U.S. Grantees 2016-2017
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Information to Users
INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand corner and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. Each original is also photographed in one exposure and is included in reduced form at the back of the book. Photographs included in the original manuscript have been reproduced xerographically in this copy. Higher quality 6" x 9" black and white photographic prints are available for any photographs or illustrations appearing in this copy for an additional charge. Contact UMI directly to order. University Microfilms International A Bell & Howell Information Company 300 North Zeeb Road. Ann Arbor. Ml 48106-1346 USA 313/761-4700 800/521-0600 Order Number 9120640 Society, state, and electronic media policy: The introduction of cable to Taiwan Chang, Chung-jen, Ph.D. The Ohio State University, 1991 UMI 300 N. -
The Formation of a Taiwanese American Identity
Forthcoming in the Journal of Chinese Overseas Understanding Intraethnic Diversity: The Formation of a Taiwanese American Identity Bing Wang and Min Zhou University of California, Los Angeles Bing Wang received his M.A. in Asian American Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles. He is currently teaching English in Taiwan. Email: [email protected] Min Zhou, Ph.D., is Professor of Sociology and Asian American Studies, Walter and Shirley Wang Endowed Chair in US-China Relations and Communications, and Director of Asia Pacific Center at the University of California, Los Angeles. Direct all correspondence to: [email protected] Acknowledgments The authors thank Valerie Matsumoto and Jinqi Ling for their helpful comments in the earlier version of the paper. This research is partially supported by the Walter and Shirley Wang Endowed Chair in US-China Relations and Communications. Abstract: This paper fills a scholarly gap in the understanding of the intraethnic diversity via a case study of the formation of a Taiwanese American identity. Drawing on a review of the existing scholarly literature and data from systematic field observations, as well as secondary data including content analysis of ethnic organizations’ mission statements and activity reports, we explore how internal and external processes intersect to drive the construction of a distinct Taiwanese American identity. The study focuses on addressing three interrelated questions: (1) How does Taiwanese immigration to the United States affect diasporic development? (2) What contributes to the formation of a Taiwanese American identity? (3) In what specific ways is the Taiwanese American identity sustained and promoted? We conceive of ethnic formation as an ethnopolitical process. -
Mixed-Race Migration and Adoption in Gish Jen's the Love Wife
Mixed-race Migration and Adoption in Gish Jen’s The Love Wife Jenny Wen-chuan Chu National Kaohsiung Normal University, Taiwan Migration is a way of geographic movement. It involves a sense of belonging, nostalgia 45 and diaspora issues. Besides, adoption in the migrated family illustrates the fluidity and tenacity of racial boundaries in different national and racial origins. In Gish Jen’s The Love Wife, the question of Mama Wong’s motives haunts Blondie and Carnegie. Is Lan a nanny who teaches their two Asian daughters to be more Chinese, or is she a love wife who drives Blondie out? In contemporary America, an interracial marriage like Carnegie and Blondie’s is increasingly common. We might expect Carnegie to naturally speak Chinese and know his culture, but it is Blondie who speaks Chinese and instructs their adopted children on Asian heritage. It is not natural. However, when Carnegie discovers that he is adopted, and adoption is a natural occurrence in China, he finally realizes that nothing is unnatural. His home is based on mutual love and sharing multiple cultures, not blood or skin colour. In the dimension of mixed-race migration, home is a discourse of locality, and place of feelings and rootedness. According to Henri Lefebvre, home belongs to a differential space, i.e., a spiritual and imaginary space. Our memories and souls are closely related to such differential space. Gaston Bachelard, too, argues that our home is a privileged entity of the intimate values that we take it as our differential space: “Our [home] is our corner of the world” (4). -
