Help

Course Information

Topics in Global/ComparativeStudies: The Asian American Experie (SOC 3600)

Term: 2019-20 Spring

Faculty

Phyllis Moore
Email address is hidden, click here to email
Malynda Eshleman
Email address is hidden, click here to email
M. Eleanor Lim-Midyett
Email address is hidden, click here to email
Email all faculty members

Schedule

Tue-Thu, 1:00 PM - 2:20 PM (1/27/2020 - 5/15/2020) Location: MAIN EA B102

Description

[cross-listed with HST 3603 and LIT 3601; G/C; Asian Studies minor; Social Practice minor] This course is an interdisciplinary, cross-cultural study of the various dimensions of Asian American experiences, including history, social organization, literature, arts, and politics. This course will focus on the diverse experiences of Chinese, Japanese, Filipino, Korean, South Asian and Southeast Asian ethnic groups in the United States. We will focus on significant issues such as immigration, racial prejudice, stereotypes, gender, labor, and identity. The class will use varied sources to explore “Asian American” experiences throughout American history. We will read seminal Asian American literary works such as Maxine Hong Kingston’s Woman Warrior and John Okada’s No Boy and watch films such as Lee Ang’s The Wedding Banquet. The class will also examine political topics such as affirmative action, the “model minority” stereotype, and racial tensions in the history of Asians in America as wel