Conference Order Form

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Conference Order Form Association of Asian American Studies Virtual Book Fair | August 10-14, 2020 www.dukeupress.edu 30% conference discount valid through 30 September 2020 You can find more information about DUP sociology books and journals online in our virtual display. Please be aware that orders may take 4-6 weeks to process and ship. HOW TO PLACE YOUR ORDER ONLINE: Use coupon code AAASBF20 at checkout on dukeupress.edu. Use the link next to each title to navigate directly to the book or journal page. BY FAX: Fax the completed order form to +1 (919) 688-2615 or toll free to +1 (888) 651-0124. BY POST: Mail the completed order form to Duke University Press Orders, Box 90660, Durham, NC 27708-0660 USA. BY PHONE: Call us at +1 (888) 651-0122 (US & Canada) or +1 (919) 688-5134 (International) to place your order. PLEASE NOTE: Journal issues and subscriptions may only be purchased online or by phone. POSTAGE AND HANDLING US: $5 for the first item + $1 for each additional item Canada: $7 for the first item + $2 for each additional item Outside US and Canada: $7 for the first item + $3 for each additional item $ Total Cost of Books $ Postage $ NC Residents, Add 7.5% Sales Tax $ Canada Residents, Add 5% GST $ Grand Total / Credit Card Expiration Date Last 4 Digits of Credit Card Number SHIPPING Name Address 1 Address 2 City State/Province/Region ZIP/Postal Code Country Phone Number Email 30% conference discount with code AAASBF20, valid through 30 September 2020. All titles are sorted alphabetically by author. NEW BOOKS FROM DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS What’s the Use?: On the Uses of Use (view online) Sara AHMED 978-1-4780-0650-3 $26.95 $18.87 Feminist theory/Queer theory/Philosophy Hōkūlani K. AIKAU Detours: A Decolonial Guide to Hawai‘i (view online) and Vernadette Vicuña 978-1-4780-0649-7 $29.95 $20.97 Hawai‘i/Native and Indigenous studies/History GONZALEZ, editors Possessing Polynesians: The Science of Settler Maile Renee ARVIN Colonial Whiteness in Hawai‘i and Oceania (view online) 978-1-4780-0633-6 $27.95 $19.57 Native and Indigenous studies/Hawai‘i The Moral Triangle: Germans, Israelis, Palestinians Sa’ed ATSHAN and (view online) 978-1-4780-0837-8 $25.95 $18.17 Katharina GALOR Israel/Palestine / Germany / Religion Revolution and Disenchantment: Arab Marxism and the Binds of Emancipation (view online) Fadi A. BARDAWIL 978-1-4780-0675-6 $26.95 $18.87 Middle East studies/Cultural Anthropology/Postcolonial Theory The Ocean in the School: Pacific Islander Students Transforming Their University (view online) Rick BONUS 978-1-4780-0672-5 $26.95 $18.87 Pacific Islander studies/Asian American studies/Higher education Sacred Men: Law, Torture, and Retribution in Guam (view online) Keith L. CAMACHO 978-1-4780-0634-3 $27.95 $19.57 American studies/Indigenous studies/Pacific Islander studies Blood Work: Life and Laboratories in Penang Janet CARSTEN (view online) 978-1-4780-0481-3 $25.95 $18.17 Anthropology/Global health/Southeast Asia Trans Exploits: Trans of Color Cultures and Technologies in Movement (view online) Jian Neo CHEN 978-1-4780-0087-7 $24.95 $17.47 Trans studies/Film and Media studies/Critical ethnic studies Jih-Fei CHENG, Alexandra JUHASZ, AIDS and the Distribution of Crises (view online) 978-1-4780-0825-5 $28.95 $20.27 and Nishant Feminism/Queer studies/Critical Race Theory