Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- East Asian Languages and Societies (2)
- American Popular Culture (1)
- American Studies (1)
- Asian American Studies (1)
- Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (1)
-
- Film and Media Studies (1)
- Food Studies (1)
- History of Science, Technology, and Medicine (1)
- Intellectual History (1)
- Japanese Studies (1)
- Language Interpretation and Translation (1)
- Other Film and Media Studies (1)
- Political History (1)
- Race, Ethnicity and Post-Colonial Studies (1)
- Social and Behavioral Sciences (1)
- Visual Studies (1)
- Women's History (1)
- Keyword
-
- 1967 National Language Act (1)
- Buwei Yang (1)
- Cold War (1)
- Communal care (1)
- Diasporic studies (1)
-
- Food studies (1)
- Japan (1)
- Joyce Chen (1)
- Kinoshita (1)
- Language movement (1)
- Madhur Jaffrey (1)
- Malay Language Society (1)
- Malaysia (1)
- May 13 (1)
- Memorialization (1)
- Michelle Zauner (1)
- Missiles (1)
- Mizoguchi (1)
- Modernization (1)
- Nakagawa (1)
- Nuclear weapons (1)
- PBMUM (1)
- Priya Krishna (1)
- Propaganda (1)
- Protest (1)
- Qian Xuesen (1)
- Racial riots (1)
- Razak Report (1)
- Scientific community (1)
- Shindo (1)
Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Asian History
Love Is Real & I Just Had Some For Dessert: Legacies Of Communal Care & Compassion In Asian Diasporic Women's Food Writing, Miki Rierson
Love Is Real & I Just Had Some For Dessert: Legacies Of Communal Care & Compassion In Asian Diasporic Women's Food Writing, Miki Rierson
Honors Projects
In this project I work to recover influential yet often erased Asian American female immigrant chefs and food authors from the mid-twentieth century to the present, situating their contributions in a deep-rooted tradition of diasporic women who used cooking as a means of communal agency and care. Immigrant Asian cookbook authors and chefs have long faced internal criticisms from their own diasporic communities of either inauthenticity or engaging in “food pornography,” to use writer Frank Chin’s term—a line of criticism that Lisa Lau has elaborated on as “re-Orientalism.”Though these criticisms should not eclipse the works themselves, I discuss and counter …
Student Activism And Malaysian Politics, 1955-74: Revising The History Of The Malay Language Society (Pbmum), Song Eraou
Student Activism And Malaysian Politics, 1955-74: Revising The History Of The Malay Language Society (Pbmum), Song Eraou
Honors Projects
In the literature on student activism in Malaysia, the years from 1967 to 1974 are emphasized as vibrant years—students organized large-scale demonstrations, regularly asserted their opinions in the political arena, and even participated in electoral politics. This period was followed, however, with the imposition of strict laws in 1975 limiting freedom of speech and expression. Such laws were part of the broader containment policy pursued by the state after the May 13, 1969, racial riots, which allowed the state to stifle any form of political dissidence to ensure peace between different ethnic groups. One particularly active organization in this period …
Duty And Distinction: Scientists As Intellectuals In Modern China, Helen Wang
Duty And Distinction: Scientists As Intellectuals In Modern China, Helen Wang
Honors Projects
As critical players in the Chinese state’s pursuit of modernization and political legitimacy, Chinese scientists have been the recipients of state attention and scrutiny throughout modern history. This paper will analyze how Qian Xuesen (1911-2009) became a national hero as the Chinese Communist Party’s model scientist. Qian developed his scientific expertise in the United States, before Cold War political tensions forced his extradition. Upon his return to China, Qian became a key missile scientist in the state’s emerging nuclear weapons program. By analyzing Qian’s public persona as portrayed in official state media, this paper will argue that the CCP conferred …
The Scars Of War: The Demonic Mother As A Conduit For Expressing Victimization, Collective Guilt, And Forgiveness In Postwar Japanese Film, 1949-1964, Sophia Walker
Honors Projects
Contemporary American viewers are familiar with the vengeful and terrifying ghost women of recent J-Horror films such as Ringu (Nakata Hideo, 1998) and Ju-On (Shimizu Takashi, 2002). Yet in Japanese theater and literature, the threatening ghost woman has a long history, beginning with the neglected Lady Rokujo in Lady Murasaki’s 11th century novel The Tale of Genji, who possesses and kills her rivals. Throughout history, the Japanese ghost mother is hideous and pitiful, worthy of fear as well as sympathy, traits that authors and filmmakers across the centuries have exploited. This project puts together four films that have never before …