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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, KimRonyoung, 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.
In this startling interdisciplinary revision of avant-garde
history, John Cage takes his rightful place as Wordsworth's great
and final heir. George J. Leonard traces a direct line back from
Cage, Pop, and Conceptual Art through the Futurists to Whitman,
Emerson, Ruskin, Carlyle, and Wordsworth, showing how the art of
everyday objects, often thought an exclusively contemporary
phenomenon, actually began as far back as 1800. In recovering the
links between such seemingly disparate figures, Leonard transforms
our understanding of modern culture.
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