Mar
16

news Korean American Diaspora symposium at UH Manoa April 21, 2009

Filed under: Events by aaas | 2:57 pm | Comments (0)

Dear colleagues,

I hope that some of you will be able to attend this pre-AAAS
conference symposium at UH Manoa sponsored by the Center for Korean
Studies.

Dr. Mary Yu Danico
Professor and Vice-chair, Psychology and Sociology Department
and
Interim Director, Michi and Walter Wegyn Endowed Chair of
Multicultural Studies
Cal Poly Pomona University
3801 W. Temple Blvd
Pomona, CA 91768
(Office) 909-869-3895
(Weglyn office) 909-869-3115

—————————-

KOREAN AMERICAN DIASPORA
APRIL 21, 2009
CENTER FOR KOREAN STUDIES
UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI‘I AT MANOA

Panel I:  Korean Americans in Hawai‘i and Abroad
11:10-12:40
Moderator: Edward Park, Loyola Marymount University

Dukhee Lee Murabayashi,     University of Hawai‘i at M?noa
The Korean Press in Hawai‘i: 1904-1970.

Dr. Yong-ho Ch’oe,     University of Hawai‘i at M?noa
Korean Prisoners-of-War in Hawaii during the World War II, a Preliminary Report.

Gary Pak, University of Hawai‘i at M?noa
Video presentation on 2nd-generation Koreans in M?noa.

Mary Yu Danico, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona
Catching the Hallyu (Korean Wave): The social, political, and global implication of K-pop

II. Korean/Korean American Diaspora
2:30-4:00
Moderator: Mary Yu Danico, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona

Sharon Lee, University of Michigan
Beauty or the Beast?: Plastic Surgery, Race and Nationalism in Korean Diasporic Media

Edward Park, Loyola Marymount University
Life in the American Bubble: Strategies of Class Mobility for South Korean Corporate Transnationals in Beijing and Tokyo

Stella Oh, Loyola Marymount University
Telling Stories, Practicing Ethics: Nora Okja Keller’s Comfort Woman.

Daniel Kim, Brown University
“Bled in, Letter by Letter”: Translation, Postmemory and the Subject of Korean War History in Susan Choi’s The Foreign Student

For more information, contact the Center for Korean Studies at (808) 956-7041.

cks-kor-am-mini-conf-paril-21-2009-flyer.doccks-kor-am-mini-conf-paril-21-2009-flyer.doc

Feb
16

news SAWCC Literary Festival: March 6-7, 2009, NYC

Filed under: Events by aaas | 6:41 pm | Comments (0)

The South Asian Women’s Creative Collective presents

Stranger Love: SAWCC’s Sixth Annual Literary Festival
March 6–7, 2009

A two-day series of readings, panel discussions, and writing workshops featuring South Asian women’s literature about love between strangers and love that is strange. This year’s theme, Stranger Love, calls to mind accidental encounters and provocative attractions that defy boundaries of social expectation. From guerilla movements in Sri Lanka to the suburbs of New Jersey, South Asian women explore journey and memory, war and conflict, and race and sexuality, spanning genres of poetry, memoir, travelogue, and fiction.

Cosponsored by The New School’s South Asia Faculty Forum and The Asian American Writers’ Workshop

Friday, March 6th, 7pm
Reading and Conversation

Featuring Pulitzer Prize–winning author Jhumpa Lahiri (Unaccustomed Earth, Knopf 2008), with author V.V. Ganeshananthan (Love Marriage, Random House 2008)

at Wollman Hall
The New School
65 West 11th Street (at 6th Ave.), 5th Floor
New York, NY
$15*

*Tickets for the Lahiri/Ganeshananthan event must be purchased in advance at http://sawcc.org/events. No door sales.

Saturday, March 7th
Writing Workshops

10 am–12 pm
Fiction Workshop with Bushra Rehman (Colonize This! Young Women of Color on Today’s Feminism, Seal Press 2002)
Poetry Workshop with Purvi Shah (Terrain Tracks, New Rivers Press 2006)

Workshops are open to all levels of writers, from beginner to advanced. To sign up, please send a brief letter of interest including some details about your creative writing experience and the subject line “fiction workshop” or “poetry workshop” to: litfest [at] sawcc [dot] org.

at The New School
6 East 16th Street (at 5th Ave), 9th Floor
New York, NY
Free

Saturday, March 7th
Panel Discussions

1:15–2:30 pm
Stranger Histories: War and Literature
Panelists speak about the way they engage narrative and verse to address issues of civil conflict, terrorism, and protest.

