Dec
20

news New Book Edited by Judy Yung: The Adventures of Eddie Fung: Chinatown Kid, Texas Cowboy, Prisoner of War (University of Washington Press)

Filed under: New Releases and Publications by aaas | 9:05 pm | Comments (0)

Book announcement

University of Washington Press has released The Adventures of Eddie Fung: Chinatown Kid, Texas Cowboy, Prisoner of War, edited by Judy Yung, professor emerita of American Studies at the
University of California Santa Cruz.

Eddie Fung has the distinction of being the only Chinese American soldier to be captured by the Japanese during World War II. He was then put to work on the Burma-Siam railroad, made famous by the film “The Bridge on the River Kwai.” In this moving and unforgettable memoir written with his wife, Eddie tells how his childhood in San Francisco’s Chinatown and young manhood as a Texas cowboy helped him survive.

The Adventures of Eddie Fung is a 272-page paperback, with 37 illustrations. More information about the book, including the table of contents and how to order, is available at:
http://www.washington.edu/uwpress/search/books/YUNADV.html

Dec
20

news New Publications Announcement: Journal of SE Asian American Education and Advancement

Filed under: New Releases and Publications by aaas | 9:02 pm | Comments (0)

** New Publications Announcement **

Journal of Southeast Asian American Education and Advancement (JSAAEA) http://www.jsaaea.org/

The following has just been published in Volume 2 of JSAAEA:

“East Meets West: The Adaptation of Vietnamese International Students to California Community Colleges ”
Tam Do
Irvine Valley College
http://jsaaea.coehd.utsa.edu/index.php/JSAAEA/article/view/33/28

This article and other published work in Volume 2 may be accessed at: http://jsaaea.coehd.utsa.edu/index.php/JSAAEA/issue/current
(or go to www.jsaaea.org and click on “Current”)

Submissions
Volume 3 (2008) is now open for submissions. Articles are added as they are accepted for publication. Submission guidelines are available at: http://jsaaea.coehd.utsa.edu/index.php/JSAAEA/about/submissions#onlineSubmissions .

Questions? Please contact the editors at jsaaea@lists.sis.utsa.edu
——
The Journal of Southeast Asian American Education and Advancement (http://www.jsaaea.org/>www.jsaaea.org) is a free on-line peer-review scholarly journal published by the National Association for the Education and Advancement of Cambodian, Laotian, and Vietnamese Americans (NAFEA), with support from the College of Education & Human Development and the Department of Bicultural-Bilingual Studies at the University of Texas , San Antonio.

Dec
20

news Anita Affeldt Graduate Travel Fund

Filed under: News from the Secretariat, Announcements by aaas | 8:27 pm | Comments (0)

In honor of Anita Affeldt, the Association for Asian American Studies will provide two conference awards to help defray graduate student travel expenses incurred by participating in its annual conference. The award will include three nights (Thursday, Friday, and Saturday) at the conference hotel (Hyatt Regency McCormick Place Hotel, Chicago, Illinois) and waived student conference registration fee. The approximate value of each award is $775. Recipients will be selected on the basis of merit, need, and other special considerations.

To qualify for one of these awards, a student must:

- be a member of the Association for Asian American Studies for the 2008 calendar year;

- have a paper proposal accepted for the 2008 conference;

- complete and submit the Graduate Student Conference Award application below;

- submit a copy of his/her paper proposal and curriculum vita.

Decisions regarding awards will be determed by a committee of the AAAS Board.

Deadline: Applications and supporting materials must be received by JANUARY 15, 2008

To download the application, please click here: aa-grad-trvl-fund-app-2008.pdf

Dec
17

news CFP: Aggression and Violent Behavior (Journal): Special Issue on Asian Am. & Pacific Islander Youth Violence and Prevention

Filed under: Call for Papers by aaas | 3:01 pm | Comments (0)

Aggression and Violent Behavior (Journal)

Call for Papers

Special Issue on
Asian American and Pacific Islander Youth Violence and Prevention

The Asian/Pacific Islander Youth Violence Prevention Center (APIYVPC) of the University of Hawai‘i at MÇnoa, is currently one of ten national centers that receives funding from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to connect academic and community resources to study and create lasting ways to prevent youth violence. The APIYVPC’s research agenda focuses primarily on Asian American and Pacific Islander youth violence and prevention. This special issue is part of the APIYVPC’s effort to stimulate and disseminate research on this understudied area.

