21F.043J / 21H.150J Introduction to Asian American Studies: Literature, Culture, and Historical Experience, Fall 2005
Author(s)
Teng, Emma J.
Download21f-043j-fall-2005/contents/index.htm (34.40Kb)
Alternative title
Introduction to Asian American Studies: Literature, Culture, and Historical Experience
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
An interdisciplinary subject that draws on literature, history, anthropology, film, and cultural studies to examine the experiences of Asian Americans in U.S. society. Covers the first wave of Asian immigration in the 19th century, the rise of anti-Asian movements, the experiences of Asian Americans during WWII, the emergence of the Asian American movement in the 1960s, and the new wave of "post-1965" Asian immigration. Examines the role these historical experiences played in the formation of Asian American ethnicity, and explores how these experiences informed Asian American literature and culture. Addresses key societal issues such as racial stereotyping, media racism, affirmative action issues, the glass ceiling, the "model minority" syndrome, and anti-Asian harassment or violence. Taught in English.
Date issued
2005-12Other identifiers
21F.043J-Fall2005
local: 21F.043J
local: 21H.150J
local: IMSCP-MD5-13b795680d6a166c8d54ed56f643701b
Keywords
asian immigration, chinese problem, anti-asian movements, WWII, new wave immigration, racism, affirmative action, race, ethnicity, Chinatown, panethnicity, memoir, chinese exlucsion, U.S. imperialism, Philippines, japanese-american internment, diaspora