UCLA Asian American Studies Center Press
For Immediate Release
Feb. 13, 2009
Press Contact: Russell C. Leong
Review Press Copies: Ming Tu, ytu@aasc.ucla.edu
"How Do Asian Americans Create Places"
UCLA Professor Kyeyoung Park and Amerasia Journal
Present New Research on Asian American Communities in Los Angeles
Professor Kyeyoung Park, UCLA Associate Professor of Anthropology and Asian American
Studies, has in conjunction with the Amerasia Journal, published new research on Asian
American communities in California, with a focus on the Los Angeles area.
The special issue, vol. 34.3, entitled "How do Asian Americans Create Places" include six
articles on the Thai, Hmong, South Asian, Chinese, Vietnamese, and Korean communities,
prefaced by a demographic profile of Asian American and Native Hawaiian Pacific Islanders
in L.A. and the United States done by Melany Dela Cruz-Viesca, director of UCLA Census
Center.
In studying Asian American communities, Park, with Amerasia editor Russell Leong note that:
"Outside Hollywood, Asian Americans have long added a global dimension to Los Angeles.
Since 1960, immigration has been the main impetus of Asian population growth in the
United States. With almost 5 million Asian Pacific residents, California has the largest
such population in the country. This includes Filipino, Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese, Korean, Asian Indian, Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, Laotian, Cambodian, Hmong, and
Thai. It's not surprising that L.A. County has the largest percentage of Asian Americans
in the state-more than a million people, according to the U.S. Census, of whom 70 percent
are immigrants. Any map of L.A. would reveal "Asian global ethno-hubs" in the central
city (Koreatown, Thai Town, Chinatown, Little Tokyo) and in the San Gabriel Valley, where
Little Taipei includes ethnic Chinese from Taiwan, Hong Kong and Southeast Asia, as well
as native-born American Chinese. Farther south, Cambodians in Long Beach are organizing
for a Little Cambodia not far from Little India in Artesia, or Little Saigon in Garden
Grove."
What do the ethnohubs mean for the future? How do they connect Los Angeles to the world? These nexuses of Asian residents and commercial and cultural activities have developed a
complicated network of institutions, including churches and temples, language schools,
banks, book and video stores, markets, factories, and other businesses, linked with like
institutions across the United States and Asia, as well. This issue includes the
following new studies:
Ý Jiemin Bao, in "From Wandering to Wat: Creating a Thai Temple and Inventing New Space
in the United States," examines in her case study the theoretical, intellectual and
practical tensions and conflicts around building a Thai temple, or wat, in the Silicon
Valley.
Eric Yang, in "Recreating Hmong History: An Examination of www.Youtube.com Videos"
examines how Hmong American students create selective versions of Hmong history through
the creation of video narratives which they post on the internet.
Surekha Acharya and Lalit N. Acharya present a case study: "Gender Identity among
Hindu Women in the Indian Enclave of Artesia, California." They interviewed Gujarati women who worked in salons and stores in Little Artesia as workers, managers, or owners.
Utilizing U.S. Census data, case studies, and field observations, Min Zhou, Yen-Fen
Tseng, and Rebecca Y. Kim analyze a Chinese suburban community "ethnoburb" in the San
Gabriel Valley, California. Their article, "Rethinking Residential Assimilation through
the Case of a Chinese Ethnoburb in the San Gabriel Valley, California," focuses on the
relatively affluent, high skilled, and educated entrepreneurial class of Chinese into a
white middle class suburbia populated by Anglos, Latinos, and American-born Chinese.
Looking at the older enclave of Chinese Americans and pre-World War II immigrants, Jan
Lin, in a more journalistic account included in this issue, explores the development of
tourism and gentrification, and redevelopment in Los Angeles Chinatown.
Linda Trinh Võ,
in her essay, "Constructing a Vietnamese American Community: Economic ad Political
Transformation in Little Saigon, Orange County," explores the establishment of Little
Saigon in Orange County, California, an ethnic enclave with the advantages of both a
large population base and sufficient spatial resources to sustain and expand both a
commercial and residential community.
Kyeyoung Park and Jessica Kim critically examine the developmental process of Koreatown
in the 1990s. As one of the most densely populated, poorest, and multiethnic
neighborhoods, Koreatown was subjected to redevelopment plans by the state sector as well
as local and transnational (especially trans-Pacific) capitalists that resulted in its gentrification and the displacement of local small business owners and residents.
"How do Asian Americans Create Places?" is intended to stimulate more probing national research and further discussion on the relationship of space, place, gender, and race,
and to raise broader questions around such issues as residential segregation, class-based
work and labor, and the transnational migration and settlement of Asian groups in relation to the interlinked global econoy.
This special issue of Amerasia Journal costs $15.00 plus $5.00 for shipping and handling and 8.25 percent sales tax for California residents. Make checks payable to "Regents of U.C." VISA, MASTERCARD, and DISCOVER are also accepted; include expiration date and phone number on correspondence. The mailing address is: UCLA Asian American Studies Center Press, 3230 Campbell Hall, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1546. Phone: 310-825-2968. Email: aascpress@aasc.ucla.edu
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Annual subscriptions for Amerasia Journal are $99.99 for individuals and $445.00 for libraries and other institutions. The institutional price includes access to the Amerasia online database, which has full-text versions of all Amerasia Journals published
since 1971. Amerasia Journal is published three times a year: Winter, Spring, and Fall. |