Adivce Bureau Coalition for asian American Children and Families Councilof Pakistan Organization Cultural Development CenterPlainview chinese School.
http://www.aafny.org/relief/911org.asp
Asian American Federation
DIRECTORY

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About Us

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WHAT WE DO
Mgmt and Tech Assist.

Asian Community Fund

Policy and Research
New Heritage of Giving WHO WE ARE Our Board Our Staff Executive Director's Bio List All Agencies ... Y A American Cancer Society - Asian Programs Andolan - Organizing South Asian Workers Anna Erika Assisted Living Asian American Business Development Center ... Asian Women In Business B Big Brothers Big Sisters of NYC/New American Partnership Brooklyn Chinese Family Health Center of Lutheran Family Health Centers Brooklyn Chinese-American Association C CAAAV: Organizing Asian Communities Cammy Lee Leukemia Foundation Inc. Center For Immigrant Health Charles B. Wang Community Health Center ... Cultural Development Center-Plainview Chinese School F Family Health Project, Inc. Filipino American Human Services, Inc. First Chinese Presbyterian Community Affairs - Home Attendant Corporation G GABRIELA Network - NY/NJ Chapter Garment Industry Development Corporation Gouverneur Hospital - Asian Bicultural Clinic Gracie Square Hospital - Asian Program ... Greater Chinatown Community Association H Hamilton-Madison House Inc.

100. Department Of Ethnic Studies Curriculum
This course will survey the narrative literature of major asian American writersof chinese, Japanese, Korean, Filipino, asian Indian, and Southeast asian
http://www.colorado.edu/EthnicStudies/Asianstudies.html
ASIAN AMERICAN STUDIES
AAST 1015-3. INTRODUCTION TO ASIAN AMERICAN STUDIES. Using Asian Americans as a case study, course examines the various factors that define minority groups and their positions in American society. Particular attention is given to the perspectives and methodologies of the emerging discipline of Ethnic Studies. Restricted to FR/SO Standing. Approved for Arts and Sciences Core Curriculum: Cultural and Gender Diversity or Contemporary Societies. AAST 1717-3. INTRODUCTION TO ASIAN AMERICAN HISTORY. Introductory-level survey of social history of Asians in America from nineteenth century to the present. Primary focus is on delineating the explaining changes that Asian Americans have undergone since their arrival in the United States. Same as HIST 1717. Approved for Arts and Sciences Core Curriculum: United States Context. AAST 2210-3. THE JAPANESE AMERICAN EXPERIENCE. This course offers an overview of the Japanese American experience in the United States from 1880 to today. What helped shape this experience and provides its salient characteristics? Emphasis will be given to the variables that generated similarities, as well as internal diversity, within the broader ethnic group. This course fulfills Arts and Sciences core requirements in the area of Cultural and Gender Diversity. Link to Readings AAST 2752 SURVEY OF ASIAN AMERICAN LITERATURE.

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