Editors' Preface

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The essays in both of these forums do a variety of work but are connected through critical reflections engaged with social movement activity. They are further designed as short essays, by contrast to the journal's research articles. In the first special forum, guest editors Sunaina Maira and Roozbeh Shirazi present the activist-scholarship special forum, \"Thinking SWANA in Asian American Studies.\" They are responding to the call by grassroots organizers to have the field of Asian American studies grapple with the category of SWANA or South-West Asian and North Africa. The field and indeed the journal have been involved in interrogating boundaries, whether the borders of nation-states or of disciplines, including our own, and exploring the various meanings this entails. The current essays build on earlier articles in JAAS, notably Sunaina Maira and Magid Shihade's essay in 2006, \"Meeting Asian/Arab American Studies: Thinking Race, Empire, and Zionism in the U.S.\" The current SWANA forum critiques the use of concepts that conceal the political and imperial usages, and yet also recognizes that any term or categorization contains limitations that will lead to different formulations in the future. So while SWANA is not one singular or static definition, and indeed no panacea, it is a term being called into being in this particular historical moment to wrestle with problems of empire, race, [End Page v] and subordination. The authors in this issue examine SWANA studies through the lens of Asian Americanist frameworks that critique imperialism, the global war on terror and anti-Muslim racism; that examine \"affects of solidarity\"; and that work in relationship to Armenian studies. The forum illuminates SWANA studies through poetic form. 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The present moment, especially the past decade, represents the most intensive period of grassroots activity for ethnic studies since the field began more than fifty years ago. There are efforts to develop ethnic studies courses more widely and to establish ethnic studies requirements at the high school, community college, and university levels. The opposition to ethnic studies is seemingly equally fierce. Building on ideas in Asian American studies and ethnic studies, the essays explore the relationship between knowledge and action that ask students and teachers to connect classroom learning to communities of change. They view Asian American studies as content knowledge and critiques of power and also as a critical pedagogical approach to learning. The essays explore frameworks for Asian American studies pedagogy and discuss specific projects, namely UCLA Asian American Studies' multimedia textbook on Asian American and Pacific Islander experiences titled Foundations and Futures and the Pin@y Educational Partnership. They argue that writing curriculum has...","PeriodicalId":125906,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Asian American Studies","volume":"45 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Asian American Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/jaas.2023.a901060","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Editors' Preface Diane C. Fujino and Lisa Sun-Hee Park In this issue, the Journal of Asian American Studies (JAAS) presents two exciting special forums. These are located in a new section of the journal that we initiated to affirm the importance of activist-scholarship and ethnic studies pedagogy in Asian American studies. The activist-scholarship and critical pedagogy call for papers seeks essays that offer "new analytical interventions on the political, ethical, and/or practical issues in producing scholarship for social justice in Asian American studies" or "critically engage pedagogical concerns and/or provide innovative solutions" that shape the field.1 The essays in these two special forums are intended as critical analysis linked to practice on the ground. The essays in both of these forums do a variety of work but are connected through critical reflections engaged with social movement activity. They are further designed as short essays, by contrast to the journal's research articles. In the first special forum, guest editors Sunaina Maira and Roozbeh Shirazi present the activist-scholarship special forum, "Thinking SWANA in Asian American Studies." They are responding to the call by grassroots organizers to have the field of Asian American studies grapple with the category of SWANA or South-West Asian and North Africa. The field and indeed the journal have been involved in interrogating boundaries, whether the borders of nation-states or of disciplines, including our own, and exploring the various meanings this entails. The current essays build on earlier articles in JAAS, notably Sunaina Maira and Magid Shihade's essay in 2006, "Meeting Asian/Arab American Studies: Thinking Race, Empire, and Zionism in the U.S." The current SWANA forum critiques the use of concepts that conceal the political and imperial usages, and yet also recognizes that any term or categorization contains limitations that will lead to different formulations in the future. So while SWANA is not one singular or static definition, and indeed no panacea, it is a term being called into being in this particular historical moment to wrestle with problems of empire, race, [End Page v] and subordination. The authors in this issue examine SWANA studies through the lens of Asian Americanist frameworks that critique imperialism, the global war on terror and anti-Muslim racism; that examine "affects of solidarity"; and that work in relationship to Armenian studies. The forum illuminates SWANA studies through poetic form. It offers curricular frameworks and pedagogical keywords for SWANA studies. And it explores definitional and praxis-based meanings of SWANA as political movement and identity. Sofia Armen offers a valuable insight: "It is in the process of doing SWANA, that SWANA is and has been made and given meaning." It is this conjuncture between the university and movements, or rather the intersections of scholarly and organizing theorizing, that new frameworks for thinking about race, empire, and activism are produced. This intertwined academic and activist knowledge connects the two special forums. The second forum, guest edited by Jocyl Sacramento, Edward R. Curammeng, and Allyson Tintiangco-Cubales, explores "Ethnic Studies as Social Movements and Solidarities." They are responding to the outpouring of activist, pedagogical, and curricular work to develop ethnic studies curriculum in K–12 schools and to explore the meanings of Asian American studies pedagogy. The present moment, especially the past decade, represents the most intensive period of grassroots activity for ethnic studies since the field began more than fifty years ago. There are efforts to develop ethnic studies courses more widely and to establish ethnic studies requirements at the high school, community college, and university levels. The opposition to ethnic studies is seemingly equally fierce. Building on ideas in Asian American studies and ethnic studies, the essays explore the relationship between knowledge and action that ask students and teachers to connect classroom learning to communities of change. They view Asian American studies as content knowledge and critiques of power and also as a critical pedagogical approach to learning. The essays explore frameworks for Asian American studies pedagogy and discuss specific projects, namely UCLA Asian American Studies' multimedia textbook on Asian American and Pacific Islander experiences titled Foundations and Futures and the Pin@y Educational Partnership. They argue that writing curriculum has...