“The Pacific Era Has Arrived”: Transnational Education Among Japanese Americans, 1932-1941
“The Pacific Era Has Arrived”: Transnational Education among Japanese Americans, 1932-1941 Eiichiro Az uma Looking back on the two years at Keisen Girls’ School, I am so grateful for the opportunity to have been able to study here. Our teachers have taught us that it was mistaken if we simply aspired to mimic the ways ofJapanese woman. Cognizant of our special position as Americans of Japanese ancestry, we must instead strive to promote the U.S.-Japan friendship. Furthermore, we must adapt the merits of the Japanese spirit [that we have acquired here] to our Amer- icanism. Back in the United States, we will dedicate ourselves to the good of our own society as best possible citizens, cooperating with Americans of other races and learning from each other. Such is the mission of the Nisei as a bridge between Japan and the United States-one that we have come to appre- ciate [through our schooling in Japan].’ Just about two years before Pearl Harbor, a young Japanese American woman took this pledge to herself when she completed a special study pro- gram in Tokyo, Japan. Although the shadow of war loomed increasingly over the Pacific, thousands of American-born Japanese (Nisei) youth like her flocked to their parents’ native land during the 1930s to pursue cultural and language learning, as well as formal secondary and higher education. In any given year following 1932, an estimated 1,500 young Nisei students from North America resided in Tokyo and other urban areas of Japan.’ Eiichiro Azuma is Assistant Professor in the department of history, University of Pennsylva- nia. -
Performing Chinatown: Hollywood Cinema, Tourism, and the Making of a Los Angeles Community, 1882-1943
Performing Chinatown: Hollywood Cinema, Tourism, and the Making of a Los Angeles Community, 1882-1943 By William Gow A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Ethnic Studies and the Designated Emphasis in Film Studies in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Catherine Ceniza Choy, Co-Chair Professor Shari Huhndorf, Co-Chair Associate Professor Weihong Bao Associate Professor Michael Omi Spring 2018 Copyright © 2018 by William Gow Abstract Performing Chinatown: Hollywood Cinema, Tourism, and the Making of a Los Angeles Community, 1882-1943 By William Gow Doctorate in Philosophy in Ethnic Studies with a designated emphasis in Film Studies University of California, Berkeley Professor Catherine Ceniza Choy, Co-Chair Professor Shari Huhndorf, Co-Chair Examining a period of national debate over immigration and U.S. citizenship, this dissertation foregrounds the social, economic, and political contexts through which representations of Chinatown in Los Angeles were produced and consumed. My dissertation asks: how did Chinese Americans in Los Angeles create, negotiate, and critically engage changing representations of Chinatown? To what extent did popular representations and economic opportunities in Hollywood inform life in Los Angeles Chinatown? And in what ways were the rights and privileges of U.S. citizenship and national belonging related to popular representations of Chinatown? To answer these questions, this project examines four different “Chinatowns” in Los Angeles—Old Chinatown, New Chinatown, China City, and MGM’s set for The Good Earth—between the passage of the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1882 and the law’s symbolic repeal in 1943 during World War II. -
A Transnational Analysis of the Formation of a Taiwanese American Identity
