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         Japanese-asian Americans:     more books (100)
  1. Asian-American ethnic studies: Chinese-Americans, Japanese-Americans, Korean-Americans by Keiko Panter, 1975
  2. Bibliography, social work with Asian Americans: Chinese Americans, Filipino Americans, Japanese Americans, Korean Americans, Vietnamese Americans by Susan Sung, 1978
  3. Demon dogs: Cultural deviance and community control in the Japanese-American evacuation (Selected papers in Asian studies) by Arthur A Hansen, 1983
  4. Storied Lives: Japanese American Students and World War II (The Scott and Laurie Oki Series in Asian American Studies) by Gary Y. Okihiro, Leslie A. Ito, 1999-04
  5. Japanese Americans Of The South Bay, CA (IMG) (Images of America) by Dale Ann Sato/Japanese American Historic, 2009-02-11
  6. Confinement and Ethnicity: An Overview of World War II Japanese American Relocation Sites (The Scott and Laurie Oki Series in Asian American Studies) by Mary M. Farrell, Florence B. Lord, et all 2002-08
  7. Japanese Americans in San Diego (Images of America: California) by Susan Hasegawa, Japanese American Historical Society, et all 2008-10-01
  8. Japanese American Midwives: Culture, Community, and Health Politics, 1880-1950 (Asian American Experience) by Susan L. Smith, 2005-11-07
  9. Just Americans: How Japanese Americans Won a War at Home and Abroad by Robert Asahina, 2007-05-17
  10. Japanese American Internment Camps (Cornerstones of Freedom, Second Series) by Gail Sakurai, 2007-09
  11. Racism, Dissent, and Asian Americans from 1850 to the Present: A Documentary History (Contributions in American History)
  12. Pacific Pioneers: Japanese Journeys to America and Hawaii, 1850-80 (Asian American Experience) by John E. Van Sant, 2000-04-19
  13. Japanese-American Civilian Prisoner Exchanges and Detention Camps, 1941-45 (Routledge Studies in the Modern History of Asia) (Volume 0) by Bruce Elleman, 2008-01-30
  14. The Japanese American Family Album (American Family Albums) by Dorothy Hoobler, Thomas Hoobler, 1998-05-28

61. Nature Publishing Group
nativity (ie USborn vs foreign-born) for Asian americans and whether six major AsianAmerican ethnic groups (Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Asian Indian, Korean
http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/DynaPage.taf?file=/ijo/journal/v24/n9/full/0801365

62. Community Organizing
Aging Overview , American Indians , Asian American Overview , Asian americansChinese , Asian americans Japanese , Asian americans Southeast Asians
http://www2.cedarcrest.edu/academic/soc/sow300.htm
Department of
Human Relations and
Social Organization
Representing the Disciplines of SOCIOLOGY, SOCIAL WORK, ANTHROPOLOGY,
RELIGIOUS STUDIES AND GERONTOLOGY
to the COMMUNITY ORGANIZING AND SOCIAL PLANNING C OURSE WEB SITE This site was last updated on March 14, 1998. It is designed to be viewed in a maximized (full) screen. Cedar Crest College Department of Human Relations and Social Organization Fall Semester, 1997 Community Organizing and Social Planning (SOW 300) Maynard L. Cressman Office: 740-3792, Ext. 3502 Return to the Department's Home Page Return to Department Web Sites
    Course Domain: This course deals with the various dimensions and phases of organizing the efforts of a group of people to improve the conditions of their community's life and their capacity for participation, self-direction, and integrated effort in community affairs. Used in this sense, the concept of community is not necessarily limited to a specific geographic locale, but also includes any group of people who share a common interest. Thus, a community could include a group of residents in a nursing home, the residents of an inner city neighborhood, or all the Native Americans in the United States. The approach of this course is that while specific choices of techniques and strategies vary with the group and the situation, the basic principles of community organization are universally applicable. In addition to community organizing, this course will explore program and community development. Without an effective program or campaign there will usually be no effective change. This course will analyze the various factors that comprise a dynamic program, campaign, or system change in the circumstances of the community's life. Factors such as resource identification and utilization, problem assessment, program administration and evaluation, bureaucratic organization, strategy formulation, and the application of tactical pressure will be discussed.

