Wednesday, March 28, 2007

New Book: L. Ling-chi Wang

UCLA Asian American Studies Press

Review copies & textbook discounts: Ming Tu at email: aascpress@aasc.ucla.edu.
Editorial: Russell C. Leong rleong@ucla.edu

"Prof. L. Ling-chi Wang: First Collection of Essays Published by UCLA Asian American Studies Center"
Book Signing Events in New York and San Francisco

UCLA's Amerasia Journal announces a special April 2007 issue "L. Ling-chi Wang: Quintessential Scholar-Activist" on the writings of Prof. Wang. During the past 40 years, Prof. Wang's impact as a Chinese American scholar, activist, institution builder at UC Berkeley, policy advocate, and public speaker has been unparalleled within the
field of Asian American Studies and in the nation. The special issue is edited by Prof. Don Nakanishi, the Director of the UCLA Asian American Studies Center, and Amerasia's long-time editor, Prof. Russell Leong.

UCLA planned this issue both as a tribute to the recently retired U.C. Berkeley teacher and administrator, and also as a way to introduce Prof. Wang's writings to students, scholars, and local and global social activists in the U.S. and in Asia.

This international edition is the first collection of Prof. Wang's selected works in English, and contains a introduction in English and in Chinese written by Nakanishi and Leong. The individual essays are organized under the
following five sections: I. China, the U.S., and Chinese Americans; II. Model Minority, High-tech Coolies, and Foreign Spies? III. Paradoxes of Asian Americans in Higher Education; IV. Philosophy and Politics of Community Activism; V. Dual Domination and Asian Americans.

At Princeton Seminary, the University of Chicago, and U.C. Berkeley, L. Ling-chi Wang was a Near Eastern Studies major and studied Greek and Hebrew, among other languages. Rooted intellectually in thinkers as diverse as the Old Testament prophets, Soren Kierkegaard, W.E.B. DuBois, Saul Alinksy, Mao Tse-tung, Sun Tzu, Antonio Gramsci, Malcolm X, and Martin Luther King, Prof. Wang encountered the Civil Rights, Black Power and Ethnic Studies Movements in the late 1960s.

As Prof. Wang states about his formal and informal education: "All the events at the University of Chicago, the black uprising, and what I was reading about Malcolm X and Martin Luther King and the black protest movement had
been more or less abstract, but coming to San Francisco, everything became real. I realized the kind of analysis used to explain the black experience can be applied to the Chinese American experience."

From this point on, Wang became both an activist and a scholar. Since that time until today, Prof. Wang has fought for the rights and for the voices of Asian Americans in politics and education, including bilingual education,
admissions quotas, the 1996 presidential campaign finance scandal, Wen Ho Lee debacle, and U.S./China relations.

One of Prof. Wang's research interests is examining Chinese migration from the 19th century onwards. His own family is a good example of migration within the "Chinese diaspora," and includes many places where the Chinese settled, including Hong Kong, Japan, the Philippines, and the U.S.

Prof. Wang's father was born in Kobe, Japan, and his mother spent early childhood in the Philippines and Fujian. Wang himself was born on the island of Gulangyu, off the coast of Xiamen, China. He remembers his childhood during World War II and the harsh conditions under which his family and others survived the Japanese invasion
and occupation.

This 200-page issue includes selected essays from the 1960s through 2006, together with an in-depth
interview by UCSB Prof. Emeritus Sucheng Chan. Prof. Wang has also provided rare family photographs of the Wang family in China and in the U.S.

On Friday, May 18, 2007, the Chinese Historical Society of America will honor Prof. Wang at an evening wine and refreshments reception and program where he also will be available to sign his book . Location: Chinese Historical Society of America, 965 Clay Street, San Francisco, CA 94108 (415) 391-1188
<http://www.chsa.org>www.chsa.org

"L. Ling-chi Wang: Quintessential Scholar-Activist" 33:1 (2007) can be ordered for $15.00 per copy through our website: www.aasc.ucla.
edu, or email: aascpress@aasc.ucla.edu. The issue is FREE with a new one-year subscription of $35.00 to Amerasia Journal (and you'll receive an entire year--three more issues.)