The goal of this special issue of Aggression and Violent Behavior is to provide the best current research on youth violence and prevention in Asian American and Pacific Islander communities in the United States.

Appropriate Topics:

* Historical background on Asian American and Pacific Islander youth violence including gangs and victimization

* Current research on youth violence in Asian American and Pacific Islander groups including Micronesian, Samoan, Vietnamese, Korean, Native Hawaiian, Cambodian, Lao/Mien, and Hmong

*Risk and/or protective factors of youth violence in Asian American and Pacific Islander groups including Micronesian, Samoan, Vietnamese, Korean, Native Hawaiian, Cambodian, Lao/Mien, and Hmong

* Innovative violence prevention programs, projects, and practices for Asian American and Pacific Island youth

Important Dates:

Deadline for Abstract Submission: January 14, 2007
Acceptance or Rejection of Abstract: February 31, 2008
Deadline for Full Paper Submission: July 15, 2008
Blind Review of Paper & Feedback Given to Authors: September 30, 2008
Deadline for Final Submission of Revised Papers: November 15, 2008
Publication: Summer 2009

Hard and electronic copies send to:

Dr. Gregory Mark
Asian/Pacific Islander Youth Violence Prevention Center
Department of Psychiatry
John A. Burns School of Medicine
University of Hawai‘i at MÇnoa
Ala Moana Building
1441 Kapi’olani Boulevard, Suite 1802
Honolulu, HI 96814

solif@dop.hawaii.edu

and

MarkG@dop.hawaii.edu

Format: APA Style (WORD for Windows, RFT or ASCII text formats)
35 pages maximum including references

See Aggression and Violent Behavior – Guide for Authors: http://www.elsevier.com

Dec
14

news JOB: Ohio State U. Women’s Studies and Asian Am Studies Visiting Scholar

Filed under: Job Opportunities by aaas | 3:31 pm | Comments (0)

The Department of Women’s Studies and the Asian American Studies Program at the Ohio State University invite applications for the Arts & Sciences Colleges Visiting Scholar position beginning Winter 2009. The Visiting Scholar appointment will provide the opportunity for junior or mid-career faculty to spend 1-2 quarters at OSU, teaching, participating in the intellectual community, and becoming acquainted more generally with what the University has to offer. The ideal candidate will facilitate collaboration between Women’s Studies, Asian American Studies and related interdisciplinary departments and programs.

Terms of appointment include: working at OSU during one or two quarters; teaching one course per quarter in the Department of Women’s Studies on an Asian American Studies topic (an alternative for two quarters might be teaching one course and organizing a seminar discussion or film series); giving one public presentation/workshop on the scholar’s work; and participating in the intellectual community at OSU by meeting with graduate students and interested faculty.

Salary is competitive and negotiable. A $1,000 research stipend will be provided by the Department of Women’s Studies.

The Department of Women’s Studies has fourteen faculty, 34 graduate students, and approximately 100 undergraduate majors. It offers one of only twelve Ph.D. programs in women’s/gender studies in the United States. The Asian American Studies Program offers an undergraduate minor and plans to develop a graduate concentration. The program has affiliated faculty from English, History, Theatre, East Asian Languages and Literatures, and Education.

Please send by February 15, 2008, a letter of interest, cv, names of three references, a short description or syllabus of a course, and a description of a seminar discussion or film series if interested in a 2 quarter stay at OSU. Materials should be mailed to: Jill Bystydzienski, Chair, Department of Women’s Studies, 286 University Hall, 230 N. Oval Mall, Columbus, OH 43210-1311.

The Ohio State University is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. We welcome applications from women, members of historically underrepresented minority groups, veterans, and individuals with disabilities.