63. American Studies 298C
on the aggregate experiences of Asian Pacific americans, starting from Pacific Americangroups (eg, Chinese, Korean, Filipino, Japanese, Asian Indian, Hawaiians
http://www.otal.umd.edu/~diverse/as298c.html
AMERICAN STUDIES 298C
ASIAN AMERICAN EXPERIENCE

William Liu, M.A. 3109 Taliaferro Hall Teaching Assistants:
Glenna Chang and Greg Toya
Course Description
Required Reading List
Class Requirements
Assignments ... Course Schedule Course Description:
This course will focus on the aggregate experiences of Asian Pacific Americans, starting from developments in the countries of origin to their contemporary issues. The class will concentrate on the histories of various Asian Pacific American groups (e.g., Chinese, Korean, Filipino, Japanese, Asian Indian, Hawaiians, Vietnamese, etc.), as well as culture, politics, the media, and stereotypes. There will be a look at the similarities among the different Asian Pacific American groups, as well as a brief comparative look at how African, Latino, and Native American experiences help shape and contribute to Asian Pacific America.
The course is interdisciplinary, and thus will use materials from different areas of scholarship (e.g., literature, psychology, sociology, film, etc.). We will look at the intersection of a variety of Asian Pacific American discourses, and try to create a framework for students use long after the completion of the class. No previous knowledge of Asian Pacific American history, exposure to literature, or other related topics will be presumed.
Required Reading List:
Aguilar-San Juan, Karin (1994).

64. Just Watched 13
Besides the parasite singles in Japan, they're making money from minorities suchas Africanamericans, Non-Japanese Asian-americans and Latinos, who can
http://www.geocities.co.jp/Hollywood-Studio/7088/Film/JW/JW03a.html

65. JAPAN BOOKSTORE: Teaching Aisle
Fiction with Japanese/Asian Themes. Teaching English Overseas A Job Guide For americansAnd Canadians by Jeff Mohamed Paperback 224 pages Guide for americans
http://www.ohayosensei.com/books/teach.html
Welcome What's New Travel and
Exploration
...
Literature

(in translation) Learning the
Japanese

Language
Gaijins ...
Only
Classic and
Contemporary
Videos
Thinking about working
in Japan? Then pick
up a free issue of O-Hayo Sensei the world's largest jobs-in-Japan news publication. Can't find what you're looking for? You can search Amazon.com directly with the engine below. Just type in an author, book title, or another search term. Looking for a unique gift? How about a handmade Sushi, DimSum or Manju Clock?
O-Hayo Sensei's Online
JAPAN BOOKSTORE
TEACHING
Not as much as you'd expect is currently in print, although there are certainly a few copies still around on shelves. The reason, of course, is that the bloom (boom) is off and it takes a little more effort (and qualifications, and talent) to get a job in Japan these days. Times change quickly, and the information in a book published even two years ago (written three years ago, based on experiences four years ago) should be taken with a big grain of salt. Importing Diversity: Inside Japan's JET Program by David L. McConnell