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

CFP: Logics of Living

LOGICS OF THE LIVING

Keynote Speaker: Daniel Heller-Roazen

Department of Comparative Literature
Cornell University
October 12-14, 2007

While a linguistic paradigm dominated theoretical inquiry in the humanities in the last decades of the 20th-century, crucial questions of literature, philosophy and politics are increasingly formulated in terms of "life" rather than language. Extending across disciplines, whether medical, environmental, juridical, philosophical, anthropological, or
biological, an open-ended concept of “life” has also come to inform critical thinking in the humanities. How does an emerging life paradigm in the humanities reflect or lead to the development of various “logics of the living” through which “life” becomes an organizing principle or system, whether aesthetic, conceptual, or social? How do these “logics of the living,” as metaphors, actualities, ethical foundations, or theoretical frameworks, come to inform the work of cultural criticism? We invite varied responses to these questions, as well as further reflections on how the question of "life" is ordered, represented, repressed, celebrated, idealized or domesticated in the humanities today.

Possible paper topics might include:
Autoimmunity
Future of life: finitude
Afterlife (trauma, haunting, survival)
Second Life and Second Death
Creation, procreation, creature
Birth (control), and labor
Reproduction, replication, proliferation
Evolution, adaptation, hybridity, competition, survival, desire
Vitalism
Engenderment
Life and sexuality
Autopoesis
Life and artifice
Aesthetic forms of the living
Autobiography
Biographics: narrative, memory, biography
Humanisms and post/anti-Humanisms
Animal lives
Bestiaries
Hagiographies
Life and materiality
Bare Life and Biopolitics
Body Politic; corporation/incorporation
Rights of the living
Politics of life/death
Life and being: Bio-ontology
Touching: auto-affection, hetero-affection
Rhythms of life
Everyday Life
Life of objects
Commodification of life: stem-cells, human tissue, organ trafficking
Genetics, genomics, body and code
Organicity
Systems, ecologies, interdependencies


About the keynote speaker:
Daniel Heller-Roazen is Professor of Comparative Literature at Princeton University. He received his Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from the Johns Hopkins University and holds additional degrees in Philosophy and German.
His wide-ranging interests address issues in classical literature, medieval philosophy (in Latin, Hebrew, and Arabic), medieval literature, and twentieth-century philosophy. He is author of Echolalias: On the Forgetting of Language (Zone Books, 2005), which explores the relationship between speech, writing, and memory, as well as Fortune's Faces: The Roman de la Rose and the Poetics of Contingency (The Johns Hopkins UP, 2003), which the Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben has described as a "model of theoretical acumen and critical sensibility." Heller-Roazen is a noteworthy translator, having translated Agamben's The End of the Poem: Studies in Poetics and edited and translated the collection of Agamben's essays, Potentialities: Collected Essays in Philosophy. His work has appeared in the journals Critical Inquiry, diacritics, MLN, and October. In 2007 he will publish The Inner Touch: Archaeology of a Sensation, a study that investigates the sense of being sentient in thinkers and writers from Aristotle to Benjamin.

The deadline for submission of 250-word paper abstracts for 20-minute presentations is May 10, 2007. Please include your name, e-mail address, and phone number. Please email abstracts to cclf@cornell.edu. Notices of
acceptance will be sent no later than May 31, 2007. Full text of accepted papers will be due September 1, 2007. For more information visit http://www.arts.cornell.edu/complit/CCLF.

Postdoc Fellowship in Women's Studies

POSTDOCTORAL FELLOWSHIP IN WOMEN'S STUDIES

University of Houston
Women's Archive and Research Center
The Women's Studies Program and the Women's Archive and Research Center at the University of Houston invite applications for a postdoctoral fellowship in Women's Studies, to begin in the Fall Semester 2007. Applicants may be working in any discipline, on a topic concerning women and/or gender. The recipient will devote half time to teaching and program development and half time to research. The initial appointment will be for one year, with the possibility of renewal for an additional year. Salary will be $40,000 plus full benefits package.