SHAHANI, editors Anti-Japan: The Politics of Sentiment in Postcolonial Leo T. S. CHING East Asia (view online) 978-1-4780-0289-5 $23.95 $16.77 Asian studies/Cultural studies dukeupress.edu [email protected] 2 888.651.0122 (US & Canada) | +1.919.688.5134 30% conference discount with code AAASBF20, valid through 30 September 2020. All titles are sorted alphabetically by author. NEW BOOKS Listen but Don’t Ask Question: Hawaiian Slack Key Kevin FELLEZS Guitar across the TransPacific (view online) 978-1-4780-0671-8 $27.95 $19.57 Music/Hawai‘i/Native and Indigenous studies Otaku and the Struggle for Imagination in Japan: (view Patrick W. online) 978-1-4780-0629-9 $27.95 $19.57 GALBRAITH Anthropology/Asian studies/Gender and Sexuality Dub: Finding Ceremony (view online) Alexis Pauline GUMBS 978-1-4780-0645-9 $24.95 $17.47 Poetry/Black feminism/Caribbean Theory Tehrangeles Dreaming: Intimacy and Imagination in Farzaneh HEMMASI Southern California’s Iranian Pop Music (view online) 978-1-4780-0836-1 $26.95 $18.87 Ethnomusicology/Iran/Pop music Queer Korea: (view online) Todd A. HENRY, editor 978-1-4780-0290-1 $29.95 $20.97 Asian studies/LGBTQ studies/History Kristin L. HOGANSON Crossing Empires: Taking U.S. History into and Jay SEXTON, Transimperial Terrain (view online) 978-1-4780-0694-7 $28.95 $20.27 editors World history/U.S. history Urban Horror: Neoliberal Post-Socialism and the Limits Erin Y. HUANG of Visibility (view online) 978-1-4780-0809-5 $26.95 $18.87 Asian studies/Film studies/Marxist geographies Insurgent Aesthetics: Security and the Queer Life of the Forever War (view online) Ronak K. KAPADIA 978-1-4780-0401-1 $28.95 $20.27 Critical Ethnic studies/Queer Theory/Art and Visual Culture The Visceral Logics of Decolonization (view online) Neetu KHANNA 978-1-4780-0817-0 $24.95 $17.47 Postcolonial theory/Affect theory/South Asian studies A Primer for Teaching Pacific Histories: Ten Design Matt K. MATSUDA Principles (view online) 978-1-4780-0847-7 $23.95 $16.77 History/Pacific histories/Pedagogy Home Rule: National Sovereignty and the Separation of Nandita SHARMA Natives and Migrants (view online) 978-1-4780-0095-2 $29.95 $20.97 Social theory/International Migration/Race Bomb Children: Life in the Former Battlefields of Laos Leah ZANI (view online) 978-1-4780-0485-1 $24.95 $17.47 Anthropology/Asian studies/Peace and Conflict studies dukeupress.edu [email protected] 3 888.651.0122 (US & Canada) | +1.919.688.5134 30% conference discount with code AAASBF20, valid through 30 September 2020. All titles are sorted alphabetically by author. COMING SOON FROM DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS All forthcoming titles can be pre-ordered over the phone or by submitting this form by mail or fax. Catherine Militarized Global Apartheid (view online) Nov 978-1-4780-1150-7 $24.95 $17.47 BESTEMAN Neoliberalism and globalization/Social theory Lisa BJÖRKMAN, Bombay Brokers May 978-1-4780-1149-1 $31.95 $22.37 editor Anthropology/Urban studies/South Asian studies Michael K. BOURDAGHS, Sound Alignments: Popular Music in Asia’s Cold Wars May Paola IOVENE, 978-1-4780-1179-8 $27.95 $19.57 Asian studies/Cold War/Popular music and Kaley MASON, editors Sushmita CHATTERJEE Meat!: A Transnational Analysis (view online) Mar and Banu Cultural studies/Critical race studies/Postcolonial 978-1-4780-1095-1 $26.95 $18.87 SUBRAMANIAM, studies editors Lori A. FLORES The Academic’s Handbook, Fourth Edition: Revised