Women, Gender, Sexuality 592AA - S-Asian American Feminisms

Fall
2013
01
3.00
Miliann Kang

TH 2:30PM 5:00PM

UMass Amherst
39798
39797
How have the figures of the Chinese bachelor, the geisha, the war bride, the hermaphrodite, the orphan, the tiger mother, the Asian nerd, the rice king, the rice queen, and the trafficked woman shaped understandings of Asian Americans, and how have these representations been critiqued by Asian American feminist scholars and writers? Is there a body of work that constitutes "Asian American feminism(s)" and what are its distinctive contributions to the field of Women, Gender, Sexuality Studies? How does this body of work illuminate historical and contemporary configurations of gender, sexuality, race, class, nation, citizenship, migration, empire, war, neoliberalism and globalization? In exploring these questions, this course examines Asian American histories, bodies, identities, diasporic communities, representations, and politics through multi- and interdisciplinary approaches, including social science research, literature, popular representations, film, poetry and art. The course fulfills the critical race feminisms requirement for graduate feminist certificate students and undergraduate majors and minors. It is open to graduate students and advanced undergraduates.
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.