The applicant must hold a Ph.D. degree at the time of the appointment and have one year of experience. A letter of application, including a description of your project, together with CV, writing sample and three letters of reference should be submitted on or before April 20, 2007, to the WARC Search Committee, Women's Studies Program, University of Houston, Houston, TX 77204-3005.

The University of Houston is Texas' premier metropolitan research institution, with more than 35,000 students enrolled this year. Located in the center of Houston in a 550-acre park, the university provides an excellent environment for research, within a dynamic city.

The University of Houston is an Affirmative Action, Equal Opportunity employer. Minorities, women, veterans and persons with disabilities are encouraged to apply.

UCD King School of Law API Week

UC Davis Asian Pacific American Law Students Association
UC Davis School of Law

API Week 2007

Monday, March 26
Noon-1p Moot Court Room
API Women in the Law:
Judge Helena Gweon, Superior Court of California
Audrey Ogawa Johnson, Senior Director, Gap, Inc.
Panelists will discuss their experiences in the public and private sectors to highlight the diverse practices, successes, and difficulties of APU women in the law. Lunch will be served.

Tuesday, March 27
Noon-1p Moot Court Room
Keynote Address – Law and Leadership: Taking Lawyer Beyond the Courtroom
Angela Oh – attorney, activist, and King Hall alum – will discuss the lawyer beyond the traditional context of the courtroom and into positions of leadership in society and the rest of the world. Lunch will be served.

Wednesday, March 28
Noon-1p Moot Court Room
Film Screening – “Sentenced Home”
An abridged screening of this documentary highlights US immigration policy and follows the heartbreaking stories of three young Cambodian Americans as they face deportation back to their birth land. Lunch will be served.

Thursday, March 29
Noon-1p Moot Court Room
Deportation Panel:
Panelists will discuss deportation as depicted in “Sentenced Home” – Lunch will be served.

APALSA Social Event
5-7p Law School Courtyard
Free beer, wine and karaoke!

Monday, April 2
7:30p – Varsity Theater, Davis
Film Screening of “Sentenced Home”
Varsity Theater – 616 2nd Street – Downtown Davis
Q&A with co-doirector Nicole Newnham Malarkey to follow screening.
Co-sponsored by SEARAC.
http://www.itva.org/outreach/sentencedhome/

Women's Studies Conferences

Here's a great link to Women's Studies conferences and conferences with a Women's Studies component:

http://www.nwsa.org/cfps/index.php

Monday, March 26, 2007

LEAP SCholarship readers needed

Subject: Need Scholarship readers-Please respond ASAP

Hi!

LEAP is again a partner organization in the McDonald's Asian Pacific Students in Action scholarship.

We are looking for people willing to volunteer as "readers" for this scholarship. Readers will read approximately 15-20 applications; score the applications, and then fax scores to PR firm coordinating the logistics of the scholarship. This is process is all by mail so you can read in the comfort of your own home! The more readers there are, the less applications to read. Over 700 applications are expected this year for 20 - $1000 scholarships.

If you are interested, please email me by this Friday, March 30 with the following information:

Full name,
title,
Company/organization
Street mailing address (NO PO Boxes)
Phone number

Applications will be FedExed to to you so a street address is required (no P.O. Boxes). This is a great experience and it doesn't take much time. The application essays (1 page only) are really wonderful to read. I hope that you can participate!

I look forward to hearing from you!

Linda


------------
-----------

Linda Akutagawa
Vice President of Resource and Business Development
Leadership Education for Asian Pacifics (LEAP)
Phone: (213) 485-1422 x 4115
Fax: (213) 485-0050
Email: lakutagawa@leap.org
Web: www.leap.org

************
******************************************
Mark your calendars!
LEAP is celebrating its 25th Anniversary!
Gala Celebration - July 19, 2007
Universal Hilton, Los Angeles, CA
For more information see our website @www.leap.org!!

LEAP is a national organization founded in 1982 with a mission to achieve full participation and equality for Asian Pacific Americans through leadership, empowerment, and policy. With original programs in leadership
training, public policy research, and community education, LEAP raises the impact and visibility of Asian Pacific Americans in all sectors.