Oct and Jocelyn H. and Expanded (view online) 978-1-4780-1111-8 $28.95 $20.27 OLCOTT, editors Higher education/Careers Mapping Abundance for a Planetary Future: Kanaka Candace Maoli and Critical Settler Cartographies in Hawai’i Feb 978-1-4780-1168-2 $26.95 $18.87 FUJIKANE (view online) Hawai’i/Indigenous studies/Environmental justice Vernadette Empire’s Mistress, Starring Isabel Rosario Cooper Feb Vicuña Asian and Asian American studies/Postcolonial 978-1-4780-1400-3 $24.95 $17.47 GONZALEZ studies Jack Wild Things: The Disorder of Desire (view online) Oct 978-1-4780-1108-8 $25.95 $18.17 HALBERSTAM Queer theory/Cultural studies Selected Writings on Race and Difference Apr Stuart HALL (view online) 978-1-4780-1166-8 $31.95 $22.37 Cultural studies/Race theory Moon-Kie JUNG and João H. Antiblackness (view online) Apr 978-1-4780-1181-1 $29.95 $20.97 Costa VARGAS, Black studies/Critical ethnic studies editors Laura Hyun Yi Traffic in Asian Women (view online) Sep 978-1-4780-0966-5 $28.95 $20.27 KANG Women’s studies/American studies/Asian studies Return Engagements: Contemporary Art’s Traumas of Modernity and History in Sài Gòn and Phnom Penh Apr Viet LÊ 978-1-4780-1079-1 $28.95 $20.27 (view online) Asian and Asian American studies/Art dukeupress.edu [email protected] 4 888.651.0122 (US & Canada) | +1.919.688.5134 30% conference discount with code AAASBF20, valid through 30 September 2020. All titles are sorted alphabetically by author. COMING SOON Unseeing Empire: Photography, Representation, South Asian America (view online) Nov Bakirathi MANI 978-1-4780-1089-0 $26.95 $18.87 Photography/Asian American studies/Postcolonial studies Walter D. The Politics of Decolonial Investigations May 978-1-4780-0149-2 $36.95 $25.87 MIGNOLO Decolonial theory/Latin American studies The Sense of Brown (view online) José Esteban Oct Queer theory/Critical ethnic studies/Performance 978-1-4780-1103-3 $24.95 $17.47 MUÑOZ studies Borderwaters: Amid the Archipelagic States of Brian Russell May America 978-1-4780-1185-9 $28.95 $20.27 ROBERTS American studies/Ocean studies Coed Revolution: The Female Student in the Chelsea Szendi Feb Japanese New Left 978-1-4780-1145-3 $25.95 $18.17 SCHIEDER Asian studies/Women’s studies/The Global 1960s Rebel Imaginaries: Labor, Culture, and Politics in Dec Elizabeth E. SINE Depression-Era California (view online) 978-1-4780-1137-8 $27.95 $19.57 US history/Labor history Experts in Action: Transnational Hong Kong-style Feb Lauren STEIMER Stunt Work and Performance (view online) 978-1-4780-1170-5 $25.95 $18.17 Media studies City of Screens: Imagining Audiences in Manila’s Jasmine Nadua Mar Alternative Film Culture (view online) 978-1-4780-1169-9 $27.95 $19.57 TRICE Film/Southeast Asian studies Experiments in Skin: Race and Beauty in the Thuy Linh Nguyen Shadows of Vietnam Mar 978-1-4780-1177-4 $25.95 $18.17 TU American studies/Asian American studies/Cultural studies History on the Run: Secrecy, Fugitivity, and Hmong Refugee Epistemologies Feb Ma VANG 978-1-4780-1131-6 $26.95 $18.87 Asian American studies/Critical ethnic studies/Critical refugee studies Minor China: Method, Materialisms, and the Aesthetic (view online) Mar Hentyle YAPP 978-1-4780-1155-2 $26.95 $18.87 Art and visual culture/Transnational Asian studies/ Affect theory dukeupress.edu [email protected] 5 888.651.0122 (US & Canada) | +1.919.688.5134 30% conference discount with code AAASBF20, valid through 30 September 2020.
