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Disability, Stigmatization, and Children's Developing Selves - Insights from Educators in Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and the U.S (Hardcover)
Misa Kayama, Wendy Haight, May-Lee Ku, Minhae Cho, Hee Yun Lee
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R1,697
Discovery Miles 16 970
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Guided by developmental cultural psychology, this volume focuses on
understandings and responses to disability and stigmatization from
the perspectives of educators practicing in Japan, South Korea,
Taiwan, and the United States. Synthesizing research that spanned
over a decade, this volume seeks to understand disabilities in
different developmental and cultural contexts. The research
presented in this book found that educators from all four cultural
groups expressed strikingly similar concerns about the impact of
stigmatization on the emerging cultural self, both with children
with disabilities and their typically developing peers, while also
describing culturally nuanced socialization goals and practices
pertaining to inclusive education. In providing a multicultural
view of common challenges in classrooms from around the world, this
book provides important lessons for the improvement of children's
lives, as well as the development of theory, policy, and programs
that are culturally sensitive and sustainable.
A short story collection exploring cultural complexities in China,
the Chinese diaspora in America, and the world at large. In a
vibrant and illuminating follow-up to her award-winning story
collection, Useful Phrases for Immigrants, May-lee Chai's latest
collection Tomorrow in Shanghai explores multicultural complexities
through lenses of class, wealth, age, gender, and sexuality-always
tracking the nuanced, knotty, and intricate exchanges of
interpersonal and institutional power. These stories transport the
reader, variously: to rural China, where a city doctor harvests
organs to fund a wedding and a future for his family; on a vacation
to France, where a white mother and her biracial daughter cannot
escape their fraught relationship; inside the unexpected romance of
two Chinese-American women living abroad in China; and finally, to
a future Chinese colony on Mars, where an aging working-class woman
lands a job as a nanny. Chai's stories are essential reading for an
increasingly globalized world.
Nea Chhim, the spirited heroine of "Dragon Chica," struggles with
college. Nightmares of war flood the waking memories of this
19-year-old survivor of the Cambodian Killing Fields. Nea decides
she must confront the past to overcome her fear and begin her own
life in America. Without telling Ma, she hops on a cross-country
bus in Nebraska to see her biological father in Southern
California. There Nea comes face to face with a man wounded by
survivor's guilt who refuses to acknowledge the family's secrets.
Nea determines to revive his struggling donut shop and help him
recover. Her tireless efforts attract a mysterious young man's
attention--is he casing the place for a gang? It is up to Nea to
find out the truth: about her family, the war that nearly destroyed
them, and herself.
"Tiger Girl" weaves together Cambodian folklore and its painful
past with contemporary American life to create an unforgettable
novel about love, war, and acceptance.
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Dragon Chica (Paperback)
May-Lee Chai
bundle available
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R391
R337
Discovery Miles 3 370
Save R54 (14%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Nea, a Chinese-Cambodian teenager, flees to Texas as a refugee
from the Khmer Rouge regime when a miracle occurs. Although her
family has been struggling to support itself, they discover that a
wealthy aunt and uncle have managed to make it to America as well.
Nea and her family rush to join their relatives and help run a
Chinese restaurant in Nebraska. But soon Nea discovers their
miracle is not what she had expected. Family fights erupt. Then the
past - and a forbidden love- threaten to tear them all apart.
Dragon Chica follows Nea, an indomitable character in the tradition
of Holden Caulfield, Scout Finch and Jo March, as she fights to
save her family and herself.
In the mid-1960s, Winberg Chai, a young academic and the son of
Chinese immigrants, married an Irish-American artist. In Hapa Girl
(hapa is Hawaiian for mixed) their daughter tells the story of this
loving family as they moved from Southern California to New York to
a South Dakota farm by the 1980s. In their new Midwestern home, the
family finds itself the object of unwelcome attention, which
swiftly escalates to violence. The Chais are suddenly socially
isolated and barely able to cope with the tension that arises from
daily incidents of racial animosity, including random acts of
cruelty. May-lee Chai's memoir ends in China, where she arrives
just in time to witness a riot and demonstrations. Here she
realizes that the rural Americans' fears of change, of economic
uncertainty, of racial anxiety, of the unknowable future compared
to the known past were the same as China's. And I realized finally
that it had not been my fault.
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