Taxi dance halls were popular during what time period?
1920s-1930s
What does SAADA stand for?
South Asian American Digital Archive
What is Orientalism?
The way Western societies have stereotyped and represented Asia and the Middle East as exotic, backward, or inferior, often to justify domination or control
What was the name of the president of SFSU during the student strikes
S.I. Hayakawa
What is the organization founded by Caswell and Mallick that utilizes digital participatory microhistories?
The South Asian American Digital Archive (SAADA)
What year did the student strikes that led to the creation of Ethnic Studies take place and how long did it last?
1968 and 5 months
What is the model minority myth?
Erika Lee calls on Chicanx Studies' framework of "border zones". What does this framework show?
Border zones are sites of intercultural exchanges, resistances, and circulations. It's used to show how racial formations are interactive and comparative.
How did being seen as "white trash" influence the way taxi dancers were treated?
They were seen as socially tainted and thus not worth safeguarding
What are 2 countries Erika Lee identifies as modeling their restrictive immigration policy after the United States
Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Peru, Cuba
Ellen Wu claims the model minority myth became popularized during which war?
The Cold War
What is the yellow peril?
A period of time during the 1800s and early 1900s where Asians were viewed as a threat to Western civilization, culture, labor markets, and national identity
How does Parrenas expand on traditional feminist theory when analyzing taxi dance halls?
Existing feminist theories often assume clear hierarchies (example: that white women hold racial privilege while women of color suffer racial exclusion)
Parreñas complicates this by asking: in interracial unions, does the white woman’s gender oppression outweigh her racial privilege, or does the Filipino man’s racial marginalization outweigh his male privilege?
Erika Lee builds on the work of Howard Winant, who coined the term "globality of race". What does this concept mean?
How a shared history of slavery and racial oppression connected the peoples of the African diaspora. Lee uses this framework to show that racial systems are not confined within national borders, but rather is a global system of power
Name 2 out of the 4 functions of digital participatory microhistories
1. Must use interactive, digital technologies
2. Must facilitate the generation of new records directly by users themselves
3. These records must document some past or ongoing event(s)
4. The records must be included in an archive where they are subject to archival intervention, like preservation and description, and made publically accessible
Which time period was Mike Murase referring to that caused higher education to shift from a religious and "impractical" education to now one that meets the needs of a growing capitalist society?
The Industrial Revolution
What is the Tydings-McDuffie Act?
1. Declared Filipinos as ineligible for citizenship
2. Limited Filipino migration to only 50 people/year
3. Reinforced a bachelor society
How does Erika Lee expand on traditional ideas of "transnational frameworks" when she writes about the yellow peril?
Rather than dismissing the nation entirely, Lee seeks to strategically re-center it, acknowledging its enduring power and influence
How does Parrenas incorporate the work of Foucault in her essay when discussing "anatomo-politics"?
She highlights how employers treated Filipino men’s bodies as machines, disciplining them to maximize output while leaving them docile from exhaustion
Foucault’s “anatomo-politics”: the optimization of the physical body’s capacity for efficiency and control
How do Caswell and Mallick define "action research" as different than case studies?
Action research involves the researcher as a participant. Case studies are where the researcher is analyzing and observing those in the study.