Dec
05

news JOB: Executive Director - The Asian American Writers Workshop

Filed under: Job Opportunities by aaas | 4:56 pm | Comments (0)

The Asian American Writers Workshop, the preeminent non-profit organization founded in 1991 to further Asian American writing, seeks an innovative and experienced leader to develop and manage all organizational and programmatic aspects of the Workshop, build a consensus and partnership under the shared vision set by the 14- member Board of Directors, and work with writers, teachers, community leaders, and other professionals to ensure the Workshop’s continued visibility and prominence, particularly in New York City. Fundraising experience a must. Salary commensurate with experience.

Cover letter and CV to: Search Committee, aawwnyc@gmail.com.

For more information on the Workshop and a detailed job description, visit http://www.aaww.org.

Sincerely,
The Board of Directors
The Asian American Writers’ Workshop
email: desk@aaww.org
phone: 212-494-0061
web: http://www.aaww.org

Dec
05

news CFP: UPDATE: Special Journal Issue – MELUS (1/1/08)

Filed under: Call for Papers by aaas | 4:05 pm | Comments (0)

CFP:  UPDATE: Special Journal Issue – MELUS (1/1/08)

Alien/Asian: Imagining the Racialized Future

To accommodate more submissions, the deadline has been extended.  Please note the new deadline below.  The timeline remains the same with the intent to publish the special issue by Winter 2008/Spring 2009.  There has been some confusion regarding whether or not this is an “abstract” or “full article” deadline, but I am expecting FULL articles on the deadline below.  The call also slightly widens the boundaries for article submissions.  Please see boldtype below.

This special issue of MELUS invites original article-length submissions (6,000-10,000 words, MLA format) addressing the racialization of the Alien/Asian subject in works of science fiction, fantasy, speculative fiction, or other such similarly aligned textual genres.  The so-called “Asian” has been the site of multiple anxieties that have marked this subject as the inscrutable immigrant alien (Immigration Act of 1924), the subhuman monster (as embodied by the evil machinations of Fu Manchu), or the eerily agreeable “model minority.”  This special issue seeks innovative, dynamic readings on the perennial “alienness” of the Asian that draws inspiration from these historical developments and stereotypes which now cast the Asian as cyborg, robot, alien species, perhaps inhabiting a post-apocalyptic world in which race takes on complicated new formations and intersectionalities.
We broadly define Asian/American narratives and texts.  Papers will dialogue with each other through broad theoretical, thematic and analytical methodologies including but not limited to “post” critiques (e.g. postmodernism and posthuman), hybridity and contact zones, allegories of empire and colonialism, cell and tissue theory, materialist approaches that consider scientific studies, new media studies and hypertext, just to name a few.  Articles might examine the configuration of dystopic and fantastic futures in texts such as Cynthia Kadohata’s In the Heart of the Valley of Love, Karen Tei Yamashita’s Tropic of Orange and Through the Arc of the Rainforest, Sesshu Foster’s Atomik Aztex, Alejandro Morales’s Rag Doll Plagues, Octavia Butler’s Parable of the Sower, Hiromi Goto’s The Kappa Child, Larissa Lai’s Salt Fish Girl, Amitav Ghosh’s The Calcutta Chromosome, Vandana Singh’s and Yoon Ha Lee’s short fiction, the work of Lawrence Yep, Tess Gerritsen’s Gravity, Minsoo Kang’s Of Tales and Enigmas, the vampire fictions of Cecilia Tan, among many others.  Not to be overlooked, we hope to solicit articles that address experimental, avant-garde poetic works that interrogate the Alien/Asian in relation to science, technology, and/or the future such as Cathy Park Hong’s Dance Dance Revolution, Brian Kim Stefans’s Before Starting Over, Mei-mei Berssenbrugge’s Four Year Old Girl, and Shanxing Wang’s Mad Science in Imperial China.  In addition, articles might examine Greg Pak’s screenplay and adapted movie Robot Stories, which uses an almost entirely Asian cast to play overtly with categories of humanity and machinery, while leaving loudly unspoken the representation of race.  Alternately, submissions might compare Asian American textual productions with the rich implications of Grace Park’s “colorblind” casting as the humanoid Lt. Sharon Valerii, a Cylon in the current Sci-Fi original series, Battlestar Galactica, or other recent casting choices in LOST and Heroes, television shows which continue to draw on the “Asian” as a participant in a science fictional world in which Americans are black, white, and Latino but never Asian.
Is the literal dehumanization of the Asian Other in actual effect dehumanizing, and/or perhaps (paradoxically) metaphorically enabling?  What kinds of permutations to the interracial romance, discourses of hybridity and “hapa” identity emerge from these conceits?  Do speculative futures suggest a post-race politic that destabilizes and challenges the grounds of Asian/American Studies?
Finally, this call encourages papers drawing on Asian/American texts (fiction, non-fiction, drama, and poetry) published from 2000 onward.  How do these “contemporary texts” imagine the trope of alien-ness within their literary boundaries and how do they query the future locations and landscapes that will comprise Asian American literature and studies?  How do changing immigration laws and subsequent representations of immigration change, alter, or challenge the conception of Asian/American as “alien subject”?  How does the conceptualization of the “illegal alien” take shape in these cultural productions and to what effect?  Are there new forms of Asian-Orientalisms that continue to posit the Asian as alien or representations that turn so-called “Asian alienation” on its head?  How does the global mobility of Asian American subjects de-stabilize the representation of the “Alien Asian” in the so-called new global economy?

