Asians at a protest from the 1970s

An 8-unit course that examines Asian and Asian American political activists who have been crisscrossing the Pacific, building and rebuilding networks of resistance to colonialism, marginalization, and exploitation.

8-units total—students will enroll in FYS 1 (4 units) as well as HIST/RELS 169 (4 units).

Students enrolled in this Immersive Course will earn credit for the Fall first year seminar requirement AND ALSO will meet the Global Connections Core requirement.

Taught by Prof. Holmes-Tagchungdarpa, Prof. Hong, and Prof. Day

Imperial violence and capitalist economic restructuring historically drove Asians to migrate to the United States. Once here, people of Asian descent engaged in transformative political activism and constructed new cultural identities and alliances to meet the challenges of diasporic and immigrant life. This course will examine the cultural and political geographies of trans-Pacific migration and identities from the 19th century to the present. From Har Dayal, Sun Yatsen, and Qiu Jin in the early 20th century to the 1960s Third World Liberation Front, the I Wo Kuen Red Guards in San Francisco working with the Black Panthers, and beyond, political activists have been crisscrossing the Pacific, building and rebuilding networks of resistance to colonialism, marginalization, and exploitation.

The course draws heavily on the rich history and cultural diversity of Los Angeles and Southern California, which has been a center of Asian and Asian American movements—migratory, political, and cultural—for over a century. Students will examine a variety of primary sources, including literature, political manifestos, and films, and engage deeply with the cultural and spatial geographies of these histories. Field trips to local religious sites and neighborhoods, paired with visits from local scholars, journalists, and filmmakers, will bring these histories to life and illustrate their legacies shaping the present.

Along with regular writing assignments, students will collaborate on a final project mapping transpacific migration histories and social justice alliances in LA.

SEATS ARE LIMITED!

Interested in registering?   Email Prof. Upson-Saia at upsonsaia@oxy.edu 

Questions about the course?  Contact Prof. Day at aday@oxy.edu 

Photo at the top of the page: Image of Asian Americans at a demonstration in Los Angeles against US involvement in the Vietnam war, circa 1971. Courtesy of UCLA Asian American Studies Center.

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