Fawzia Afzal-Khan (Shattering the Stereotypes: Muslim Women Speak Out, Olive Branch Press 2005)
Meena Alexander (Quickly Changing River: Poems, Triquarterly Books 2008)
V.V. Ganeshananthan (Love Marriage, Random House 2008)
Moderated by Zohra Saed (PhD Candidate, CUNY Graduate Center)

2:45–4:00 pm
Stranger Migrations: Travel and Literature
Panelists discuss nonfiction that takes the form of travelogue and memoir, and their work’s exploration of journey, displacement, and diaspora.

Minal Hajratwala (Leaving India: My Family’s Journey from Five Villages to Five Continents, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2009)
S. Mitra Kalita (Suburban Sahibs, Rutgers University Press 2003)
Suketu Mehta (Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found, Knopf 2004)
Moderated by Pooja Makhijani (Under Her Skin: How Girls Experience Race in America, Seal Press 2004)

4:15–5:30 pm
Passing Strange: Race, Gender and Sexuality
Panelists consider how their writing reimagines raced, gendered, and sexual identity in unconventional ways.

Abha Dawesar (That Summer in Paris, Nan A. Talese/Doubleday 2006)
Farzana Doctor (Stealing Nasreen, Inanna 2007)
Chandra Prasad (On Borrowed Wings: A Novel, Atria 2007)
Moderated by Svati Shah (Postdoctoral Fellow, Duke University)

at The New School
6 East 16th Street (at 5th Ave), 9th Floor
New York, NY
Free

Saturday, March 7th, 7 pm
Closing Night Reading

From dating on Craigslist to undiscovered family histories, South Asian women share their own writing on the theme of “stranger love.” Featuring Meena Alexander, Abha Dawesar, Farzana Doctor, Minal Hajratwala, S. Mitra Kalita, Yesha Naik, Amy Paul, Zohra Saed, and Purvi Shah.

at Bar 13
35 East 13th Street (at University Pl.)
New York, NY
$5 at the door

Questions or press inquiries? Write to litfest [at] sawcc [dot] org.

Feb
10

news UCLA: An Invitation To A Symposium on Asian American Artists in

Filed under: Events by aaas | 9:38 pm | Comments (0)

The UCLA Asian American Studies Center and Hammer Museum cordially invites you to attend:

ASIAN AMERICAN ARTISTS IN CALIFORNIA
A Symposium

Saturday, March 14, 2009
9:00am - 1:00pm
Armand Hammer Museum
10899 Wilshire Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90024

(located at the northeast corner of Westwood and Wilshire Boulevards in Westwood Village
3 blocks east of the 405 freeway’s Wilshire Boulevard exit)

This event is free and open to the public. RSVP is requested. Please call (310) 825-2974 or
e-mail aascrsvp@aasc.ucla.edu by March 13, 2009.

Parking is available under the Museum. Rates are $3 for the first three hours with Museum stamp; $1.50 for each additional 20 minutes. Parking for people with disabilities is provided on levels P1 and P3.

This program is one of the events celebrating the 40th Anniversary of the UCLA Asian American Studies Center and other ethnic studies centers at UCLA.

For more information, call (310) 825-2974.

Program Description
From the Chinese photographers of the Gold Rush to contemporary video artists, men and women of Asian descent have produced a rich and diverse body of artwork. Examining the lives and work of artists past and present offers insights into issues of cultural hybridity, race, social climate, and transnationalism.

This symposium will celebrate the publication of the landmark Asian American Art, A History, 1850-1970, edited by Gordon H. Chang, Mark Johnson, and Paul Karlstrom, as well as present the dynamic work of three present-day artists in southern California. Asian American Art, A History is the first comprehensive study of more than 150 early artists in the United States before 1970. Artists of Asian ancestry have received little historical attention, even though many of them received wide critical acclaim during their productive years. This pioneering work recovers the impressive artistic production of numerous Asian Americans, and brings to light their extraordinary range of vision and media. Amazon.com is giving a 34% discount (only $26.37 instead of $39.95) AND free shipping for this book. Purchase ahead for the best deal.