66. Xpress Online - Opinion/Media
Asian americans have been mistakenly dubbed the model minority in this country Thegroup as whole includes Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Asian Indian, Korean
http://www.journalism.sfsu.edu/Xpress/archive/fall99/opinion/minority.html
A Minority in the Eyes of the Few... By: Katherine General
Xpress Coorespondent Based on a study on academic achievement released last week, the College Board has decided not to classify Asian-Americans as minorities. In an article printed in the Boston Globe, the Board explains Asian-Americans can't be grouped with other minorities because they consistantly out-perform them. If decisions like this continue nationwide, Asian-Americans will receive cease to receive special consideration in education and hiring choices within the academic world, as well as in government aid. This decision is grounded in the mistaken belief that Asian Americans are the "model minority." Asian Americans have been mistakenly dubbed the "model minority" in this country since the 1960s. Since then they have been pitted against other minority groups and simultaneously maligned for their alleged success. Asians are often viewed as hard-working machines, without emotion, without humanity, only looking toward the goal. What is not taken into account in perceptions about the Asian-American community as a whole is its interior diversity. The U.S. Census classifies approximately 20 different ethnic groups under the label "Asian/Pacific Islander." The group as whole includes Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Asian Indian, Korean, Vietnamese, Cambodian, Hmong, Laotian, Thai, Pacific Islander, Polynesian, Hawaiian, Samoan, Micronesian, Guamanian, and few others. It doesn't make sense to assume that because a few ethnic groups are doing well with in the larger group, that everyone else in the group is. It's an over-generalization that unfortunately some people buy into.

67. PBS - "Ancestors In The Americas"
to whom the same law was applied in succession Japanese, Asian Indian, Filipino thelegal right of citizenship by birth for all americans, more clearly
http://www.pbs.org/ancestorsintheamericas/program3_2.html
"Holding my queue grown longer, American cowlicks growing out on my once smooth head. I carry candidate President Grover Cleveland, and his vice president on my chest. He gave us justice at Rock Springs.We honor him, though we cannot vote." - Chinese Pioneer Man We see as well the role of political opportunism in the way that anti-Chinese sentiment infused the highest levels of government, as California Governor George C. Perkins proclaimed March 4, 1880, a legal state holiday for anti-Chinese demonstrations. The program will show how 30 years of unrelenting anti-Chinese sentiment culminated in the U.S. Congress passing the unprecedented Chinese Exclusion Act in 1882, which halted further immigration of virtually all Chinese as well as other "Asiatics" to whom the same law was applied in succession: Japanese, Asian Indian, Filipino, Koreans. The Exclusion Act also prevented Asians already residing in the U.S., including American-born offspring, from becoming naturalized citizens. "The Chinese Exclusion Act...is the hinge on which all American immigration policy turned. Prior to the Exclusion Act there had been no significant restrictions of any kind on any immigration to the United States. There was no such thing as an illegal immigrant. After 1882...there are successive restrictions placed on all immigrants."

68. Www.sba.gov/gopher/Business-Development/Success-Series/Vol6/mktg.txt
Filipinos, Japanese, Asian Indians, Koreans and Vietnamese. And within the Africanamericansegment, French-speaking Haitian-born americans, for example, may
http://www.sba.gov/gopher/Business-Development/Success-Series/Vol6/mktg.txt

69. Profile Of Asian Pacific Communities
the largest subpopulations were Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Asian Indian, Korean subpopulationfollowed by Chinese, Vietnamese, Korean, and Japanese americans.
http://academic.udayton.edu/health/08civilrights/01-02-11ProfileAsAm.htm
Institute on Race, Health Care and the Law
Speaking Truth to Power!
Profile of Asian Pacific Communities
Please Sign My Guestbook Read My Guestbook
V ernellia R. Randall
Professor of Law and Founder
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Chapter 2: Background: Disparity, Discrimination and Diversity in Health Care; Volume I, The Role of Governmental and Private Health Care Programs and Initiatives, The Health Care Challenge: Acknowledging Disparity, Confronting Discrimination, and Ensuring Equality, A Report of the United States, Commission on Civil Rights (September 1999). "During our 160-year history, most portrayals of Asian Americans have perpetuated insidious stereotypes including the Eurocentric perception of Asian Americans as foreign, exotic, and non-American. There have been few images that reflect the complexity of Asian American experiences." "In order to provide adequate health services to all Americans, health researchers must incorporate knowledge of the great diversity of Americans into our health services."

