Showing posts with label Heritage Seeking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heritage Seeking. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Chinese Identities


One of my research interests focuses on heritage seeking in a study abroad context. Some time ago I came across the book Chineseness Across Borders: Renegotiating Chinese Identities in China and the United States (2004) by Andrea Louie. Following is a description of the book that I prepared:

The Author and the Evolution of her Research
Andrea Louie is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Michigan State University. Her research for this book first began while she was a graduate student in 1992 when she participated in the Search of Roots Program and visited her paternal grandfather’s village. A subsequent return trip in 1993 with her parents led her to delve further into this research upon her return to graduate school. In 1994 she was again involved with the Roots program but this time as an observer and a final research trip in 1995 allowed her to conduct more research in the field.

Introduction
The introduction is very detailed and begins with Louie’s experience going to China and visiting her relatives. It then dives into the “Roots” program and how it has discovered different perspectives and issues that Chinese from China and Chinese Americans have amongst each other. She then starts introducing each chapter in her book to give the reader a glimpse of what is to come.

Chapter 1
Louie begins by providing some historical context of the migration of Chinese from the Guangdong Province to the United States. She then begins to weave the concepts of Chinese identity and connections to the homeland into the development of the Summer Camp and Roots Program.

Chapter 2
Louie illustrates the experiences of the Roots program participants in China. She describes how the younger generations of Chinese Americans craft their Chinese identity through multiple contexts. They craft their Chinese identity from the mixture of family histories, family kinship ties, American urban hip hop culture, Japanese manga, Hong Kong kung fu movies and Asian American activism. They see Chinese identity through the lens of Chinese American, Asian and Asian American. Louie defines this process of forming identity by Chinese Americans as a socially, geographically and transnational process.

Chapter 3
Louie discusses the Chinese Americans’ identity construction within the context of U.S. multiculturalism. Chinese American culture is viewed as inherent within U.S. multiculturalism. Chinese Americans are voluntarily or involuntarily attached to the static representations of Chinese tradition and culture that is rooted in mainland China in the past. They are thus marginalized from U.S. mainstream culture. The narratives from the program participants reveal that American-born Chinese Americans have less or no direct ties to the concept of authentic Chinese culture in mainland China. In U.S. multicultural society, the identity construction of Chinese Americans coexists with multiple levels of identifications such as Asian American, Chinese American, or just plain American, middle class Chinese American who live outside of Chinatown, Chinese Americans from the upper class Hong Kong or Taiwan origins, first, second or third generation- Chinese Americans and family ancestors’ geographic regions in China. Louie concludes the chapter that Chinese Americans are creating their own contemporary form of identity based on their ancestral ties to China and their homeland the USA where they were born and grew up.

Chapter 4
The Open Policy has allowed increased exposure to foreign images, such as print and television media, which has allowed the mainland Chinese to compare themselves more to foreigners and China to the outside world. The mainland Chinese see these images as promoting the positives aspects of life in China. Some negatives of the other countries include: mistreatment of minorities, violence, requirement to work twice as hard for the same living standard, and the high cost of living. Not having to depend financially on oversees relatives is seen as a symbol of pride. Oversees relatives are seen as “assimilated (tonghua) to other less civilized cultures ... are not culturally suited for life in China or abroad (156)”

Chapter 5
Louis delves fully into the discussion of the Youth Festival, which is held in the Guangdong Province of China, that attracts over four hundred young people of Chinese descent (huayi) from across the globe including youth from Canada, France, Germany, Madagascar, Malaysia, Tahiti and the United States. The primary goal of the Youth Festival and Summer Camps is to “invoke connections of blood and culture for the huayi in order to reacquaint them with their motherland.”

Chapter 6
Louie provides a description of the Roots program and looks at how the Roots interns construct their own sense of Chineseness and in particular, their Chinese Americanness. The chapter ends with a discussion on the future of the program and who (the Chinese government sponsors, the Chinese American community sponsors, the Chinese American leaders, the interns or their parents) will lead it into the future.

Epilogue
Louie returns to visit her relatives in Guangzhou seven years after her last visit and notes first hand the changes she sees in the town’s infrastructure and her family's attitudes and situation. Some of the things she finds, for example, are that her relatives are more prosperous and interest in immigration has decreased in the larger and richer sections of China but the poorer farming communities continue to see America as a chance to become wealthy. Pursuing one’s higher education abroad is encouraged because officials and educators believe the students will return with the knowledge to help China instead of remaining abroad.

Monday, March 24, 2008

Korean Universities Have Stepped Up Their Recruitment of Korean-American Undergraduates

I thought the following from today's insidehighered.com was very interesting. A rare but increasing approach to heritage seeking in study abroad.

"Korean universities have stepped up their recruitment of Korean-American undergraduates, some of whom are turning down top American universities, Joong Ang Daily reported. The Korean universities have started accepting the SAT to encourage applications from Korean-American students who are considering institutions in both countries. A proliferation of English-language programs means that the students need not speak Korean."

You can access the Joong Ang Daily article here: http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2887771

Sunday, February 24, 2008

U.S. Heritage-Seeking Students Discover Minority Communities in Western Europe

This research article examines quantitative data relevant to an increasingly multiethnic Western Europe and investigates European opportunities for U.S. minority heritage-seeking students. In addition to analyzing the demographic data of Western Europe, a review of U.S. higher education enrollment demographics derived from current national education statistics as well as a look at the racial and ethnic makeup of U.S. students studying abroad will be conducted.

Journal of Studies in International Education, Vol. 12, No. 1, 29-37 (2008)http://jsi.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/12/1/29

Monday, June 25, 2007

The State of Research on Heritage-Seeking in Study Abroad

Heritage-seeking in study abroad is not a new phenomenon. For decades, students have been traveling to and studying in countries and regions of the world where they share racial/ethnic, religious and/or linguistic connections. However, research on heritage-seeking in study abroad is relatively new. During the 1960’s and 1970’s a few studies emerged that focused on American Jewish students studying in Israel but it wasn’t until the 1990’s that we begin to see more research and attention paid to heritage-seeking in study abroad. While there is relatively little research on heritage-seeking in a study abroad context, there is a growing body of research and literature related to minority students studying abroad. Much of the literature identifies barriers to and factors influencing participation of minority students on study abroad programs and many studies on underrepresented students abroad offer only anecdotal observations and data on heritage-seeking. The majority of the current research on heritage-seeking in study abroad focuses on African-American, Hispanic-American and Asian-American students. However, there is literature that also focuses on heritage-seeking students studying in Western and Eastern Europe.

In an attempt to organize all of the known articles on heritage seeking in study abroad I have compiled and annotated a bibliography for use by students, study abroad administrators and researchers. This bibliography presents a broad listing of research studies, position papers, conference presentations and news articles on heritage seeking. This bibliography is available by e-mailing David Comp at international.ed.consulting@gmail.com. This bibliography is currently being updated. Notifications of current research, comments and article submissions are invited and encouraged.

Originally published in IIENetworker: The International Education Magazine, 29 (Fall, 2006).