Jul
31

news City of Fear: Nation Review of Scott Kurashige’s Shifting Grounds of Race. By Jon Wiener

Filed under: New Releases and Publications by aaas | 4:21 pm | Comments (0)

The Shifting Grounds of Race: Black and Japanese Americans in the Making of Multiethnic Los Angeles. By Scott Kurashige http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080630/wiener/print

City of Fear

By Jon Wiener

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080630

This article appeared in the June 30, 2008 edition of The Nation.

June 11, 2008

Associated Press
Quiet streets: Little Tokyo in July 1942, after the US government interned thousands of citizens.

From 1920 to 1960, Los Angeles was the whitest and most Protestant city in the United States, and the American city with the smallest proportion of immigrants–just 8 percent in 1960. By the end of the twentieth century, it was a multiracial place: 3.7 million residents, with 30 percent white, 10 percent black, 10 percent Asian and almost half Latino. During “the white years” in LA history, you might think Asian immigrant groups and black migrants from the South lived in separate worlds. The truth is more complicated: sometimes they were pitted against each other, sometimes they fought–and sometimes they joined forces in left-wing campaigns for jobs, housing and political power. Those competitions and alliances are the subject of Scott Kurashige’s fascinating and important new book, The Shifting Grounds of Race. Kurashige’s originality lies mostly in his research on Japanese-Americans and in his use of black history as an illuminating counterpoint to their struggles.

A professor of history at the University of Michigan, Kurashige begins his story in the 1920s, when Japanese immigrants were legally defined as “aliens ineligible for citizenship,” although, alone among Asian immigrant groups, Japanese men were permitted to bring wives–and thus raise a generation of American-born children, the Nisei, or “second generation.” Because whites wanted to keep racial minorities out of their neighborhoods, the small number of Japanese in LA sometimes lived in the same neighborhoods as blacks. For those with some money, the West Jefferson neighborhood, near USC, was the place to be. Chester Himes described it in his 1945 novel If He Hollers Let Him Go as “a pleasant neighborhood, clean, quiet, well bred.” In a 1929 study of the neighborhood, USC interviewers found that while local whites were hostile to both groups, blacks and Japanese-Americans “generally held favorable views of each other.”

The Communist Party organized among blacks and Japanese-Americans in LA in the 1930s and ’40s, and Kurashige emphasizes the CP’s “multiracial vision of full equality” for both groups. In the ’20s, the party in LA was a small organization of mostly Jewish immigrants from Russia, but during the Popular Front period, beginning in 1936, it grew to nearly 3,000 members. The national CP had a “Japanese section” with 200 members and claimed a thousand more Japanese-American fellow travelers, vocal opponents of the rise of fascism in Japan. (LA at the time had a population of 35,000 Japanese and Japanese-Americans.) Nisei leftists in LA organized the Market Workers Union in 1936, with 500 Japanese-American members. But when the Teamsters took over the union in 1937 in a jurisdictional dispute, they purged the Nisei.

Kurashige has found in the archives a few vivid cases where Japanese-Americans and blacks joined forces: in the mid-1930s Japanese-American Communists in LA produced bilingual fliers declaring “Scottsboro Boys Must Be Freed”; and in 1934 Langston Hughes gave the keynote speech at the party’s “Japan Night”–his topic was “The Japanese and the Darker Races.” Internationalism was the party line, but for those who saw World War II in the Pacific as a race war, there was a more sinister side to solidarity: in those same years, W.E.B. Du Bois praised Japan’s invasion of Manchuria for “showing the way to freedom” from white supremacy, calling the Chinese, as Kurashige puts it, “the Uncle Toms of the Far East.” This notion, Kurashige reports, “had spread through portions of Black America.” Hughes had a similar position, writing in 1944 about a white person telling a black church audience that “these Japs are really trying to wipe us white folks off the face of the earth”–to which “a dark and wrinkled old grandma in the amen corner” responded, “It’s about time!”