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles Strait to the Point: A Transnational Analysis of the Formation of a Taiwanese American Identity A thesis submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Asian American Studies by Bing Wang 2020 ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS Strait to the Point: A Transnational Analysis of the Formation of a Taiwanese American Identity by Bing Wang Master of Arts in Asian American Studies University of California, Los Angeles, 2020 Professor Min Zhou, Chair This research examines the formation of a Taiwanese American identity from a transnational perspective, filling a scholarly gap in the understanding of intraethnic diversity. Before the surge of Taiwanese immigration to the United States since the 1970s, Taiwanese Americans and Chinese Americans were often perceived as a single ethnonational group, and the two identities conflated. Taiwanese Americans, particularly the second-generation, have constructed a distinct identity separate from Chinese Americans. The lifting of martial law in 1987 and democratization efforts in Taiwan allowed Taiwanese and the Taiwanese diaspora to publicly oppose the KuoMinTang (KMT) party, giving rise to Taiwanese nationalism, encouraging Taiwanese Americans to fully embrace the Taiwanese independence movement, create and reinforce a Taiwanese American identity, and call for recognition of Taiwan in international organizations. I argue that the Taiwanese American identity is formed through the disidentification from Chinese American community, construction -
SOME LGBT RESOURCES Community and Activist Groups
A publication of the Community Services Center Centered on TAIPEI September 2013, Volume 14, Issue 1 KINMEN: A MAGICAL HISTOry TOUR LGBT IN TAIPEI LOVE RIVER: THE HEArt OF KAOHSIUNG ARE YOU THINKING ABOVE-THE-LINE? A PEEK INSIDE A LUXUry BABY HOTEL THE Art OF ANTIQUING WOOGO CALIFORNIA SMOOTHIES UNCOVERING A DARKER PERIOD IN TAIWan’s PAST Sept_13_Cover.indd 2 2013/8/27 8:21:49 AM Sept_13_Cover.indd 3 2013/8/27 8:21:57 AM COVer ImAge: Richard Saunders Alleyway in old Jincheng Town, Kinmen at night. September 2013 volume 14 issue 1 5 LETTER FROM THE EDITOR 6 RICHARD RECOMMENDS NATIONAL THEATER AND CONCert HALL: SEPTEMBER 2013 8 CENTER GALLERY THE CENTER’S FAVORITE FINDS 9 OFF THE BEATEN TRACK Kinmen 10 OUTLOOK LGBT in Taipei 12 TRAVEL Love River 14 COFFEE CORNER Frog Café 16 EXPAT PERSPECTIVE Are You Thinking Above-the-Line? 18 PHOTOGRAPHY Depth of Field 19 HeALTH The Facts About Probiotics CONTENTS 9 20 ArOUND TAIPEI The Art of Zuo Yuezi 22 ANTIQUES Faye Angevine and the Art of Antiquing 25 TCM CORNER A TCM Approach to Menopause 26 DINING WooGo Smoothies 28 PROFILE 22 Michael Hurst 30 GENERATION Y The Importance of Volunteer Work 31 CHINESE KITCHEN Bottle Gourd 32 COMMUNITY TAS 33 EVENTS ABOUT TOWN EVENTS AT THE CENTER 34 COURSES AT THE CENTER 26 CSC BUSINESS CLASSIFIED Centered on Taipei is a publication of the Community Services Center, 25, Lane 290, ZhongShan N. Rd., Sec. 6, Tianmu, Taipei, Taiwan Tel: 02-2836-8134 fax: 02-2835-2530 e-mail: [email protected] Correspondence may be sent to the editor at coteditor@communitycenter. -
UCLA Electronic Theses and Dissertations
UCLA UCLA Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Strait to the Point: A Transnational Analysis of the Formation of a Taiwanese American Identity Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/67r1721s Author Wang, Bing Publication Date 2020 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles Strait to the Point: A Transnational Analysis of the Formation of a Taiwanese American Identity A thesis submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Asian American Studies by Bing Wang 2020 ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS Strait to the Point: A Transnational Analysis of the Formation of a Taiwanese American Identity by Bing Wang Master of Arts in Asian American Studies University of California, Los Angeles, 2020 Professor Min Zhou, Chair This research examines the formation of a Taiwanese American identity from a transnational perspective, filling a scholarly gap in the understanding of intraethnic diversity. Before the surge of Taiwanese immigration to the United States since the 1970s, Taiwanese Americans and Chinese Americans were often perceived