Recommended publications
  • Island Holiday Livestream Performance Sunday, December 20, 2020, 3Pm Island Holiday Sunday, December 20, 2020 | Youtube Live
    2020 VIRTUAL PERFORMANCE ISLAND HOLIDAY LIVESTREAM PERFORMANCE SUNDAY, DECEMBER 20, 2020, 3PM ISLAND HOLIDAY SUNDAY, DECEMBER 20, 2020 | YOUTUBE LIVE with Special Guests Kronos Quartet David Harrington, violin John Sherba, violin Hank Dutt, viola Sunny Yang, cello Kronos Quartet appears courtesy of Kronos Performing Arts Association Sean San José, stage director Joan Osato, video designer Florante Aguilar, ukulele and guitar Robert Huw Morgan, organ The Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History Sirkhane Social Circus School, Turkey 2 PROGRAM CHORUS SCHOOL LEVEL II Monica Covitt, director; Astghik Sakanyan, piano Addison Li, Madison Chow, Giovanna Barroso, soloists ¡Ay, Mi Palomita! (Oh! My Little Dove) Traditional Lullaby from the Dominican Republic and other Latin American Countries arr. Juan Tony Guzmán CHORUS SCHOOL LEVEL IV Anne Hege, director; Level IV Sectional Leaders, body percussion Son de Camaguey Cuban folk song, arr. with additional music by Stephen Hatfield CHORUS SCHOOL TRAINING CHORUS, in collaboration with BAYVIEW OPERA HOUSE Othello Jefferson, Christopher Street, directors Othello Jefferson, piano Bassez Down (Dance Low Down) West Indian Folk Song, arr. Othello Jefferson CHORUS SCHOOL PREP CHORUS, in collaboration with BAYVIEW OPERA HOUSE Christopher Street, director Three Little Birds Bob Marley, arr. Christopher Street PREMIER ENSEMBLE Valérie Sainte-Agathe, Artistic Director Seven Principles Bernice Johnson Reagon 3 CHORUS SCHOOL LEVEL III Terry Alvord, director; Angela Rey, piano Selections from Cinq Chansons Folkloriques d’Haiti arr. Electo Silva Feill’ oh Dodo Titit PREMIER ENSEMBLE Valérie Sainte-Agathe, Artistic Director Chesley Mok, piano; Maggie Lu, flute Mi Zeh Hidlik Yiddish Traditional, arr. Elliot Z. Levine Deck the Hall Traditional Welsh Carol, arr.
    [Show full text]
  • Clemente C. Morales Family Salinas, California
    The Filipino American Experience Research Project Copyright © October 3, 1998 The Filipino American Experience Research Project Clemente C. Morales Family Salinas, California Edited by Alex S. Fabros, Jr., The Filipino American Experience Research Project is an independent research project of The Filipino American National Historical Society Page 1 The Filipino American Experience Research Project Copyright © October 3, 1998 The Filipino American Experience Research Project Copyright (c) October 3, 1998 by Alex S. Fabros, Jr. All rights reserved. Printed in the U.S.A. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review written for inclusion in a magazine, newspaper, or broadcast. Published in the United States by: The Filipino American Experience Research Project, Fresno, California. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 95-Pending First Draft Printing: 08/05/98 For additional information: The Filipino American Experience Research Project is an independent project within The Filipino American National Historical Society - FRESNO ALEX S. FABROS, JR. 4199 W. Alhambra Street Fresno, CA 93722 209-275-8849 The Filipino American Experience Research Project-SFSU is an independent project sponsored by Filipino American Studies Department of Asian American Studies College of Ethnic Studies San Francisco State University 1600 Holloway Avenue San Francisco, CA 94132 415-338-6161 (Office) 415-338-1739 (FAX) Page 2 The Filipino American Experience Research Project Copyright © October 3, 1998 TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS .................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • A Spatial Comparison of Historic Filipinotown and Its Cultural
    CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, NORTHRIDGE The Invisible Town: A Spatial Comparison of Historic Filipinotown and its Cultural Symbols A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements For the degree of Master of Science in Geographic Information Science By Kenneth Banares August 2018 Copyright by Kenneth Banares 2018 ii This thesis of Kenneth Banares is approved: ___________________________________________ ____________________ Dr. Steve Graves Date ___________________________________________ ____________________ Dr. James Craine Date ___________________________________________ ____________________ Dr. Ron Davidson, Chair Date California State University, Northridge iii Acknowledgements I would like to thank the California State University, Northridge Department of Geography and Environmental Studies for allowing me to follow my passion and love for Geography. Without you, I would be nowhere. Dr. Steve Graves and Dr. James Craine, thank you for agreeing to be a part of my thesis committee. Also, I would like to give a special thanks to my chair, Dr. Ron Davidson for helping me find a thesis topic that not only interests me, but also taught me a lot about myself. To my friends and family that was there for me, your loving support and encouragement gave me the strength to go on and pursue a degree that I was born to complete. iv Dedication This thesis is dedicated to all my friends and family. Also, I dedicate this thesis to my late grandma, Carolina Panlilio Lingat. Without her, I would not have been the man I am today. No words can express how much I miss you. You were the foundation to our whole family. Love you Lola. v Table of Contents Signature Page ..................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 1 PUBLIC COUNSEL MARK ROSENBAUM (State Bar No. 59940
    1 PUBLIC COUNSEL MARK ROSENBAUM (State Bar No. 59940) 2 [email protected] AMANDA SAVAGE (State Bar No. 325996) 3 [email protected] 610 S. Ardmore Avenue, 4 Los Angeles, CA 90005 Tel: (213) 385-2977 - Fax: (213) 385-9089 5 6 SCHEPER KIM & HARRIS LLP GREGORY A. ELLIS (State Bar No. 204478) 7 [email protected] KATHERINE B. FARKAS (State Bar No. 234924) 8 [email protected] MICHAEL L. LAVETTER (State Bar No. 224423) 9 [email protected] 800 West Sixth Street, 18th Floor 10 Los Angeles, California 90017-2701 Tel: (213) 613-4655 - Fax: (213) 613-4656 11 Additional Counsel listed on next page 12 Attorneys for Plaintiffs 13 SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA 14 COUNTY OF ALAMEDA, RENE C. DAVIDSON COURTHOUSE 15 KAWIKA SMITH, through his guardian ad CASE NO. RG19046222 litem LEILANI REED; GLORIA D., through (Consolidated with RG19046343) 16 her guardian ad litem DIANA I; STEPHEN C., through his guardian ad litem, MARGARET F.; Judge: Hon. Brad Seligman 17 ALEXANDRA VILLEGAS, an individual; GARY W., an individual; CHINESE FOR 18 AFFIRMATIVE ACTION, a nonprofit DECLARATION OF PATRICIA organization; COLLEGE ACCESS PLAN, a GÁNDARA, PH.D. IN SUPPORT OF 19 nonprofit organization; COLLEGE SEEKERS, a PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION FOR nonprofit organization; COMMUNITY PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION 20 COALITION, a nonprofit organization; DOLORES HUERTA FOUNDATION, a Date: August 20, 2020 21 nonprofit organization; and LITTLE MANILA Time: 3:00 p.m. RISING, a nonprofit organization, Dept.: 23 22 Reservation ID: R-2193299 Plaintiff, 23 v. Action Filed: December 10, 2019 24 Trial Date: None Set REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF 25 CALIFORNIA; JANET NAPOLITANO, in her official capacity as President of the University of 26 California; and DOES 1-100, 27 Defendant.