Prominent Japanese Communists in the United States faced a terrible choice in the 1930s, when almost a dozen from LA were threatened with deportation. With the help of the party’s International Labor Defense, they “voluntarily” accepted exile to the Soviet Union rather than returning to Japan, where they faced execution. But in Stalin’s Russia, Kurashige notes, at least five of them were “imprisoned and executed as ‘infiltrators.’” As tensions across the Pacific grew, mainstream Japanese-Americans, represented by the Japanese-American Citizens League (JACL), were torn between allegiance to Japan and the United States. As late as 1940, LA’s Japanese daily newspaper Rafu Shimpo (founded in 1903 by three students at USC) was printing Japanese government propaganda in its English section, describing the Chinese in Manchuria welcoming invading Japanese soldiers as liberators and describing the Japanese puppet state Manchukuo as a “miracle of the 20th century.”

Before World War II, Japanese-Americans and blacks were, in Kurashige’s words, “roughly equal targets of degradation by whites.” But after Pearl Harbor, the former were defined as enemies of the state, while the latter were granted equal employment rights by the White House. However, Kurashige points out that there were hardly any calls for internment in the month immediately following the bombing. In fact, FDR, Attorney General Francis Biddle and many others spoke out against hostility to Japanese-Americans. In LA, the County Board of Supervisors passed a resolution on December 9, two days after the bombing, declaring that Japanese-Americans had “proven their loyalty to the United States by service in the [First] World War and in other ways.” And the Los Angeles Times ran a photo of Mayor Fletcher Bowron with Nisei leaders on December 8 headlined Japanese Americans Ready to Aid Nation. A liberal Republican supporter of civil liberties, Bowron had dismantled the notorious LAPD Red Squad and spoken out against anti-Communist witch hunts in 1940. Immediately after Pearl Harbor he assured Nisei leaders that the city would provide them with the “protection accorded any other citizen.” But by January 1942, with public opinion inflamed over news accounts of Japanese atrocities in the Philippines and with FDR issuing Executive Order 9066 requiring internment, Bowron had turned into a virulent advocate of rounding up all Japanese-Americans. He went so far as to argue that the Nisei posed the greatest threat of sabotage and espionage in what he said would be a “second Pearl Harbor” in LA.

It’s well-known that the mainstream JACL called on Japanese-Americans to cooperate with internment on the grounds that, although it was unjust, the community was powerless to stop it, and redress could be pursued after the war’s end. It’s also well-known that the CP supported the roundup on the grounds that opposing FDR would interfere with winning the war. (The leading Japanese-American CP member, Shuji Fujii, published a telegram he sent to FDR in the Popular Front Eagle that called on the government to “exterminate…un-American elements amongst us.”) But the most shocking fact in Kurashige’s book is that internment was not challenged by Nisei Communists. Despite their enthusiasm, the party suspended its Nisei comrades under the slogan “Everything for National Unity!”

The key research on black organizations’ positions on the internment has been done by Cheryl Greenberg, a professor of history at Trinity College, who found that the NAACP, the National Urban League and the National Council of Negro Women were mostly silent about the internment. Kurashige’s impressive research deepens the gloom. He searched the archives for LA blacks who criticized the internment as racist and found only one black newspaper, the Tribune, that “took a firm stand against” it–but “unfortunately the bulk of its wartime publications are unavailable in existing archives,” so we don’t really know what they said, or whether they changed their position when the climate became even more inhospitable.

Public opposition in LA to the internment was limited to a few individuals–notably Clifford Clinton, a white man and the proprietor of the famous Clifton’s Cafeteria downtown (which is still open). Even Carey McWilliams, then chief of California’s Division of Immigration and Housing (and not yet editor of The Nation), reluctantly supported internment in a 1942 article–although he soon became its most outspoken white critic. In black LA, the Eagle, published by leftist Charlotta Bass, ignored the internment and publicized the “Negro Victory Market,” a grocery co-op aimed at replacing the departed Japanese-American grocers.

Meanwhile, poor blacks from Texas and Louisiana were pouring into the city in search of wartime factory jobs. Whites didn’t want black neighbors, and so the newcomers moved to the suddenly vacant Little Tokyo. Overnight Little Tokyo turned into Bronzeville, an overcrowded ghetto known for its wild nightlife, centered on Shepp’s Playhouse, where young Charlie Parker and Miles Davis played. What the white elites had viewed as a Japanese slum they now saw as an even worse Negro slum.

