History 269 Asian Americans in Historical Perspective Fall 2012

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History 269 Asian Americans in Historical Perspective Fall 2012 T-R 12:30-1:45 Sabin Hall G28 Professor: Kimberly Hernandez Email: hernandk@uwm.edu Office: Holton 348 Office Hours: TR 3:30-5:00, or by appointment Phone: (414) 229-4058 Asian and Pacific Islander Student Center Mural Cal Poly Pomona (1998) Course Description This course provides an introductory history of Chinese, Japanese, Koreans, Filipinos, Asian Indians, and Southeast Asians in the United States from the mid-nineteenth century to the present. We will focus on the experiences of Asian Americans according to historical immigration trends, focusing on push factors (reasons for emigration), pull factors (reasons for immigrating to the United States and/or U.S. territories), the immigration and settlement experience, family roles, ethnic identity, and the ethnic economy. Course Objectives 1. To familiarize students with the key events, people, and trends in Asian American History. 2. To expose students to a wide range of primary sources such as speeches, letters, laws, court decisions, journalistic accounts, oral histories, photographs, and film footage. 3. To teach students how to analyze such sources in the context of the key questions of the histories of Asian immigration to and Asian American communities within the United States. 4. To improve student communication both written and oral. Required Readings (available for purchase at the UWM bookstore) Roger Daniels, Prisoners Without Trial: Japanese Americans in World War II, revised edition (Hill & Wang, 2004) Lillian Faderman, I Begin My Life All Over: the Hmong and the American Immigrant Experience (Beacon Press, 1998) Ronald Takaki, Strangers from a Different Shore: A History of Asian Americans, revised edition (Back Bay Books, 1998) Texts also available for two-hour checkout at Course Reserves in the Golda Meier Library Additional Course Readings posted to the Course D2L Occasionally we will read additional articles or primary documents pertaining to the topic at hand. These readings will be noted in the course schedule and can be found online at the course D2L site in the appropriate weekly files. Here is information from UWM about how to gain access to our course webpage through D2L: 1. Open your web browser and go to the UWM home page: http://www.uwm.edu (OR go directly to the D2L login page at http://d2l.uwm.edu and skip to #3 below). 2. From the UWM home page, click on the dropdown menu and select D2L Course 1

Access. 3. On the Desire2Learn Welcome screen, you will see a location to enter your username and password. 4. Type in your epanther username (the same that you use for your campus email but without the @uwm.edu) and password (same password used for your campus email) and login. 5. On the MyHome screen find the area called My UW-Milwaukee Courses a. Click on [Search] with the textbox empty to see all the Active courses you are enrolled in (students are not able to see course sites until the Instructor has designated them as Active). Alternatively you can type a search string (for instance: psych 101) and click on [Search]. b. In the search results list double click on the word Semester at the top of the column to organize your courses by semester, displaying the current semester first. 6. If you have difficulty getting into the course web page try closing down your web browser and then opening it again. 7. If using a public computer remember to always logout when you are finished. If you have problems gaining access to D2L contact the UWM Help Desk at: help@uwm.edu; (414) 229-4040 or (if outside the Milwaukee area) (877) 381-3459 Class Format This course consists of lecture, some video, and some discussion. You should make every effort to attend each class. Your participation grade will reflect your attendance, quality of discussion questions, and level of informed engagement. If you are absent you must provide documentation in order for it to be excused. Lectures will include opportunities for some discussion. My expectations for student behavior during class are as follows: 1. Arrive on time and stay until class is over. 2. During lecture remain quiet unless I ask questions that prompt discussion. Feel free, however, to raise your hand to ask questions. 3. UWM building rules prohibit eating or drinking in the classrooms. 4. Remain attentive and be considerate of others. Turn off and put away cell phones; refrain from web surfing during class; no headphones. Graded Components of the Course Class Participation 10% Two short papers 30% Midterm and Final Exams 60% Exams must be taken on the dates given. Any emergency that causes a missed exam must be documented and brought to my immediate attention in order to take a makeup. In case of emergency that keeps you from finishing coursework, you must be passing the class (up until time of emergency) in order to receive an I (incomplete) as a final grade. Anyone who needs special assistance should see me during the first week of classes. This includes anyone who must miss class due to activities such as military service, sporting competitions, and/or religious observance. 2