    [Show full text]
  • Filipino Americans in Los Angeles Historic Context Statement
    LOS ANGELES CITYWIDE HISTORIC CONTEXT STATEMENT Context: Filipino Americans in Los Angeles, 1903-1980 Prepared for: City of Los Angeles Department of City Planning Office of Historic Resources August 2018 National Park Service, Department of the Interior Grant Disclaimer This material is based upon work assisted by a grant from the Historic Preservation Fund, National Park Service, Department of the Interior. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Department of the Interior. SurveyLA Citywide Historic Context Statement Filipino Americans in Los Angeles, 1903-1980 TABLE OF CONTENTS PURPOSE AND SCOPE 1 CONTRIBUTORS 1 PREFACE 2 HISTORIC CONTEXT 10 Introduction 10 Terms and Definitions 10 Beginnings, 1898-1903 11 Early Filipino Immigration to Southern California, 1903-1923 12 Filipino Settlement in Los Angeles: Establishing a Community, 1924-1945 16 Post-World War II and Maturing of the Community, 1946-1964 31 Filipino American Los Angeles, 1965-1980 42 ASSOCIATED PROPERTY TYPES AND ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS 49 BIBLIOGRAPHY 73 APPENDICES: Appendix A: Filipino American Known and Designated Resources Appendix B: SurveyLA’s Asian American Historic Context Statement Advisory Committee SurveyLA Citywide Historic Context Statement Filipino Americans in Los Angeles, 1903-1980 PURPOSE AND SCOPE In 2016, the City of Los Angeles Office of Historic Resources (OHR) received an Underrepresented Communities grant from the National Park Service to develop a National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Documentation Form (MPDF) and associated historic contexts for five Asian American communities in Los Angeles: Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Thai, and Filipino.
    [Show full text]
  • DOWNLOAD Sample Pages
    Sample Pages from Created by Teachers for Teachers and Students Thanks for checking us out. Please call us at 800-858-7339 with questions or feedback, or to order this product. You can also order this product online at www.tcmpub.com. For correlations to State Standards, please visit www.tcmpub.com/administrators/correlations 800-858-7339 • www.tcmpub.com Immigration Teacher’s Guide Teacher’s Exploring Primary Sources Immigration Teacher's Guide Table of ContentsTable Introduction Why Are Primary Sources Important? 4 Research on Using Primary Sources 6 Analyzing Primary Sources with Students 11 Components of This Resource 15 How to Use This Resource 18 Standards Correlation 23 Creating Strong Questions 28 Primary Source Card Activities Statue of Liberty 31 Mulberry Street in New York City 35 Immigrants on the SS Amerika 39 Registry Hall in Ellis Island 43 Angel Island 47 Eastern European Immigrant Family 51 Mediterranean Immigrants 55 Mexican Immigration 59 Primary Source Reproduction Activities Emigrants of the Globe 63 Looking Backward 69 Inspection Card 75 Ship’s Manifest 81 Naturalization Paper 87 Chinese Labor Application for Return Certificate 93 Mexican Border Immigration Manifest 99 This Is America 105 Culminating Activities Project-Based Learning Activity 111 Document-Based Questions 114 Making Connections Technology Connections 119 Young-Adult Literature Connections 122 Appendix References Cited 123 Answer Key 124 Digital Resources 128 © | Teacher Created Materials 111318—Exploring Primary Sources: Immigration 3 Why Are Primary
    [Show full text]
  • INCITE Research Outline Alina, CJ, Emily, Nabiha July 12 2019
    INCITE Research Outline Alina, CJ, Emily, Nabiha July 12 2019 Abstract Hypothesis: Asian immigrants’ country of origin (specifically South Asian, Southeast Asian, and East Asian) shapes multiple aspects of their financial experiences in New York City, including their income level, occupation, amount of remittances, and the presence or absence of family obligations. Background and Significance Background information on South, Southeast, and East Asian immigrant population groups in NYC: Literature review (articles and national data on Asian immigrants’ statistics): • https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2016/12/20/why-asian-americans- arent-as-rich-as-they- seem/?noredirect=on&utm_campaign=pubexchange_article&utm_medium=referral&utm _source=huffingtonpost.com&utm_term=.e9284c694c14 o “Model Asian” stereotype o Large category of Asians with high education and financial status does not hold true for all Asians • Large discrepancies among Asian immigrants’ financial statuses o https://cdn.americanprogress.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/AAPI- IncomePoverty.pdf ▪ Statistics show large discrepancies among Asian immigrants’ financial statuses, including per capita and median household income levels Significance: • The “Model Asian” stereotype popularized/supported by the success of certain groups of Asian immigrants in the United States o Differences in occupations and income levels among Asian immigrants in the United States reveal (financially) that the “Model Asian” stereotype is not true for all Asian groups => overgeneralization •
    [Show full text]
  • Asian American Pacific Islander National Historic Landmarks Theme Study National Historic Landmarks Theme Study