The internment officially ended on January 2, 1945, but the mayor warned that Japanese-Americans “had better not come back to Los Angeles.” In Manzanar, they listened; over the next six months, only 3 percent of LA’s prewar Japanese-American population returned to the city. The War Relocation Authority (WRA) had to force the rest to leave Manzanar in the fall of 1945. Eventually two-thirds came back to LA, but they had nowhere to live–leading the WRA to house them (FEMA-style) in trailer parks in Burbank, Santa Monica, Hawthorne, El Segundo and Santa Ana. The city fathers feared rioting in Bronzeville, but it never materialized; in July 1946 Ebony magazine ran a story on “The Race War That Flopped.” The racial peace seems in part to have been the work of Common Ground, a 1945 project of the Pilgrim House, one of several Protestant church efforts to promote “interracialism.” But Bronzeville/Little Tokyo was still targeted for “urban renewal,” and in 1949, 2,500 Japanese-Americans and blacks were evicted to make way for a new LAPD headquarters and then a city parking garage.

The Protestant integrationists’ goal was to prevent the formation of a new Little Tokyo and instead integrate Japanese-Americans into suburban LA. Nisei leaders worried about undermining their historic community support institutions yet were drawn to the idea of integration; Kurashige notes that “public recognition that the Nisei were even potentially capable of assimilation represented a paradigm shift.” And so the same Japanese-Americans who were treated as criminals during the war became the “model minority” whose successful integration into mainstream America was contrasted with the failure of blacks to overcome what sociologists called “dysfunction.” Liberals like Ronald Reagan embraced them, honoring Japanese-American veterans and declaring in 1945 that “America stands unique in the world, the only country not founded on race, but on…an ideal.” Not everyone agreed; the Teamsters’ official magazine declared it “senseless to argue” that “Japs are American citizens.” The union lobbied for the revocation of citizenship for Japanese-Americans.

In 1952 Congress passed the McCarran Walter Immigration Act over Truman’s veto. The act banned “suspected subversives” from entering the United States–those kept out included Gabriel García Márquez, Pablo Neruda and Graham Greene. Yet it contained a political triumph for the Nisei. In a little-known provision, the bill asserted that Japan had become our principal cold war ally in Asia. It granted naturalization rights to Japanese immigrants and permitted many more Japanese to immigrate. The quota itself wasn’t as significant as family reunification: in the 1950s, tens of thousands of Japanese legally immigrated, almost all of them family members of US citizens. As a result, more Japanese people arrived in the United States in that decade than in the previous forty years put together.

The new model minority completed its move to the suburbs, notably Gardena, Long Beach and Pasadena. But for blacks, moving just one block into white territory provoked protests and then white flight. The neighborhood around Florence and Normandie, where the Rodney King riots began in 1991, was virtually all-white in 1950; 6,000 blacks moved into the neighborhood during the 1950s, and by the ’60s, only a handful of whites remained.

For blacks there was one shining exception to the sea of black segregation in 1960s Los Angeles: the Crenshaw district, west of USC and south of the Santa Monica Freeway. There, Japanese-Americans, blacks and liberal whites lived together–for a time. Crenshaw started out after World War II as “the new Little Tokyo,” and by the early 1960s it had Southern California’s largest Japanese-American community, centered around the new Crenshaw Square shopping center, with its 1950s “Oriental” architecture and landscaping and a Japanese summer festival. But that changed in 1965, when the anger from the riots in nearby Watts spilled into Crenshaw. Japanese-American stores were looted and burned. Afterward, Crenshaw Neighbors, an organization formed by white and black women in 1961, tried to persuade whites and Japanese-Americans not to flee. (It was perhaps the region’s only homeowners’ group that fought for integrated neighborhoods.) The city opened a new high school, Crenshaw High, hoping to keep white and Japanese-American families in the area. That effort failed; Crenshaw became a black neighborhood in the 1970s.

Still, Crenshaw’s political legacy was huge. Tom Bradley, LA’s first black mayor, elected in 1973, got his start in the Crenshaw Democratic Club, where he learned to walk precincts and began his lifelong alliance with Jewish liberals. After taking office, he provided the first real opportunity for Japanese-Americans to participate in city government, and “always maintained a significant Japanese American presence in his office.” During the Bradley era, even as much of black LA fell deeper into poverty, many Japanese-Americans prospered. (Kurashige, however, is more interested in another kind of globalization–the young Japanese-American radicals of the campus Third World liberation movements of the early ’70s.)