RIT's Annual Future Faculty Career Exploration Program

ROCHESTER INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY’S: ANNUAL FUTURE FACULTY CAREER EXPLORATION PROGRAM

Application postmarked deadline: June 8, 2007
Applications are available online at: http://finweb.rit.edu/humanresources/employment/ffcep/

We are now accepting applications for RIT's annual Future Faculty Career Exploration Program. An All-Expense-Paid trip to visit RIT and Rochester, NY

The Future Faculty Career Exploration Program (FFCEP) is one of a series of recruitment strategies designed to fuel the future pipeline of faculty. This innovative program furthers RIT's diversity goals by bringing students nearing the end of their doctoral studies to Rochester to receive the "RIT treatment".

The FFCEP is a unique and exciting opportunity to explore potential career choices through exploratory interviews; presentations; meetings with deans, department heads, and RIT's President; as well as participate in campus and community tours.

The program allows RIT deans to engage prospects in discussions about their academic work and career interests. It also allows faculty to share RIT's teaching and research agenda and to dialog on current open faculty positions or those that may be available in the near future.

Selection Criteria*
1) Individuals with the ability to contribute in meaningful ways to the university's continuing commitment to cultural diversity, pluralism, and individual differences. We are especially interested in applications from people of color who are underrepresented and underserved in teaching professions; i.e., African American, Latin American, American Indian, or Alaskan Native.
2) Within one to two years of receiving Ph.D. -or-
3) Within one year of receiving or already received MFA. -or-
4) Engaged in a Post Doctoral assignment.
5) Desire academic teaching career at an exceptional institution.
6) Receiving degrees in Business, Liberal Arts, Science, Engineering, Applied Science & Technology, Computing & Information Sciences, Imaging Arts & Sciences.
7) Demonstrate potential to fill open and/or anticipated vacancies at RIT.
8) Able to travel to Rochester for a weekend- September 26-30, 2007.

Program Objectives
1) Build the pipeline by establishing significant meaningful relationships with prospects.
2) Lay the foundation for opening up future network with other universities.
3) Strategically prepare for pending human resource needs to cover future curriculum development and course offerings.
4) Proactively seize employment opportunities where appropriate prospects are found.
5) Serve as a bridge to assist in transition from graduate school student to a faculty member.
6) Assist in preparing future faculty for a career in the institute.

Contact
Rochester Institute of Technology
Department of Human Resources
Office of Faculty Recruitment
8 Lomb Memorial Drive
Rochester, New York 14623-5604
Voice: 585.475.5775
Fax: 585.475.7170
Email: cfrpsn@rit.edu

CFP - The Analytic Scene: Translations and Transferences

CALL FOR PAPERS

The Analytic Scene: Translations and Transferences
Keynote address from Dr. Luke Thurston, University of Wales, Aberystwyth

A one-day graduate student/invited speaker conference sponsored by the Psychoanalysis and Sexuality Research Unit of the Center for Cultural Studies

UC Santa Cruz
May 19, 2007
Humanities 1, Room 210


“The Analytic Scene: Translations and Transferences” will bring together graduate student papers from various disciplines that address key psychoanalytic concepts in the context of an interdisciplinary approach. We are nterested in exploring the translation of the clinical “scene” into different theoretical registers in order to investigate the space of analysis and challenge its implicit borders. This conference will question the efficacy of psychoanalysis as it is “applied to” other disciplines, a mode in which critical issues from each discourse seem to get lost in the
application. Our goal is to bring together papers that test diverse approaches to psychoanalytic interdisciplinarity by asking a series of central questions. What is the specificity of psychoanalytic knowledge and its method? What is the relationship of psychoanalysis to other disciplines and to contemporary deployments of categories such as race,
class, and power?

Keynote Speaker: Dr Luke Thurston lectures in Modern and Contemporary Literature at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth, UK. He is the author of James Joyce and the Problem of Psychoanalysis (2004) and the editor of Re-inventing the Symptom: Essays on the Final Lacan (2002). He has translated works by André Green, Jean Laplanche and Roberto Harari, and is an Associate Editor of the Journal for Lacanian Studies. His current project is a study of bilingualism and ego-multiplication in Beckett and Pessoa.