    National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior A National Historic Landmarks Theme Study ASIAN AMERICAN PACIFIC ISLANDER ISLANDER AMERICAN PACIFIC ASIAN Finding a Path Forward ASIAN AMERICAN PACIFIC ISLANDER NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARKS THEME STUDY LANDMARKS HISTORIC NATIONAL NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARKS THEME STUDY Edited by Franklin Odo Use of ISBN This is the official U.S. Government edition of this publication and is herein identified to certify its authenticity. Use of 978-0-692-92584-3 is for the U.S. Government Publishing Office editions only. The Superintendent of Documents of the U.S. Government Publishing Office requests that any reprinted edition clearly be labeled a copy of the authentic work with a new ISBN. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Odo, Franklin, editor. | National Historic Landmarks Program (U.S.), issuing body. | United States. National Park Service. Title: Finding a Path Forward, Asian American and Pacific Islander National Historic Landmarks theme study / edited by Franklin Odo. Other titles: Asian American and Pacific Islander National Historic Landmarks theme study | National historic landmark theme study. Description: Washington, D.C. : National Historic Landmarks Program, National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, 2017. | Series: A National Historic Landmarks theme study | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: LCCN 2017045212| ISBN 9780692925843 | ISBN 0692925848 Subjects: LCSH: National Historic Landmarks Program (U.S.) | Asian Americans--History. | Pacific Islander Americans--History. | United States--History. Classification: LCC E184.A75 F46 2017 | DDC 973/.0495--dc23 | SUDOC I 29.117:AS 4 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017045212 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Resolution MONTEREY COUNTY BOARD of EDUCATION
    Resolution MONTEREY COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION RESOLUTION NUMBER 15-16-13 Honoring FILIPINO AMERICAN HISTORY MONTH WHEREAS, each October we observe Filipino American History Month, which was established to commemorate the first documented landing of Filipinos over 425 years ago and was first recognized statewide in 2006 when the California Department of Education placed it on its celebrations calendar and then in 2009 by the California State Assembly; and WHEREAS, the Filipino American National Society recognized the year of 1763 as the date of the first permanent Filipino settlement in the United States in St. Malo, Louisiana; and WHEREAS, the Filipino-American community is the third largest Asian-American group in the United States and California has become the home to over half of the Filipino population in the United States with historic Filipino communities located in Delano, Los Angeles, Salinas, San Diego, San Francisco, Stockton, and Vallejo; and WHEREAS, providing an opportunity to research, examine, and promulgate Filipino American’s history and culture, Filipino American History Month highlights the economic, cultural, social, and patriotic contributions Filipino Americans have made in countless ways toward the development of our State and our Country; and WHEREAS, the city of Stockton was chosen as the site for the Filipino American National Historical Museum by the Filipino American National Historical Society Board of Trustees at the 1994 Conference and in 2015, the museum opened in Stockton's Little Manila; and WHEREAS,
    [Show full text]
  • THE LIFE and TIMES of CARLOS BULOSAN a Thesis
    KAIN NA! THE LIFE AND TIMES OF CARLOS BULOSAN A Thesis Presented to the faculty of the Department of History California State University, Sacramento Submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS in History by Donald Estrella Piring, Jr. FALL 2016 © 2016 Donald Estrella Piring, Jr. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ii Preface This thesis, Kain Na!, began as a project in Fall 2015.1 It was based on a historic community of Filipino migrant workers and shopkeepers – Little Manila in Stockton, California. America’s legalized racism and American citizens’ individual prejudices segregated Asian migrant workers to designated districts, one of which was Stockton’s Little Manila. The immigrants were expressly forbidden from leaving these districts, except for work or out-of-town travel. The history of just one community is too broad for one paper, and so the project was repurposed to examine just one individual – Allos “Carlos” Bulosan, Filipino writer and labor organizer. There are some limitations to the study. Attempts were made to contact Dr. Dawn Mabalon at San Francisco State University and Conor M. Casey at the University of Washington, Seattle. Most of the materials consulted during the Fall 2015 semester were fiction and prose written by Bulosan. One year later, archival materials were consulted and this thesis was written. There was insufficient time to reread all the materials with new evidence and insights. Not all of the known Bulosan materials (in the UW Seattle Special Collections or elsewhere) were examined. Microfilm and audio cassettes were not consulted, lest they become damaged in the research process.