After Watts, one symbol of interracial harmony in Crenshaw remained: Holiday Bowl, the Nisei-run bowling alley that had opened in 1958. In its coffee shop, blacks ate udon and Japanese-Americans ate soul food. Kurashige ends his book with the battle to save Holiday Bowl from the wrecking ball in 2000, when Manzanar survivors teamed up with working-class black veterans of the Negro bowling leagues and Anglo preservation activists. They lost that fight. The place was torn down in 2001, but it’s been enshrined in local history by the Japanese-American National Museum of LA. (It also has its own website, holidaybowlcrenshaw.com.) For Kurashige, Holiday Bowl provides a model of an alternative future for “polyethnic” Los Angeles–a future we might call “bowling together.”

About Jon Wiener

Jon Wiener started writing for The Nation in 1984. Since then he’s written more than 100 stories and reviews for the magazine, many about American history, university politics, and California life. He’s also professor of history at the University of California, Irvine, and a Los Angeles radio host. His most recent book is Historians in Trouble: Plagiarism, Fraud, and Politics in the Ivory Tower (New Press).

Jun
11

news AAAS May 2008 Newsletter

The AAAS May 2008 newsletter is now out. We have sent the newsletter through email to members who have listed their email addresses on their membership forms. The newsletter is also available on our website: http://aaastudies.org/newsletters/index.html

Jun
04

news New edition of Shawn Wong’s novel Homebase

Filed under: New Releases and Publications by aaas | 2:13 pm | Comments (0)

Book Announcement

HOMEBASE

A Novel

Shawn Wong

With a new introduction by the author

(University of Washington Press, May 2008, $12.95 paperback)

University of Washington Press is pleased to announce the publication of a new edition of Shawn Wong’s novel Homebase.  When it was first published in 1979, this coming of age story was lauded as “a poetically rendered tour de force” by Amerasia Journal.  In his new introduction, Shawn Wong describes the book’s initial publication, the blossoming of Asian American literature from 1970s forward, and his own development as a writer.  Included in the book are discussion questions, many suggested by professors who teach Homebase in their courses.

Shawn Wong is the author of the novel American Knees and an editor of several anthologies of Asian American literature, including Aiiieeeee! and The Big Aiiieeeee!. His work has been awarded a National Endowment for the Arts creative writing fellowship and numerous other prizes. He is professor of English at the University of Washington, Seattle.

For more information about the book, visit: http://www.washington.edu/uwpress/search/books/WONHOM.html

Beth DeWeese
Direct Marketing Manager
University of Washington Press
PO Box 50096
Seattle, WA 98145-5096
206-221-5890 tel; 206-545-3932 fax

Order books at 1-800-537-5487 or on our website:
www.washington.edu/uwpress

May
28

news New Release: The Paintings of Yun Gee and Li-lan by Joyce Brodsky

Filed under: New Releases and Publications by aaas | 2:51 pm | Comments (0)

Book Announcement

EXPERIENCES OF PASSAGE

The Paintings of Yun Gee and Li-lan
Joyce Brodsky
(University of Washington Press, April 2008)

In this generously illustrated volume, teacher, author, and critic Joyce Brodsky brings together works by the expatriate Chinese painter Yun Gee (1906-1963) and his Chinese American daughter, Li-lan, exploring connections between these artists’ lives and paintings.  Both artists can be understood as cosmopolitan and transnational figures—citizens, in Homi Bhabha’s terms, of contemporary culture’s “middle passage.”  As artists who have embraced multinational, multicultural, and multiracial experiences, Yun Gee and Li-lan have combined those experiences intrinsically, sometimes in spite of the pain that such a complex passage may entail.

“Experiences of Passage represents an ambitious effort to trace the complex processes of transnational movement, cross-cultural identifications, and mixing through the work of Yun Gee and Li-lan.” — Margo Machida, University of Connecticut

Experiences of Passage is a 248-page, hardcover book with 70 illustrations.  For more information, visit:  http://www.washington.edu/uwpress/search/books/BROEXP.html

May
23

news AALDEF New Report: Asian American students don’t benefit from No Child Left Behind Act—Major Reforms needed

Filed under: New Releases and Publications, Announcements by aaas | 2:16 pm | Comments (0)

New Report: Asian American students don’t benefit from
No Child Left Behind Act—Major Reforms needed

New York, NY — At the first-ever National Asian American Education Advocates Summit held at Columbia University in April, the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund (AALDEF), a 34-year old civil rights organization, released its new report detailing several provisions of the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) that must be overhauled in order to meet the needs of Asian American students.