The first panel explores the history of long-neglected artists, beginning with Sharon Spain’s discussion of the innovative research project that gave rise to the book. Mark Johnson draws attention to the development of an international artistic sensibility among 19th-century Asian American practitioners, Karin Higa illuminates how the creative activity rooted in 1930s Little Tokyo also moved in national and global contexts. Gordon Chang considers the connection of war and art as well as the power of art to influence public mood.

For the second panel, contemporary artists Reanne Estrada, Yong Soon Min, and Viet Le discuss their work within a transnational context. Reanne Estrada reflects on the Galleon Trade project, a series of exhibitions and programs highlighting the linkages among the Philippines, Mexico and California. Yong Soon Min-decolonial art activist and scholar-will speak about her projects, including “transPOP: Korea Viet Nam Remix,” co-curated with Viet Le, an artist and creative writer who examines memory, AIDS and representation in Southeast Asia and its diasporas.

Panelist Bios
Sharon Spain has been the associate director of the Asian American Art Project since 2004 and has managed the California Asian American Artists Biographical Survey project for more than ten years. She holds an M.A. in museum studies and has overseen major exhibition and publication projects, including Chang Dai-chien in California.

Mark Johnson is professor of art at San Francisco State University. He is the co-editor of Asian American Art: A History, 1850-1970, and guest curator for the de Young Museum exhibition Asian/American/Modern Art: Shifting Currents, 1900-1970′ (2008) and other exhibitions of Asian American historical art.

Karin Higa is adjunct senior curator of art at the Japanese American National Museum where she recently curated “Living Flowers: Ikebana and Contemporary Art.” She is currently working on a study of art and culture in Los Angeles’s Little Tokyo between World War I and II.

Gordon Chang is a professor of history at Stanford University. The author of numerous books and articles, he recently co-edited both Asian American Art: A History, 1850-1970 and Chinese American Voices: From the Gold Rush to the Present.

Valerie J. Matsumoto, an associate professor in history and Asian American Studies at UCLA, is a contributor to Asian American Art, A History, 1850-1970. She has just completed a study of Japanese American women in Los Angeles from the Jazz Age to resettlement after World War II.

Reanne Estrada, a Los Angeles-based visual artist, collaborates with Eliza Barios and Jenifer Wofford as Mail Order Brides/M.O.B. on video and works with Public Matters to integrate public-purpose media production with civic engagement.

Yong Soon Min, professor of Studio Art at the University of California, Irvine, incorporates interdisciplinary sources and processes to engage issues of representation and cultural identities. Her work has been widely shown in exhibitions such as the 10th Havana Bienal and the 7th Gwangju Biennale.

Viet Le is an artist, creative writer, and Ph.D. candidate at the University of Southern California. His work has been featured in the Asian Pacific American Journal and anthologies such as So Luminous the Wildflowers; he has exhibited at DoBaeBacSa Gallery, Korea, The Banff Centre, Canada, and the Shoshin Performance Space in New York.

Aimee Chang is Director of Academic Programming and Artist Residencies at the Hammer Museum.

Schedule
9:00-9:30am Registration
9:30-10:50 Art History Panel (Sharon Spain, Mark Johnson, Gordon Chang, and Karin Higa; moderated by Professor Valerie Matsumoto)
10:50-11:00 Break
11:00-12:20 Contemporary Artists Panel (Yong Soon Min, Reanne Estrada, Viet Le; moderated by Aimee Chang)
Book signing afterward

Feb
10

news Chinese American Museum of N. California Announces 2009 Bok Kai Festival Schedule

Filed under: Events by aaas | 9:32 pm | Comments (0)

PRESS RELEASE

THE CHINESE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
232 1st Street
Marysville, CA 95901
510 710-2342
February 10, 2008
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Brian Tom, Museum Director
Phone: 510 710-2342
Email: BrianLTom@yahoo.com

THE CHINESE AMERICAN MUSEUM
OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA ANNOUNCES ITS 2009 BOK KAI FESTIVAL SCHEDULE—FEBRUARY 28TH AND MARCH 1ST 2009

