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Book

The Asian Pacific American Heritage

Book

The Asian Pacific American Heritage

DOI link for The Asian Pacific American Heritage

The Asian Pacific American Heritage book

A Companion to Literature and Arts

The Asian Pacific American Heritage

DOI link for The Asian Pacific American Heritage

The Asian Pacific American Heritage book

A Companion to Literature and Arts
Edited ByGeorge J. Leonard
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 1998
eBook Published 1 October 1998
Pub. Location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203344590
Pages 690
eBook ISBN 9780203344590
Subjects Humanities
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Leonard, G.J. (Ed.). (1998). The Asian Pacific American Heritage: A Companion to Literature and Arts (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203344590

ABSTRACT

Meeting the challenge of teaching multiculturalism
Students-and their teachers-encountering literature and arts from unfamiliar cultures will welcome the special help this book provides. Instructors who are unfamiliar with Asian Pacific cultures are now being asked to explain a reference to the Year of the Rat, Obon Season, or to interpret a haiku. When Amy Tan refers to the Moon Lady or the Kitchen God, what does she mean? Is Confucianism actually a religion? This book answers these and many other questions, for students, teachers, and the librarians to whom they turn for help.

Provides sound information on in-demand topics
The Companion presents lengthy articles-written specifically for this book-on the topics that unlock the work of a number of contemporary Asian Pacific American writers and artists, for example: Asian naming systems, the "model minority" discourse, Chinese diaspora, Filipino American values, the Confucian family and its tensions, Japanese internment, Mao's Great Cultural Revolution, the Korean alphabet, food and ethnic identity, religious traditions, Fengshui and Chinese medicine, Filipino folk religion, Hmong needlework, and reading Asian characters in English, just to name a few.

Covers major contemporary writers
The articles are coupled with in-depth studies of the authors most likely to be part of the multicultural curriculum during the next decade, among them Maxine Hong Kingston, Frank Chin, Amy Tan, Younghill Kang, Carlos Bulosan, Jessica Hagedorn, Lawson Fusao Inada, Garret Hongo, David Henry Hwang, Kim Ronyoung, and Cathy Song.

Expert contributors
This volume was created under the supervision of distinguished Advisory Editors from the Asian Pacific American community. The contributors, a Who's Who of Asian Pacific American humanistic scholarship, are frequently the founders of their disciplines, and most are from the ethnic group being written about.

Helps students understand arts and literature
Multicultural courses are generally taught by exposing students to literature or arts, with reference to their political, sociological, and historical contexts. This book is designed to help students reading novels, watching films, and confronting artworks with information needs quite different from those of social scientists and historians.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

part |1 pages

Part I: Fundamentals

chapter 1|11 pages

Reading Asian Characters in English: Why “Chou” and “Zhou” Are the Same Word, and They Are Both Pronounced “Joe”: The Perils of Reading Chinese, Japanese, and Korean Characters Transliterated into English; with Notes on Vietnamese and Thai: George J.

chapter 2|13 pages

Characters: The Asian Ideogram Systems: An Invitation for Beginning Students: George J.Leonard

chapter 3|6 pages

Asian Naming Systems: Is Du Xiao Bao Mr. Du or Mr. Bao? Chinese, Japanese , Korean, Vietnamese, and Southeast Asian Naming Systems: George J.Leonard

chapter 4|3 pages

The “Model Minority” Discourse: Brian Niiya

part |1 pages

Part II: The Family and the Self

chapter 5|25 pages

Confucius and the Asian American Family: A Personal View: George J.Leonard

chapter 6|17 pages

My Grandfather’s Concubines: A First-Generation Woman Remembers Life in Peking: Molly H.Isham

chapter 7|28 pages

Japanese American Life in the Twentieth Century: A Personal Journey: K.Morgan Yamanaka

chapter 8|5 pages

The Nisei Go to War: The Japanese American 442nd Regimental Combat Team: Brian Niiya

chapter 9|4 pages

Being Nisei: Reflections on the Second Generation of Japanese Americans “Building the Nisei-style House”—A Guide for Sansei: Brian Niiya

chapter 10|3 pages

Being Sansei: Reflections on the Third Generation of Japanese Americas: Brian Niiya

chapter 11|12 pages

First-Generation Memories: One Filipina’s Story: Salve Millard and Max Millard

chapter 12|3 pages

Filipino American Values: Daniel Gonzales

chapter 13|7 pages

Korean American One-Point-Five: Jeeyeon Lee

chapter 14|18 pages

The Lizard Hunter: My Life as a Vietnamese Girl: Thuy Tran

part |1 pages

Part III: Roots, Traditions, and Asian Pacific Life: The Old Country and its Cultural Legacy

