Asian American Studies
- AMS 403/ASA 403/LAO 403/SOC 403: Advanced Seminar in American Studies: Race, Ethnicity, and Immigration Across the American LandscapeThis is an advanced Seminar meant to deepen understanding of central themes in American Studies, Asian American Studies, and Latino/a Studies.The Seminar concentrates on historical trajectories, social and economic evolution, and cultural contributions to nation making on the part of Asian Americans and Latino/as. We will investigate colonial antecedents and processes of exclusion/stigmatization but also acts of resistance and claims on citizenship that have consistently identified the trajectory of immigrants and their descendants throughout American history.
- ASA 201/AMS 210: Introduction to Asian American StudiesThis course surveys critical themes in the interdisciplinary field of Asian American studies, including perspectives from history, literature, sociology, and gender and sexuality studies. It develops an account of Asian racial and spatial formations as a product of multiple racial settler colonial projects forged through the US wars and empire in Asia and the Pacific Islands, settler colonialism, racial capitalism, migration, incarceration, and popular culture.
- HIS 270/AMS 370/ASA 370: Asian American HistoryThis course introduces students to the multiple and varied experiences of people of Asian heritage in the United States from the 19th century to the present day. It focuses on three major questions: (1) What brought Asians to the United States? (2) How did Asian Americans come to be viewed as a race? (3) How does Asian American experience transform our understanding of U.S. history? Using newspapers, novels, government reports, and films, this course will cover major topics in Asian American history, including Chinese Exclusion, Japanese incarceration, transnational adoption, and the model minority stereotype.