AALDEF’s report, Left in the Margins: Asian American Students and the No Child Left Behind Act,  demonstrates how Asian Americans who are English Language Learners (ELLs) are currently set up to fail under NCLB.  Citing Census statistics and numerous examples in school districts around the country, AALDEF illustrates how this marginalized community is falling through our public education system’s cracks.  Left in the Margins puts a spotlight on particular school districts where Asian American ELL students are the most visible and also highly vulnerable due to the lack of appropriate services.

Margaret Fung, AALDEF executive director, said: “Since the No Child Left Behind law was enacted, we have not seen significant improvements in the quality of public education.  Instead, Asian Americans– especially immigrant, poor and non-English speaking students–have been left behind to fend for themselves in securing basic educational services. ”

Key recommendations from AALDEF’s report propose several major changes in NCLB:

Provide targeted language services for Asian American ELLs, since nearly a quarter of all Asian American students are ELLs.  Among those between the ages 5 and 17, over half of Hmong Americans, 39% of Vietnamese Americans, and 34% of Bangladeshi Americans are ELLs.

Use absolute numerical thresholds and/or population ratios in smaller districts or counties (rather than states) to determine the need for native language materials.  Asian American ELLs are densely populated in specific neighborhoods throughout the country.  For example, Vietnamese-speaking ELLs in Seattle constitute 16% of all ELLs in the city, but only 4% of the total ELL population in the state of Washington.  If native language materials were available only for language minority groups that made up at least 10% of ELLs in a state, then large numbers of Vietnamese-speaking ELLs would not benefit from native language materials.

Use multiple forms of assessment to measure ELL student achievement and limit the use of testing-based sanctions to abate high dropout rates among ELL students.  In New York City, the class of 2006’s ELL population had a dropout rate of 30% compared to 6.9% of all students citywide.

Provide states with funds to hire more ESL specialists, bilingual education specialists, and teachers bilingual in Asian languages. Although Vietnamese is the second most common native language of ELLs in California, there is only one bilingual teacher for every 662 Vietnamese-speaking students in the state.

Provide states with more funds to translate school documents, hire interpreters, and conduct community education for immigrant families.  Over 40% of Vietnamese, Korean, and Chinese households are linguistically isolated.
Require every state to collect comprehensive student data that is disaggregated by ethnicity, native language, socioeconomic status, ELL status, and ELL program type.  Without this information, the educational needs of individual groups are concealed and will remain unaddressed.

Copies of Left in the Margins: Asian American Students and the No Child Left Behind Act are available at www.aaldef.org/docs/AALDEF_LeftintheMargins_NCLB.pdf .

###

The Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund (AALDEF), founded in 1974, is a national organization that protects and promotes the civil rights of Asian Americans.  By combining litigation, advocacy, education, and organizing, AALDEF works with Asian American communities across the country to secure human rights for all.

May
23

news New Release: Mark Wild, “Street Meeting: Multiethnic Neighborhoods in Early Twentieth-Century Los Angeles”

Filed under: New Releases and Publications by aaas | 2:13 pm | Comments (0)

The University of California Press  is pleased to announce the publication of:

Street Meeting: Multiethnic Neighborhoods in Early Twentieth-Century Los Angeles

Now Available in Paperback!

Mark Wild is Assistant Professor of History at California State University, Los Angeles.

http://go.ucpress.edu/StreetMeeting

“Fascinating. . . . A rare and important addition to the rich literature on ethnic and racial experiences in Los Angeles.”-_Journal of American Ethnic History _

Immigrant neighborhoods of the early twentieth century have commonly been viewed as segregated, homogeneous slums isolated from the larger “American” city. But as Mark Wild demonstrates in this new study of Los Angeles, such districts often nurtured dynamic, diverse environments where residents interacted with individuals of other races and cultures. In fact, as his engaging account makes clear, between 1900 and 1940 such multiethnic areas mushroomed in Los Angeles. _Street Meeting, _enriched with oral histories, reminiscences, newspaper reports, and other sources, examines interactions among working-class Mexicans, Chinese, Japanese, Jews, Italians, African Americans, and others, reminding us that Los Angeles has been a multiethnic city since its birth. This study further argues that these ethnic interactions played a crucial role in the urban development of the United States during the early decades of the twentieth century.