70. Kang Lee Advertising, Nation's Leading Ad Agency For The Asian
Approximately 9095% of Polish-americans are Roman Catholic. in the Asian and EastEuropean consumer segments (Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Asian-Indian, Korean
http://www.inforesources.com/press/6-7-99.html

71. American Studies: 200 Level Courses Offered
An introductory history of Chinese, Japanese, Asian Indians, Filipinos, and Koreansin the United AM ST 257 US Culture Mexican americans (also LSP 258; Hist
http://www.arts.cornell.edu/amerstud/courses/200level.htm
AM ST 201 Popular Culture in United States 1900-1945 Fall 2002 . 4 Credits. G.C. Altschuler
MWF 11:15-12:05.
American Studies 201 deals with American popular culture in the period between 1900 and the end of World War II. As we examine best-sellers, films, sports and television, radio, ads, newspapers, magazines and music, we will try to better understand the ways in which popular culture "contested terrain," the place where social classes, racial and ethnic groups, women and men, the powerful and the less powerful, seet to "control" images and themes. Topics for 201 include: the Western; Cultural Heroes and the Cult of Individualism in the 1920s; The Hays Code and the Black Sox Scandal; Mae West and the New Woman; Advertising in an Age of Consumption; Gangsters and G-Men; Jackie Robinson and the American Dilemma.
AM ST 202 Popular Culture in the United States, 1945 to the Present Spring 2003 . 4 credits. G. Altschuler.
MWF 11:15-12:05. Plus sections TBA.
American Studies 202 will treat the period from 1945 to the present. As we examine bestsellers, films, sports and television, radio, ads, newspapers, magazines, and music, we will try to better understand the ways in which popular culture shapes and/or reflects American values. The course will also depict popular culture as "contested terrain," the place were social classes, racial and ethnic groups, women and men, the powerful and less powerful, seek to "control" images and themes. Topics for 202 include: The "Honeymooners" and 1950s television, soap operas; "Gross-out" movies; Elvis; The Beatles, and Guns 'n' Roses; Gothic Romances; People Magazine and USA Today.

72. WHAT'S NEW - In The Month Of June 2001!
PEARL HARBOR BRINGS FEARS Japanese/Asian americans such as John Tateishi (presidentof the Japanese American Citizens League) are worried that people will
http://us_asians.tripod.com/new-01-06.html
Get Five DVDs for $.49 each. Join now. Tell me when this page is updated Quick Site Guide Home Page Advertise Here What's New? Events Music Film Featured Artists Timeline Awards Resources Articles APA's on TV Need for Support Film Selection Our Presentations Artists Important Issues Affiliate Sponsors Contact Us WHAT'S NEW
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SECTIONS Featured Actors Featured Actresses Featured Directors Featured Musicians ... Yellow Face Click Here to receive email when this page changes o Powered by NetMind o var test=0; document.write("<");document.write("! "); document.write(" ");document.write(">"); W h a t ' s N e w LATEST NEWS FOR JUNE 2001 Recent times have seen the general public's perception of the Asian Pacific American / U.S. Asian communities vacillate a great deal. Much of this was created by the incident involving a U.S. spy plane crashing in Hainan Island of the PRC and its resulting consequences. Various unfortunate "backlash" incidents within the general public and the media have created false images of the APA communities. Combine this with the revival of IceBox.Com's infamous " Mr. Wong