Please review university policies on final exams, incompletes, complaints/appeals, accommodations for students with disabilities, absences due to religious observance or military service, sexual harassment, and academic misconduct (i.e. cheating and plagiarism) at: http://www.uwm.edu/dept/secu/syllabuslinks.pdf Course Schedule Week 1 Sept 4 Sept 6 Course Introduction Reading Assignment for Thursday: Takaki, Preface Additional reading posted to course D2L: Bill Ong Hing, What Does it Mean to be Asian American? in Major Problems in Asian American History (Cengage, 2003). Prepare discussion questions for class on Thursday (must be typed; at least two questions per reading). What does it mean to be Asian American? Film: My America, or Honk if You Love Buddha (Pt 1) Reading Assignment for Tuesday: Takaki, Introduction Additional reading posted to course D2L: Roger Daniels, Neglect and Distortion of Asian Americans by American Historians ; Ronald Takaki, The Centrality of Racism in Asian American History ; Sylvia Yanagisako, Rethinking the Centrality of Racism in Asian American History in Major Problems in Asian American History. For discussion on Tuesday, write a brief response to each of these essays summarizing the views of each historian. Where do they seem to agree? Where do they disagree? Week 2 Sept 11 Film: My America, or Honk if You Love Buddha (Pt 2) Discussion: What is the place of Asians in American History? Sept 13 Overview: 19 th and early 20 th century Asian immigration Reading: Takaki, Ch. 1-2 Week 3 Sept 18 Sept 20 Chinese Immigration Film: From Spikes to Spindles Reading: Takaki, first part of Ch. 3 (pp. 79-99) Reading Assignment for Thursday: Read the following primary documents posted on the course D2L: Chinese Laborers Report on a Race Riot at Rock Springs, Wyoming Territory, 1885 ; Editor Henry George Supports Chinese Exclusion on Economic and Racial Grounds, 1869 ; The Tables Turned: You Sabe Him? in Major Problems in Asian American History. What does each document tell us about reasons for Anti-Chinese sentiment? How does the report by Chinese laborers on the Rock Springs call into question some of the claims made by Henry George? Anti-Chinese Sentiment 3

Reading: Takaki, remainder of Ch. 3 Reading Assignment for Tuesday: Read the following primary documents posted on the course D2L: Hawaiians Petition the Privy Council to Halt Foreign Influence in the Islands, and the Council Replies, 1845 ; A Foreigner Speculates on Hawaiian Land Acquisition, 1849 ; in Major Problems in Asian American History. What questions do you have about these readings? Write down your questions and any key thoughts for discussion. Week 4 Sept 25 Sept 27 Week 5 Oct 2 Oct 4 Week 6 Oct 9 Oct 11 Week 7 Oct 16 Oct 18 Plantation Hawaii Reading: Takaki, Ch. 4 Japanese Immigration Reading: Takaki, Ch. 5 Filipinos: Conquest and Colonization Film: Bontoc Eulogy Filipino Settlement in America Reading: Takaki, Ch. 9 Late 19 th and Early 20 th -Century Korean and Asian Indian Immigration Reading: Takaki, Ch 7-8 Exclusion, the Asiatic Barred Zone, and Paper Sons Film: Carved in Silence Reading: Takaki, Angel Island in Ch. 6 (pp. 230-top of 239); Daniels, Ch. 1 Midterm Exam Americanization and the Second Generation Reading: Gilded Ghettos and Searching for Bridges in Takaki, Ch. 6 (pp. 239-269) Week 8 Oct 23 The Watershed of World War II: Allies and Enemy Aliens Reading: Takaki, Ch. 10 Oct 25 Executive Order 9066 Film: Something Strong Within Reading: Daniels, Ch. 2-4 Week 9 Oct 30 Nov 1 You Win Some, You Lose A Lot: Japanese American Resettlement and Redress Film: Unfinished Business Reading: Daniels, Ch. 5-7 Class Discussion on Japanese Internment and the Daniels Assignment Cold War Adjustments: Allies and Reds 4

Reading: Takaki, pp. 406-418 Week 10 Nov 6 The Vietnam Conflict, Pt. 1 Daniels Paper Due Nov 8 The Vietnam Conflict, Pt. 2 Reading: Fadiman, Prologue, Introduction, and Pt. 1, The Village Week 11 Nov 13 Nov 15 The Plight of the Hmong Southeast Asian Refugees Film: Blue Collar and Buddha (Pt. 1) Reading: Fadiman, Pt. 1, The Escape, The Camp ; Pt. 2, To a Promised Land, and Shamanism, Christianity, and Modern Medicine ; Takaki, Pushed By Necessity pp. 448-471 Week 12 Nov 20 Film: Blue Collar and Buddha (Pt. 2) Class Discussion of film and Fadiman Reading: Fadiman, remaining sections Nov 22 Thanksgiving Day No Class Week 13 Nov 27 Nov 29 Week 14 Dec 4 Dec 6 Week 15 Dec 11 Immigrant Entrepreneurship and Community Reading TBA Fadiman Paper Due Asians in the New New Immigration, Post-1965 Film: The New Puritans Reading: Daniels, pp. 419-448 The Model Minority? All Suspects Now : Immigrants in Post-9/11 America Reading TBA Wrap Up and Review Final Exam Sabin Hall G28, 12:30-2:30 Friday, December 14 th 5