Please submit a title and abstract by e-mail (as Microsoft Word .doc or Rich Text Format attachments) by April 9 to analyticscenes@gmail.com.

Please include the word “submission” somewhere in the subject line. Include your name, affiliation, telephone number, and a brief blurb about yourself/your work for the purposes of publicity. Papers will be 15 minutes in length (5-7 pages) and due two weeks prior to the conference for review and comment by the organizers.

Please direct inquiries to: Rob Trumbull (rtrumbul@ucsc.edu) or Christina Stevenson (clsteven@ucsc.edu).

Friday, March 23, 2007

CFP: Western History Association

2008 Western History Association's national meeting
Salt Lake City, Utah
October 22-25, 2008

***Particular emphasis for this meeting is "the Asian American and Pacific Islander experience in the west."

On October 22-25, 2008, the Western History Association will gather in Salt Lake City for its 48th Annual Conference. Salt Lake City is a welcome venue for both this talk of risk and for risky talk. Carving a new mountain home for generations of faithful is surely a chancy endeavor, not to mention the grit required to journey thousands of miles from one's birthplace to pound railroad stakes for a living. The city is also well-known, of course, for its winter sports, short-term perils of downhill racers and long-term threats to stable mountaintops. The city too is poised, as newcomers from Latin America and the Pacific Islands mingle and mix with the long-settled, queer and straight alike.

To explore further the risky businesses of Western history, the 2008 program committee solicits proposals for sessions that themselves seek to re-imagine and re-invent the standard conference format. Possible sessions could follow new formats that give fresh legs to the faltering three-paper standard. Workshops could belly up to a range of topics: the perils of public history; the pitfalls of peer review; the problems and pleasures of crossing disciplines; books we couldn't, and could, do without; museum exhibits we would like to see funded, movies we'd like to make. Other sessions could consider a variety of media -- such as essays, web pages, dissertation chapters, K-12 teaching materials, music, public history projects, fiction, or short films—that might be pre-posted electronically and made available through the WHA website. Given the vitality of Asian American history and the history of Pacific Islanders, we are especially eager to receive sessions and individual papers examining the Asian American and Pacific Islander experience in the West.

Submissions may be for an entire session, a panel discussion, or an individual paper. When submitting an entire session, include an abstract that outlines the purpose of the session, and designate one panelist or participant as the contact person. Each paper proposal, whether individual or part of a session, should include a one-page abstract and a one page c.v. including the address, phone, and email address for each participant. The committee will assume that all listed individuals have agreed to participate. Send all program submission materials to: Karen Merrill, Department of History, Williams College, Williamstown, MA 01267 (kmerrill@williams.edu). Submissions should be postmarked by 31 August 2007.

Thursday, March 1, 2007

Post Doc: Mellon

MELLON POSTDOCTORAL FELLOWSHIP

Northwestern University seeks applications for a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship in Asian American Studies for a period of two years, beginning September 1, 2007. All requirements for the Ph.D. must be complete before the start date. We are seeking recent Ph.D.s with ambitious research interests and strong teaching abilities.

Preferred disciplinary fields are anthropology, art history, ethnic and urban studies, history, literature, political science, religion, and sociology. The successful candidate will be affiliated with the Asian American Studies program and the appropriate disciplinary department. He or she will teach two courses per year in Asian American Studies and present one colloquium per year.

Letter of application, cv, sample of scholarly writing, brief research proposal, and teaching record should be submitted to Mellon Search Committee, Asian American Studies, Crowe 1-117, 1860 Campus Drive, Evanston, IL 60208 . Questions may be emailed to <jcheng@northwestern.edu>. Please arrange to have 3-4 letters of reference sent directly to the search committee; if possible, one of the letters should address the applicant's teaching qualifications.

Deadline for all materials: March 1, 2007. AA/EOE. Applications from minority and women scholars are especially welcome.