as a single ethnonational group, and the two identities conflated. Taiwanese Americans, particularly the second-generation, have constructed a distinct identity separate from Chinese Americans. The lifting of martial law in 1987 and democratization efforts in Taiwan allowed Taiwanese and the Taiwanese diaspora to publicly oppose the KuoMinTang (KMT) party, giving rise to Taiwanese nationalism, encouraging Taiwanese Americans to fully embrace the Taiwanese independence movement, create and reinforce a Taiwanese American identity, and call for recognition of Taiwan in international organizations. I argue that the Taiwanese American identity is formed through the disidentification from Chinese American community, construction of socioeconomic support networks, engagement with transnational political activism, and appropriation of Taiwanese Indigenous symbols. -
Qiaowu and the Overseas Chinese
Hand-in-Hand, Heart-to-Heart: Qiaowu and the Overseas Chinese _____________________________________________________________________ A thesis submitted in fulfillment of the requirement for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Political Science in the University of Canterbury by James Jiann Hua TO ___________________________________________________________ University of Canterbury 2009 Table of Contents Acknowledgements iv Abstract v Notes on Romanization of Chinese vi List of Acronyms and Abbreviations vii Figure 1: Relationships Between the Qiaowu Apparatus and the viii Extended State Bureaucracy 1.00 Introduction 1 1.01 A Comparison: Incorporating the Turkish Diaspora in Europe 3 1.02 Introduction to the Extant Literature 7 1.03 Aims of this Research 10 1.04 Importance of Qiaowu Research to International Relations 11 1.05 Political/Social Control 13 1.06 Qiaowu for the 21st Century 15 1.07 Problems with Assessing Qiaowu 16 1.08 Methodology 17 1.09 Thesis Outline 21 st 2.00 Mobilizing the OC in the 21 Century 23 2.01 Capitalizing on the Olympic Spirit 23 2.02 The 1989 Tiananmen Incident 26 2.03 The CCP’s Ideological Work and Influence on PRC Students 28 2.04 The 2008 Olympic Torch Rallies 30 2.05 Another Evolution in Qiaowu 34 2.05 Conclusion 35 3.00 Unveiling Qiaowu 36 3.01 The Role of the OC for the CCP-led Party-State 36 3.02 Political Mobilization 38 3.03 Espionage 41 3.04 Unveiling Qiaowu 44 3.05 Service for the OC: Qiaowu Cadres and Their Duties 46 3.06 The CCP’s Guiding Hand 50 3.07 A Brief History of Qiaowu Organizational Structure -
Travel & Culture 2020
July 2020 | Vol. 50 | Issue 7 THE AMERICAN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE IN TAIPEI IN OF COMMERCE THE AMERICAN CHAMBER TRAVEL & CULTURE 2020 TAIWAN BUSINESS TOPICS TAIWAN July 2020 | Vol. 50 | Issue 7 Vol. July 2020 | 中 華 郵 政 北 台 字 第 5000 號 執 照 登 記 為 雜 誌 交 寄 ISSUE SPONSOR Published by the American Chamber Of Read TOPICS Online at topics.amcham.com.tw NT$150 Commerce In Taipei 7_2020_Cover.indd 1 2020/7/2 下午5:20 CONTENTS 7 President’s View The moment I realized I was in love with Taiwan JULY 2020 VOLUME 50, NUMBER 7 一○九年七月號 By William Foreman 12 Experiencing Taiwan’s Most Publisher 發行人 Convenient Island Getaway William Foreman 傅維廉 Editor-in-Chief 總編輯 Just a quick jaunt from Taipei, Don Shapiro 沙蕩 Xiaoliuqiu has a lot to offer the Deputy Editor 副總編輯 Jeremy Olivier 歐嘉仁 weekend traveler – beaches, Art Director/ 美術主任/ hiking, wondrous wildlife, and Production Coordinator 後製統籌 Katia Chen 陳國梅 the chance to snorkel alongside Manager, Publications Sales & Marketing 廣告行銷經理 green sea turtles. Caroline Lee 李佳紋 By Dinah Gardner Translation 翻譯 Kevin Chen, Andrew Wang 陳又銘, 王先棠 16 Can Taiwan’s Hoop Dreams Become Reality? American Chamber of Commerce in Taipei 129 MinSheng East Road, Section 3, Basketball is one of the island’s 7F, Suite 706, Taipei 10596, Taiwan best-loved sports, but unsustain- P.O. Box 17-277, Taipei, 10419 Taiwan Tel: 2718-8226 Fax: 2718-8182 able business models and training e-mail: [email protected] website: http://www.amcham.com.tw schedules have kept it from being 名稱:台北市美國商會工商雜誌 發行所:台北市美國商會 as successful in Taiwan as base- 臺北市10596民生東路三段129號七樓706室 ball.