73. Films In 2001 With U.S. Asians!
IMPORTANT NOTEWORTHY FILMS FEATURING ASIAN PACIFIC americans. Many Japanese/AsianAmerican organizations have been concerned, despite the film production
http://us_asians.tripod.com/film-2001.html
Get Five DVDs for $.49 each. Join now. Tell me when this page is updated Quick Site Guide Home Page What's New? Latest Events Need for Support Important Issues Politcs Polls Music Artists Important Films Film Selection Featured Artists Awards Timeline Resources Articles Our Presentations Affiliate Sponsors Contest Advertise Here Contact Us
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var test=0; document.write("<");document.write("! "); document.write(" ");document.write(">"); FEATURING ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICANS Films in 2001 (Part 1) Click HERE for Part 2, HERE for Part 3 and HERE for Part 4 PEARL HARBOR Director: Michael Bay Studio: Disney Produced by Michael Bay and Jerry Bruckheimer Music: Hans Zimmer , Faith Hill Writer: Randall Wallace Cast: Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett, Kate Beckinsale, William Lee Scott, Greg Zola, Ewen Bremner, Alec Baldwin, James King, Catherine Kellner, Jennifer Garner, Michael Shannon, Jon Voight, Cuba Gooding Jr., Matthew Davis, Mako, John Fujioka, Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, Colm Feore, Dan Aykroyd, Reiley McClendon, Jesse James, William Fichtner, Ping Wu, Tom Everett, Sung Kang, Yuji Okumoto, Tom Sizemore, Ted McGinley, Noriaki Kamata, Garreth Saito, Eiji Inoue, Precious Chong, Seth Sakai, Toru Tanaka Jr., Garret Sato, James Saito, Angel Sing, Tak Kubota, Vic Chao, Seiki Moriguchi, Vincent J. Inghilterra, Leway Shih, Lijay Shih, James Yeung SYNOPSIS: Pearl Harbor follows a similar path seen in the movie "Titanic." The central theme is an epic love story set in the days when nations last made the devasting leap from peace to World War II. The story follows two daring young pilots, Rafe McCawley and Danny Walker, who grew up like brothers and first learned to fly in the daring and dangerous aviation practice of crop dusting. As a result of their skills; they both became pilots in the U.S. Army Air Corps. Rafe falls in love with Evelyn Stewart, a beautiful and courageous nurse serving in the US Navy. Their love has only just begun to bloom when destiny and that of the world on the brink of war

74. Math2.math.nthu.edu.tw/jcchuan/note2/ency7
Noting that Asian americans are the fastest growing minority in America, the groupsin the United States Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Asian Indian, Korean
http://math2.math.nthu.edu.tw/jcchuan/note2/ency7

75. Asian
As a category, the US.Census Bureau describes AsianPacific americans in over 30 Mostpopular are Filipino, Japanese, Asian Indian, Korean, Chinese, Hmong, Thai
http://www.hepm.org/asian.htm
Asian/Pacific Countries:
As a category, the U.S.Census Bureau describes Asian-Pacific Americans in
over 30 ethnic groups from South Asian (India), SE Asia (Vietnam), Central
Asia (China), the Pacific Rim (Korea) and the Pacific Basin (Phillipines).
Hawaii and six island jurisdictions are considered in the Asian-Pacific
American category as well. They include: American Samoa, Commonwealth of
the Northern Mariana Islands, U.S. territory of Guam, Republic of the
Marshall Islands, and Republic of Palau. Most popular are Filipino,
Japanese, Asian Indian, Korean, Chinese, Hmong, Thai, Cambodian, Laotian,
Vietnamese, Burmese, Sri Lankan, Bangladeshi, Malayan, Indonesian,
Pakistani. Hope this help. Research from DEOMI, Patrick AFB, FL. Other Countries that may fall in this category: Taiwan Tonga Bangladesh Nepal Mongolia Return to www.hepm.org

76. Newsgroups Soc.culture.korean,soc.culture.asian.american,alt.
over and over again There are just too few Korean americans in the Since thereare comparable amounts of Filipinos, Japanese, Asian Indians, and Chinese in
http://www.dpg.devry.edu/~akim/sck/aa2.htm

77. Past Students Say . . .on Student Activities
people view other Asians as ‘lesser’ than Japanese and not really ‘real americans.’”. Unfortunately,if you are a nonJapanese Asian-American, you
http://eap.ucop.edu/eap/country/japan/jpstudents_say_activ.htm