Marysville, February 10, 2009. The Chinese American Museum of Northern California will be open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., February 28th and March 1st, 2009, during the Bok Kai Festival or Bomb Day. Admission is free during the Festival. The museum schedule includes tours of the Chinatown and the museum, speakers on Chinese American history including Philip Choy, Gerry Low-Sabado and Jon Jung, a panel of Arcadia Publishing authors that have written books on various California Chinatowns—Brian Tom, Lawrence Tom, Sylvia Sun Minnick, Lorraine Hee-Chorley, Lillian Gong-Guy and Gerrye Wong, and oral histories by some of the former residents of the Marysville Chinatown. Dr. Raymond Tom will speak on Researching your Family Roots and Dr. Irene Kwok Tom on The Mystique of Chinese Culinary Creations. John Walz, a licensed acupuncturist, will present information on traditional Chinese medicine. A complete schedule in attached.

The Chinese American Museum of Northern California was established in 2005 to preserve the history of Chinese Americans. The museum is the only museum in Northern California devoted entirely to the history of the Chinese in America. It is located in the heart of the historic Chinatown on the corner of 1st and C Streets, the same intersection where the Chinese have been “firing the bombs” for Bomb Day since the 1850’s. The museum building is a gold rush era brick building built in 1858. The annual Bok Kai parade is on Saturday, February 28th from 11 a.m. to 1 p. m. The “firing of the bombs” will take place on Sunday, March 1st at 2 p. m.

The museum has the following permanent exhibitions: 1. Marysville—The Last Chinatown of Gold Rush California. 2. Chinese American History in 10 (Easy) Steps. 3. The Lost Chinatowns of Old California—Ghost Towns and Survivors and 4. The Sanfow Bean Sprout Plant. The special exhibition this year is “The Life and Times of Gordon Tom”.

The Marysville Chinatown is one of the oldest Chinatowns in California and during the 1870’s was the 2nd largest Chinatown in the United States. Marysville was a leading commercial center during the gold rush, supplying many of the mining camps and boom towns of the northern mining region. It still has the only active Chinese temple in California that dates back to the gold rush. The Bok Kai Festival is said to be the oldest festival in the state, dating back to the early 1850’s when the Chinese pioneers settled in Marysville.

The Bok Kai Festival this year is a particularly important one. The Bok Kai Temple, for whom the Festival is named, has just completed a major renovation and after being closed for more than half a year, will be open to the public during the festival. In addition, for the first time this year the firing of the bombs at the traditional 4 p.m. Sunday has been changed to 2 p.m.

Oct
03

news San Francisco State University: 40th Anniversary Commemoration of the 1968 Student-led Strike (SFSU College of Ethnic Studies)

Filed under: Events by aaas | 6:53 pm | Comments (0)

Consciousness, Community, Liberation: Fulfilling the Promise of ‘68

A 40th Anniversary Commemoration of the 1968 Student-led Strike
San Francisco State University
Oct. 29 - Nov. 1, 2008

To register for the commemoration click here.

The College of Ethnic Studies and the Educational Opportunity Program at San Francisco State University extend a warm invitation for you to attend activities commemorating the 1968 Student Strike. The commemoration includes a conference and cultural festival titled, Consciousness, Community, Liberation: Fulfilling the Promise of ’68.
In keeping with the spirit of activism of 1968, we have accepted academic presentations, teach ins, artistic displays, media workshops, and panels and cultural presentations from the full range of elements of The Movement (e.g. civil rights; ethnic or cultural empowerment; gender or sexuality empowerment; disability rights; environmental justice and sustainable societies; legal/political/economic equity; peace; liberation philosophy, theology and pedagogy; and social liberation movements) as well as special topics including, student leadership and activism, community organizing, educational access and achievement, alternatives to incarceration and news media. This engaging program will offer participants a broad range of discussion driven forums to experience.
http://www.sfsu.edu/~ethnicst/fortieth.html

Oct
03

news Delia D. Aguliar speaks at Bryant University (Rhode Island)– REVISITING FEMINISM: WHO’S AFRAID OF THE “F” WORD? (THURSDAY, OCT 16, 3:30pm. Women’s Studies Speaker Series)

Filed under: Events by aaas | 6:51 pm | Comments (0)

********************
Women’s Studies Speaker Series, Bryant University

REVISITING FEMINISM: WHO’S AFRAID OF THE “F” WORD?

