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Campus faculty endeavors to define Asian-American
identity
By Joe Nguyen
nguyejos@mscd.edu
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| Peggy Lore, director of Asian American
Student Services at UCD, speaks at the Metro’s
Honors Program’s ninth annual honors conference
Oct. 25 at St. Cajetan’s Center. This year’s
theme was titled “China and Japan: A Changing
Balance of Power.” |
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Professors from UCD and the University of Colorado at Boulder
discussed the struggles of Asian-American identity Oct. 25 at
St. Cajetan’s Center.
The session was part of the Metro Honors Program’s ninth
annual honors conference. This year’s theme was titled “China
and Japan: A Changing Balance of Power.”
“Asians in the U.S. have always had to link their identities
to Asia,” CU-Boulder ethnic studies professor Daryl Maeda
said. “But in ways that are far more complicated than simply
thinking of themselves as connected to Asia as part of Asian
diasporas.”
The speakers covered a wide range of subjects, from the formation
of Asian-American identity during the 1960s to themes from author
Amy Tan’s books.
“The construction of Asian-American identity is a fragile
state,” said Peggy Lore, director of Asian American Students
Services at UCD. “… I think the idea of trying to
form Asian-American identity is like nailing Jell-O to a wall
in some instances, because it is affected by many things.”
Maeda said it is difficult to identify the single biggest problem
concerning Asian-American identity, but did list the model-minority
myth.
“Asian-Americans continue to face racism in the United
States of America, yet at the same time, we are constantly told
we are, in fact, the model minority,” Maeda said. “Asian-Americans
are good students, we’re industrious, Asian-Americans don’t
suffer from poverty or mental health. All of these assertions
are false.”
At one point, Lore asked the audience to name their favorite
Asian-American role model. After some initial hesitation, a few
in the crowd spouted out celebrity names such as Bruce Lee and
Yao Ming. Lore said she wasn’t surprised by the answers
and that she receives many of the same answers in her own classes.
“Most people, when they think of Asians, they think of
them as being foreign,” Lore said. “I want to credit
the organizers of the (honors conference) for allowing a distinct
Asian-American perspective on social, political and historical
events.”
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