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编辑序:Diane C. Fujino和Lisa Sun-Hee Park在本期《亚裔美国人研究杂志》(JAAS)中呈现了两个令人兴奋的特别论坛。这些文章刊登在杂志的一个新栏目中,这个栏目是我们发起的,旨在肯定激进主义学术和种族研究教学法在亚裔美国人研究中的重要性。积极分子奖学金和批判教育学的论文征集活动要求论文提供“对政治、伦理和/或实际问题的新的分析干预,以产生亚裔美国人研究中的社会正义奖学金”或“批判性地参与教学问题和/或提供创新的解决方案”,从而塑造该领域这两个特别论坛的文章旨在作为与实地实践相联系的批判性分析。这两个论坛上的文章做了各种各样的工作,但通过参与社会运动活动的批判性反思联系在一起。与该杂志的研究文章相比,它们被进一步设计为短文。在第一个特别论坛上,特邀编辑Sunaina Maira和Roozbeh Shirazi主持了“亚裔美国人研究中的思考SWANA”活动奖学金特别论坛。他们正在响应草根组织者的呼吁,让亚裔美国人研究领域与西南亚和北非的分类作斗争。这个领域和这本杂志一直在探讨边界,无论是民族国家的边界还是学科的边界,包括我们自己的边界,并探索其所蕴含的各种含义。当前的文章建立在JAAS早期文章的基础上,特别是Sunaina Maira和Magid Shihade在2006年发表的文章《遇见亚洲/阿拉伯裔美国人研究:思考美国的种族、帝国和犹太复国主义》。目前的SWANA论坛批评使用隐藏政治和帝国用法的概念,但也认识到任何术语或分类都有局限性,将导致将来的不同表述。因此,虽然SWANA不是一个单一的或静态的定义,实际上也不是万灵药,但它是在这个特殊的历史时刻产生的一个术语,是为了解决帝国、种族、和从属等问题。本期作者通过批判帝国主义、全球反恐战争和反穆斯林种族主义的亚裔美国人框架来审视SWANA的研究;考察“团结的影响”;这与亚美尼亚研究有关。该论坛通过诗歌形式阐明了SWANA研究。它为SWANA研究提供了课程框架和教学关键词。并探讨了SWANA作为政治运动和身份认同的定义意义和实践意义。Sofia Armen提供了一个有价值的见解:“正是在做SWANA的过程中,SWANA才得以产生并被赋予意义。”正是这种大学和运动之间的结合,或者更确切地说,是学术和组织理论的交集,产生了思考种族、帝国和行动主义的新框架。这种交织在一起的学术和活动家的知识连接了两个特别的论坛。第二个论坛由Jocyl Sacramento、Edward R. Curammeng和Allyson Tintiangco-Cubales客座编辑,探讨“作为社会运动和团结的民族研究”。他们正在回应大量积极分子、教学和课程工作的涌现,以开发K-12学校的种族研究课程,并探索亚裔美国人研究教学法的意义。当前,特别是过去十年,是民族研究领域50多年来最密集的草根活动时期。目前正在努力更广泛地开设民族研究课程,并在高中、社区学院和大学设立民族研究必修课程。对种族研究的反对似乎同样激烈。这些文章以亚裔美国人研究和种族研究的观点为基础,探讨了知识与行动之间的关系,要求学生和教师将课堂学习与变革社区联系起来。他们认为亚裔美国人研究是一种内容知识和对权力的批判,也是一种批判性的学习教学方法。这些文章探讨了亚裔美国人研究的教学框架,并讨论了具体的项目,即加州大学洛杉矶分校亚裔美国人研究的多媒体教科书《基础与未来》和Pin@y教育伙伴关系。他们认为写作课程……
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