Delia D. Aguilar
Jane Watson Irwin Chair in Women’s Studies, Hamilton College

Thursday, October 16
3:30pm
Stepan Grand Hall, Bello Center
Bryant University

For three decades, Delia Aguilar has published over 30 articles in the fields of social theory and feminist theory, with particular emphasis on women in development and Filipino women.  Her essays have appeared in numerous anthologies and journals such as Dragon Ladies: Asian American Feminists Breathe Fire (Ed. Sonia Shah), Amerasia Journal, and Race and Class.  Aguilar is the author of several books on “Third World” feminist theory and practice including The Feminist Challenge: Initial Working Principles Toward Reconceptualizing the Feminist Movement in the Philippines (1989).  In 2004, she co-edited Women and Globalization with Anne Lacsamana.  This anthology provides “a global feminist perspective that views women as both laboring and desiring subjects.”

Aguilar’s dialogue piece with her daughter Karin Aguilar-San Juan titled “Feminism Across Our Generations” (2005) is now required reading in Asian American and Philippine Studies courses.  In 2007, she contributed an entry titled “Women and Globalization” to The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History (Ed. Bonnie Smith).  In 2008, she contributed an entry on “Asian American Feminism” to the ! Encyclopedia of Race and Racism (Ed. John Hartwell Moore).

A widely sought after speaker on feminism and social change, Aguilar delivered the keynote address at the 2007 Pacific Northwest Conference for the National Association for Chicana and Chicano Studies.  Earlier this year, she delivered several talks on feminist theory and practice at the Ateneo de Manila University and the University of the Philippines.  Aguilar is currently the Jane Watson Irwin Chair in Women’s Studies at Hamilton College.

We’re grateful for generous support from the Women’s Studies Advisory Board (WSAB), The Women’s Center, the Intercultural Center, the Department of English and Cultural Studies, Academic Affairs, and the College of Arts and Sciences.

Sep
29

news NAPAWF briefing: Human Trafficking and the Asian & Pacific Islander Community

Filed under: Events by aaas | 4:29 pm | Comments (0)

The National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum invites you to attend a briefing on

“Human Trafficking and the Asian & Pacific Islander Community”

Wednesday, October 8, 2008
6PM - 7:30PM

Loyola University - Kasbeer Hall
25 E. Pearson, Chicago

Human trafficking is one of the worst forms of exploitation. As a multi-billion dollar industry with profits that rival the illegal drug and arms trades, human trafficking disproportionately impacts Asian and Pacific Islander women and girls, who represent the largest group of persons trafficked into the United States.

You are invited to a special briefing on Rights to Survival & Mobility, a newly released report by the National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum on human trafficking and its impact on Asian and Pacific Islander women and girls.

Speakers include:
Liezl Tomas Rebugio
Anti-Trafficking Project Director, National Asian Pacific American
Women’s Forum

Katherine Kaufka
Executive Director, International Organization for Adolescents

RSVP and questions to napawfchicago@gmail.com by October 6, 2008

Special Thanks to:
NAPAWF-Chicago Chapter (host)
Loyola University School of Social Work (sponsor)

Jul
31

news EVENT: AAPI Colorado Summit at the Democratic National Convention - Aug 24, 12:00-4:30

Filed under: Events by aaas | 4:16 pm | Comments (0)

SAVE THE DATES!
Sunday August 24th and Tuesday August 26th

Colorado AAPI Democrats
Asian Pacific Americans for Progress
DNC Vice Chair U.S. Representative Mike Honda (CA-15)
Obama for America AAPI Vote Team

INVITE YOU TO

WHAT: AAPI Colorado Summit at the Democratic Convention

WHEN: Sunday August 24, 2008
12:00 PM - 4:30 PM

WHERE: Colorado Convention Center,
700 14th Street, Downtown Denver

WHY:
* Build upon the activism of AAPIs in the Democratic Party
* Learn from local and national AAPI leaders
* Network with people from Colorado and across the country

WHO: Anyone who is interested in taking action and affecting change

Also, on Tuesday August 26th from 2:00 PM - 4:00 PM, Asian Pacific
Americans for Progress will be sponsoring an “Asian American
Grassroots Strategy Session with Special Guest Congressman Mike
Honda.” Come join us for this brainstorming session to be held at the
Convention Center.

Please email Apafp@apaforprogress.org for more information or to
RSVP. You can also stay in touch by joining our facebook group at:
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=2295577919

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