Full information about the book, including the table of contents, is available online: http://go.ucpress.edu/StreetMeeting

May
16

news New Release: A GOOD INDIAN WIFE by Anne Cherian

Filed under: New Releases and Publications by aaas | 8:48 pm | Comments (0)

Anne Cherian has been closely associated with Asian American issues. She has taught for the Asian American Studies Department at UC Berkeley, as well as being Associate Director for the Center for the Pacific Rim at the University of San Francisco.

If you’d like to contact Anne, please email her at cherian.anne@yahoo.com

———-

A Good Indian Wife
A Novel by Anne Cherian

http://www.wwnorton.com/catalog/spring08/006523.htm

http://www.amazon.com/Good-Indian-Wife-Novel/dp/0393065235/

ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1210754720&sr=8-1

A clash of hearts and cultures set against the divergent backdrops of rural India and downtown San Francisco.

Handsome anesthesiologist Neel prides himself on his decisiveness, both in and out of the operating room. So when he agrees to return to India to visit his ailing grand-father, he is sure he’ll be able to resist his family’s pleas that he marry a “good” Indian girl. With a girlfriend and a promising career back in San Francisco, the last thing Neel needs is an arranged marriage.

Leila is a thirty-year-old teacher in Neel’s family’s village who has watched too many prospective husbands come and go to think her newest suitor will be any different. She is well past prime marrying age; her family has no money for a dowry; and then there’s the matter of an old friendship with a Muslim boy named Janni.

Neel and Leila struggle to reconcile their own desires with the expectations of others in this riveting story of two people, two countries, and two ways of life that may be more compatible than they seem.

Anne Cherian was born and raised in Jamshedpur, India. She graduated from Bombay and Bangalore Universities and received graduate degrees in journalism and comparative literature from the University of California, Berkeley.

May 2008 / hardcover / ISBN 978-0-393-06523-7
5 1/2″ x 8 1/4″ / 320 pages / Fiction

May
12

news New Book: For Better or For Worse: Vietnamese International Marriages in the New Global Economy

Filed under: New Releases and Publications by aaas | 5:33 pm | Comments (0)

New Book by Hung Cam Thai

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE:
Vietnamese International Marriages in the New Global Economy
Hung Cam Thai

(Rutgers University Press, 2008)

Marriage is currently the number one reason people migrate to the United
States, and women constitute the majority of newcomers joining husbands
who already reside here. But little is known about these marriage and
migration streams beyond the highly publicized and often sensationalized
phenomena of mail-order and military brides. Less common knowledge
actually shows that most international couples are immigrants of the
same ethnicity.

In For Better or For Worse, Hung Cam Thai takes a closer look at
marriage and migration, with a specific focus on the unions between
Vietnamese men living in the United States and the women who marry them.
Weaving together a series of personal stories, he underscores the
ironies and challenges that these unions face. He includes the voices of
working-class immigrant men dealing with marginalization in their
adopted country. These men speak about wanting “traditional” wives who
they hope will recognize their gendered authority. Meanwhile, young
Vietnamese college-educated women, undesirable to bachelors in their own
country who are seeking subservient wives, express a preference for men
of the same ethnicity but with a more liberal outlook on gender-men they
imagine they will find in the United States. A sense of foreboding
pervades the book as Thai captures the contrasting viewpoints of the
couples who appear to be separated not only geographically but
ideologically.

Professor Hung Cam Thai is an assistant professor of Asian American
Studies and Sociology at Pomona College. His general areas of interests
are race and ethnicity, gender, immigration, and the family. Thai is an
ethnographic sociologist and his research is motivated by questions of
how state policies (such as immigration laws) intrude on what we often
view as the realm of the private, which is to say the family and
intimate relations. His research employs interviews and participant
observations and aligns with feminist and race theories. He has
conducted research in Vietnam and in the United States with a special
focus on Vietnamese transpacific marriages.