chapter 15|9 pages

Food and Ethnic Identity: Theory: Robert A.Leonard and Wendy J.Saliba

chapter 16|8 pages

Chinese Food: Mary Scott

chapter 17|8 pages

Japanese Food: Mary Scott

chapter 18|2 pages

Filipino Food: Ed Romero, Dan Gonzales, Max Millard, and Salve Millard

chapter 19|7 pages

Korean Food: Jeeyeon Lee

chapter 20|5 pages

Vietnamese Food: Chuong Hoang Chung

chapter 21|6 pages

Southeast Asian Food: The Durian and Beyond: Robert A.Leonard and Wendy J.Saliba

chapter 22|10 pages

Tea: Kakuzo Okakura

chapter 23|8 pages

Fengshui, Chinese Medicine, and Correlative Thinking: Mary Scott

chapter 24|10 pages

Lunar New Year, the Moon Lady, and the Moon Festival: Molly H.Isham

chapter 25|3 pages

Obon Season in Little Tokyo: The Persistence of Community: Brian Niiya

chapter 26|20 pages

Filipinos and Religion: Salve Millard, Max Millard, and Marie Castillo-Pruden

chapter 27|26 pages

Maoism and Surviving the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution: My Personal Experiences from 1966 to 1976: Molly H.Isham

part |1 pages

Part IV: Asian Pacific Culture: Diaspora

chapter 28|12 pages

The Chinese Diaspora: A Selection from the Work of Evelyn Hu-Dehart: Evelyn Hu-DeHart

chapter 29|5 pages

The Arrival of the Asians in California: The Six Companies: Steven A.Chin

chapter 30|6 pages

The Early History of Chinese, Japanes, Koreans, and Filipinos in America: Brian Niiya

chapter 31|8 pages

Chinatown, 1899: C.A.Higgins

part |1 pages

Part V: Literature

chapter 32|18 pages

Dialect, Standard, and Slang: Sociolinguistics and Ethnic American Literature: Robert A.Leonard

chapter 33|12 pages

Dialect Literature in America: Theory: James J.Kohn

chapter 34|6 pages

Roots: The Journey to the West: Mary Scott

chapter 35|7 pages

Roots: Japanese Haiku and Matsuo Basho: George J.Leonard

chapter 36|3 pages

The Beginnings of Chinese Literature in America: The Angel Island Poems: Two Poems by Xu of Xiangshan: Simei Leonard and George J.Leonard

chapter 37|14 pages

D.T.Suzuki and the Creation of Japanese American Zen: George J.Leonard

chapter 38|18 pages

Asian American Literary Pioneers: Jeffery Paul Chan and George J.Leonard

chapter 39|10 pages

Asian American Literature: The Canon and the First Generation: S.E.Solberg

chapter 40|3 pages

First-Generation Writings: Younghill Kang and Carlos Bulosan: S.E.Solberg

chapter 41|8 pages

Asian American Autobiographical Tradition: Brian Niiya

chapter 42|4 pages

Frank Chin: First Asian American Dramatist: Jeffery Paul Chan

chapter 43|8 pages

Maxine Hong Kingston: Amy Ling and Patricia P.Chu

chapter 44|26 pages

A Reader’s Guide to Amy: Tan’s The Joy Luck Club: Molly H.Isham

chapter 45|8 pages

David Henry Hwang: Patricia P.Chu

chapter 46|16 pages

A Reader’s Guide to Cebu and Dark Blue Suit Based on Interviews with Its Author, Peter Bacho: George J.Leonard and Diane Rosenblum

chapter 47|10 pages

Jessica Hagedorn: An Interview with a Filipina Novelist: Joyce Jenkins

chapter 48|6 pages

Lawson Fusao Inada: Japanese American Poet: Jeffery Paul Chan and George J.Leonard

chapter 49|2 pages

Garret Hongo: An Interview with a Hawaiian Japanese American Poet: Jenny Stern

chapter 50|11 pages

The Literature of Korean America: S.E.Solberg

chapter 51|7 pages

The Korean American Novel: Kim Ronyoung: A Memoir by Her Daughter, Kim Hahn

chapter 52|2 pages

Discovering Korean American Literature: The Manuscript of Clay Walls: S.E.Solberg

chapter 53|4 pages

Clay Walls: The Great Korean American Novel: S.E.Solberg

chapter 54|6 pages

Cathy Song and the Korean American Experience in Poetry : Peering Through “Frameless Windows, Squares of Light”: S.E.Solberg

part |1 pages

Part VI: The Arts

chapter 55|5 pages

Chinese Opera: Mary Scott

chapter 56|11 pages

Bernardo Bertolucci and the Westernization of The Last Emperor: A Conversation with Bernardo Bertolucci’s Advisor, the Emperor’s Grand Tutor’s son, Leo Chen: George J.Leonard

chapter 57|18 pages

A Viewer’s Guide to Wayne Wang’s Dim Sum: An Interview with Its Star and Co-Screenwriter, Laureen Chew: George J.Leonard

chapter 58|5 pages

Asian American Visual Arts: An Interview with Betty Kano: Timothy Drescher

chapter 59|15 pages

Story Cloths: The Hmong, the Mien, and the Making of an Asian American Art: George J.Leonard

chapter 60|4 pages

Toi Hoang: Painting and Healing: Amy Feldman

chapter 61|7 pages

First-Generation Painting: A Conversation Among Hung Liu, George J.Leonard, and Jeff Kelley: Jeff Kelley

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