Please e-mail articles as anonymous word attachments with an accompanying abbreviated 1 page c.v. to Stephen Hong Sohn at Stephen.H.Sohn@gmail.com by January 1, 2008.  Any queries may be forwarded to the same e-mail address.

Stephen Hong Sohn
Assistant Professor
English Department
Stanford University
450 Serra Mall (Building 460)
Stanford, CA 94305
650-723-3014

Dec
04

news January 15: Deadline to Submit Caucus Room Requests

Filed under: 2008 AAAS Conference Updates by aaas | 8:07 pm | Comments (0)

If you wish to convene a caucus meeting at the 2008 conference in Chicago, please let us know by January 15, 2008 so we can schedule a meeting place and time for you and your colleagues. Contact ssh13@cornell.edu to notify us of your request.

Dec
04

news East of California (EOC) 2008 Conference (Oct. 31-Nov.1, U of Connecticut, Storrs)

Filed under: Upcoming Conferences, Announcements by aaas | 5:13 pm | Comments (1)

SAVE THE DATE!

What? The 2008 EOC Conference
When? October 31 - November 1, 2008
Where? The University of Connecticut, Storrs

Dec
04

news CFP: ALA Conference: Aesthetics, Politics & Marketing of Asian American Genre Fiction (Panel)

Filed under: Call for Papers by aaas | 2:58 pm | Comments (0)

CFP: Aesthetics, Politics & Marketing of Asian American Genre Fiction
(1/10/08; ALA/CAALS, 5/22/08- 5/25/08)

CAALS is a member of the American Literature Association. The ALA meeting will
be held in San Francisco, May 22-25, 2008 (Memorial Day weekend).

The Circle for Asian American Literary Studies (CAALS) invites papers for a
panel that addresses the growing number of Asian American writers working in
alternative prose fiction genres such as mystery/detective/crime fiction,
romance/”chick lit”, science fiction, graphic novels, or any other genre that
falls under the categorization of “genre fiction.” Once thought of as a
literature of “ill-repute” by the belletristic mainstream, genre fiction was
long relegated to the margins of the literary academe. Many Asian American texts
were first published by small presses and/or university presses, but more
recently, mass market and trade publishers have been promoting a number of
titles written by Asian American authors. We seek papers on works by Asian
American writers who consciously choose to write genre fiction as a subversive
or complicit narrative act. The aim of the panel is to investigate whether Asian
American genre fiction expands or constrains the models and vocabularies of
Asian American literary representation by negotiating established formal and
thematic conventions, navigating the demands of fan culture and the publishing
market, and interrogating genre fiction’s pop-cultural cachet vis-à-vis what
Sven Birkerts calls “literature with a capital L.”

Please email a 250-word abstract and a two-page CV to BOTH Betsy Huang and Greta
Niu, co-chairs, by January 10, 2008. Please feel free to contact us with any
questions.

Betsy Huang
Department of English
Clark University
bhuang@clarku.edu

Greta Niu
Department of English
University of Rochester
greta.niu@rochester.edu

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