The Intercollegiate Department of Asian American Studies (IDAAS) was
established in 1998 and currently has a core of thirteen faculty who
teach and research in Asian American Studies. At the heart of its
program, IDAAS offers an array of classes each academic year that
addresses Asian Pacific American issues and populations. The
department’s curriculum in the humanities and social sciences includes
courses in the arts, ethnic studies, history, literature, psychology,
sociology, and a number of interdisciplinary areas of study. For more
information, please visit the website at http://www.idaas.org.

May
12

news New Book edited by David K. Yoo and Ruth H. Chung

Filed under: New Releases and Publications by aaas | 5:32 pm | Comments (0)

Book Announcement:

RELIGION AND SPIRITUALITY IN KOREAN AMERICA
David K. Yoo and Ruth H. Chung, editors
Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2008)

Religion and Spirituality in Korean America examines the ambivalent
identities of predominantly Protestant Korean Americans in
Judeo-Christian American culture. Focusing largely on the migration of
Koreans to the United States since 1965, this interdisciplinary
collection investigates campus faith groups and adoptees and probes how
factors such as race, the concept of diaspora, and the improvised
creation of sacred spaces shape Korean American religious identity and
experience. In calling attention to important trends in Korean American
spirituality, this volume highlights a high rate of religious
involvement in urban places and participation in a transnational
religious community.

Contributors include Ruth H. Chung, Jae Ran Kim, Jung Ha Kim, Rebecca
Kim, Sharon Kim, Okyun Kwon, Sang Hyun Lee, Anselm Kyongsuk Min, Sharon
A. Suh, Sung Hyun Um, and David K. Yoo.

Professor David K. Yoo is an associate professor of history at Claremont
McKenna College and a core faculty member of the Asian American Studies
Department at The Claremont Colleges. He is the author of Growing Up
Nisei and editor of New Spiritual Homes. His current research focuses on
early Korean American history.

The Intercollegiate Department of Asian American Studies (IDAAS) was
established in 1998 and currently has a core of thirteen faculty who
teach and research in Asian American Studies. At the heart of its
program, IDAAS offers an array of classes each academic year that
addresses Asian Pacific American issues and populations. The
department’s curriculum in the humanities and social sciences includes
courses in the arts, ethnic studies, history, literature, psychology,
sociology, and a number of interdisciplinary areas of study. For more
information, please visit the website at http://www.idaas.org.

May
12

news Book Announcement: Dragon’s Child by Prof. Kathleen S. Yep and Laurence Yep

Filed under: New Releases and Publications, Announcements by aaas | 5:27 pm | Comments (0)

The Intercollegiate Department of Asian American Studies at The
Claremont Colleges is proud to announce that Dr. Kathleen S. Yep
published a young adult novel with her uncle, Dr. Laurence Yep, the
recipient of the Laura Ingalls Wilder Lifetime Achievement in Children’s
Literature and two-time Newbery honor winner.

Distributed by HarperCollins, Dragon’s Child tells the story of a father
and son from rural China immigrating to San Francisco in 1922. The Yeps
draw on family stories, immigration records, ship blueprints and
memories of Laurence’s own conversations with his father to tell the
story of Chinese immigration and Angel Island. The American Library
Association’s Booklist describes Dragon’s Child as a “stirring narrative
” and a “dramatic blend of fact and fiction.” The novel also includes
family photos, a historical note, a bibliography, and web resources on
Angel Island. Dragon’s Child resonates with current examples of
immigration interrogations, detentions and deportations.

Professor Kathleen S. Yep is an assistant professor of Asian American
Studies and Sociology at Pitzer College. After completing her doctorate
from the Ethnic Studies Department at the University of California at
Berkeley, Yep was a University of California Presidential Postdoctoral
Fellow at the University of California at Santa Cruz. Her research
interests include cultural politics, social movements, feminist and
anti-racist pedagogies, and oral historiography. Yep has published in
the Sociology of Sport Journal, the Journal of Asian American Studies,
and the Asian American Policy Review.

The Intercollegiate Department of Asian American Studies (IDAAS) was
established in 1998 and currently has a core of thirteen faculty who
teach and research in Asian American Studies. At the heart of its
program, IDAAS offers an array of classes each academic year that
addresses Asian Pacific American issues and populations. The
department’s curriculum in the humanities and social sciences includes
courses in the arts, ethnic studies, history, literature, psychology,
sociology, and a number of interdisciplinary areas of study. For more
information, please visit the website at http://www.idaas.org.

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