    [Show full text]
  • Reimagining Historic Preservation in Asian American and Pacific Islander Communities
    aapi nexus Vol. 14, No. 2 (Fall 2016): 105-116 Practitioners Essay Cultural Preservation Policy and Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders: Reimagining Historic Preservation in Asian American and Pacific Islander Communities Michelle G. Magalong and Dawn Bohulano Mabalon Abstract Historic and cultural preservation is a significant issue for Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPIs) seeking to safeguard impor- tant historic places, preserve unique cultural practices, and receive of- ficial recognition of civic contributions. However, few sites associated with AAPI history and cultures have been recognized as landmarks. With the fiftieth anniversary of the Historic Preservation Act of 1966, the Department of the Interior and the National Park Service have em- barked on an Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Initiative to explore how the legacy of AAPIs can be recognized, preserved, and in- terpreted for future generations. To understand what we could be com- memorating on the act’s fifieth anniversary, this essay will offer policy recommendations for preserving, landmarking, and interpreting AAPI historic and cultural sites into 2040 and beyond. Introduction The passage of the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 created the National Register of Historic Places and National Historic Landmarks Program, the official list of the nation’s historic places wor- thy of preservation. The National Park Service’s National Register of Historic Places is part of a national program to coordinate and support public and private efforts to identify, evaluate, and protect America’s historic and archeological resources. National Historic Landmarks (NHLs) are nationally significant historic places designated by the Sec- retary of the Interior because they possess exceptional value or quality in illustrating or interpreting the heritage of the United States.
    [Show full text]
  • “Skid Row”: Filipinos, Race and the Social Construction of Space in San Diego
    “Skid Row”: Filipinos, Race and the Social Construction of Space in San Diego By Rudy P. Guevarra, Jr.*1 Like other racial and ethnic minority groups in early twentieth century San Diego, Filipinos found their use of space profoundly circumscribed. Racial segregation restricted where Filipinos could live, work and enjoy their leisure time. Like other Asian immigrant groups before them, Filipinos were prohibited from owning land or property in California due to existing alien land laws. In addition, the city’s racial structure also ensured that Filipinos were denied access to rental housing in various parts of San Diego, which limited their choices. As a result of these restrictions, Filipinos remained in several enclaves: the South Bay and Southeastern sections of San Diego, small pockets in Coronado and La Jolla (known as the “servants quarters”) and in downtown San Diego’s Chinatown, or as many called it, “skid row.” 1 This area, which was described as the “tenderloin” of San Diego, was as one 1946 report noted, “the location of most of the interracial Stingaree, 3rd Avenue and J Street, c. 1924. © SDHS #14116. multiple family dwellings in San Diego” where “rooming houses, cheap hotels and tenements” were located.2 In this article, I argue that this restricted area – encompassing the blocks of Fourth through Sixth Avenues, Island, Market, and J Streets –served as the spatial locus for the formation of a distinct Filipino community in San Diego. Ironically, Filipino migration to California was largely the result of late nineteenth and early twentieth century American policies to exclude Asian * The author would like to thank Colin Fisher and Margaret Fajardo for reading over previous drafts of this essay.
    [Show full text]