Japan
Program Options
University/Country Links

Course Information

Internships/Field Study
... Choose another country Japan Past Students Say... “Be open to everything. See all the differences as a learning experience. You have to get used to large crowds and busy streets. My biggest adjustment was living with a host family because I had to adapt to the family life. Also commuting was tiring.” “Learn about Japan and really understand that it is a different society. What Americans view as acceptable often offends the Japanese. Be aware of situations in Japan and make sure not to offend.” “The Japanese society is fairly easy to enter on a surface level. Don’t expect to be able to build close relationships without serious effort in studying the culture and the language. Try not to go against the already existing order here. Authority often is unquestioned, procedures and formalities are considered important.” “People are very neat in their clothing and appearance here. Don’t wear anything outlandish until you see how others are dressed.” “A good way to assimilate is to join a club. However, do a little research before you join. Some clubs pick on new members or do a lot of drinking.”

78. Yuu's Random B****ing
americans would never see. This is not a racist comment, but rather a truth becauseeven I have received different treatment as a “nonJapanese Asian.” An
http://www.geocities.com/anifei/rant/Rambling46.html
“Shonen Fairy Tale” It’s been a long time since I’ve done a decent movie review. Maybe it’s because I’ve come back from Japan. Maybe it’s because I haven’t seen a GOOD movie (Minority Report? *puke* - to nemuren: j/k :B) So finally, I’ve decided to come around to the last great movie that’s rated 5 pop stars on the H.O.T.-o’-meter: Isao Yukisada’s “Go.” I actually saw this film a fairly long time ago, back in springtime while I was in Hong Kong with my girlfriend. It was around my birthday, so she had wanted to do something special (which, me being the anti-social angst freak that I am, was not something I was used to ^^;) So I just said we should go to watch a movie, since I was too cheap to see many movies in Japan ^^; We went to the papers with no idea what was hot in the theaters, and I spied an ad for the 1st-day-release of “Go,” which I had seen in numerous commercials in Japan. Perhaps it was the stupidest reason I had ever had for wanting to see a movie, but the ending theme song had gotten stuck in my head enough (due to mass Japanese commercialism…) to intrigue me enough to pick that particular movie. I’m thankful I made that choice. Basically, G is about a zainichinihonjin teenager, Korean-Japanese, Lee Jong-Ho, Japanese name: Sugiyama. Set in Japan’s modern society, it follows his story growing up not only as an outsider in terms of his racial heritage, but also as a teenager growing up into the adult world. It’s a story of learning what it is to live in Japan as a Korean-Japanese, as well as a story of what it is like to live for himself. This isn’t the story of something extraordinary that happens to this boy, but rather, to paraphrase S. Ching, “The ordinary tale of extraordinary people.”

79. Japanese Friendship Dolls - Finding Dolls
Friendship Dolls from display and stored them away, since no americans wanted to RosieSkiles, one of the leaders of the Japanese Asian Doll Enthusiasts (JADE
http://wgordon.web.wesleyan.edu/dolls/japanese/finding/
Main Page Children's Page Japanese Friendship Dolls History ... Current Programs Japanese Friendship Dolls
Finding Dolls Bob Hunter with Miss Chosen, found in 1998 at a museum in West Hartford, Connecticut During World War II, many museums took down the Japanese Friendship Dolls from display and stored them away, since no Americans wanted to see these gifts from the enemy they were fighting. In the decades after the end of the war, most of the 58 Dolls seem to have been forgotten, misplaced, or sold. Rosie Skiles, one of the leaders of the Japanese Asian Doll Enthusiasts (J.A.D.E.), has been very active for several years searching for missing Japanese Friendship Dolls . Her tireless efforts have led to the finding of four dolls: Miss Yokohama, Miss Kagoshima, Miss Fukushima, and Miss Shimane. She is also working together with the National Science Museum in Tokyo to unravel the mix-ups in the names of some of the 58 Japanese Friendship Dolls. Several of the dolls have fascinating stories about how they were located many years after they had been forgotten.

80. No Message!
genocide of native americans. - slavery of africans. Need I go on about Genocideof Chinese by Japanese, Asian overt and public racisim against Blacks all
http://www.camweb.org/bbs/open/index.cgi?read=8636

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