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- Mountain Movers: Ebook EPub Version: Student Activism & the Emergence of Asian American Studies
Mountain Movers: Ebook EPub Version: Student Activism & the Emergence of Asian American Studies
RECOMMENDED FOR MACINTOSH AND APPLE COMPUTERS.
FOR PC's, PURCHASE THE PDF VERSION.
Editors: Jeung, Russell, Karen Umemoto, Harvey Dong, Eric Mar, Lisa Hirai Tsuchitani, Arnold Pan
ISBN: 9780934052542-Ebook EPub Version
Publisher: UCLA Asian American Studies Center
Format: Ebook Download/MacOS
Pub Date: May 2019
Downloads Available: 6
Note: This anthology was written to commemorate 50th anniversary of the student struggles that led to formation of Asian American Studies at SF State, UC Berkeley and UCLA campuses. This includes commemoration of the TWLF strikes and alliances at all three campuses. Also included are lessons and legacies of the student movements.
Will work on Mac. PC users will need the Adobe Digital Editions (available free) for book download. see FAQ.
SF State was the epicenter of the movement for ethnic studies and affirmative action and the site of the longest student strike in American history, starting in fall of 1968 and lasting five months. The SF State strike was led by African American, Asian American, Latinx and Native American students who formed the Third World Liberation Front. A similar coalition was established at UC Berkeley, which went on strike for the entire Winter quarter of 1969, and called on the university to establish ethnic studies. This movement spread and students at UCLA and elsewhere joined in demanding the establishment of ethnic studies and greater access for students of color at their respective campuses.
During this period through the early 1970s, Asian American Studies programs or departments were founded at Merritt College in Oakland, the College of San Mateo, Santa Clara University, UC Davis, UC Santa Barbara, and California State University at Pomona and Long Beach. They were also established at campuses such as the University of Hawai'i, Yale University, and Hunter College of the City University of New York, among many others. The flourishing of a new interdisciplinary field of inquiry, along with new learning opportunities that linked students with Asian American and Pacific Islander and other communities of color, transformed higher education. And it formed the basis for a deeper understanding of the histories and experiences of communities of color in the US and their larger diasporas. There is much to learn from this rich history of social transformation.
Publisher Information on Mountain Movers
Visit the UCLA Asian American Studies Center webpage.