Author: Asian-Indigenous Relations

  • Sarah Hunt/Tłaliłila’ogwa & May Farrales (2024)

    Sarah Hunt/Tłaliłila’ogwa & May Farrales (2024)

    Against Abstraction: Reclaiming and Reorienting to Embodied Collective Knowledges of Solidarity Hunt/Tłaliłila’ogwa, Sarah, and May Farrales. 2024. “Against Abstraction: Reclaiming and Reorienting to Embodied Collective Knowledges of Solidarity.” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 42 (3): 422–41.

  • Lisa M. Hoffman & Mary L. Hanneman (2023)

    Lisa M. Hoffman & Mary L. Hanneman (2023)

    Here. Again. Anti-Asian Violence in the City Hoffman, Lisa M., and Mary L. Hanneman. 2023. “Here. Again. Anti-Asian Violence in the City.” Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography, 1–17.

  • Richard Fung (1993)

    Richard Fung (1993)

    Working Through Cultural Appropriation Fung, Richard. 1993. “Working Through Cultural Appropriation.” Fuse Magazine 16 (5): 16–24.

  • Robert Diaz (2016)

    Robert Diaz (2016)

    QUEER UNSETTLEMENTS: Diasporic Filipinos in Canada’s World Pride Diaz, Robert. 2016. “QUEER UNSETTLEMENTS: Diasporic Filipinos in Canada’s World Pride.” Journal of Asian American Studies 19 (3): 327–50.

  • Iyko Day (2010)

    Iyko Day (2010)

    Alien Intimacies: The Coloniality of Japanese Internment in Australia, Canada, and the U.S. Day, Iyko. 2010. “Alien Intimacies: The Coloniality of Japanese Internment in Australia, Canada, and the U.S.” Amerasia Journal 36 (2): 107–24.

  • Dorothy Christian & Agnes Huang (2008)

    Dorothy Christian & Agnes Huang (2008)

    Remapping Activism: A Transcript of Dorothy Christian’s Talk – August 28th, 2004 Christian, Dorothy, and Agnes Huang. 2008. “Remapping Activism: A Transcript of Dorothy Christian’s Talk – August 28th, 2004.” West Coast Line 58 (1): 15–20.

  • Martin J. Cannon (2009)

    Martin J. Cannon (2009)

    Changing the Subject in Teacher Education: Centering Indigenous, Diasporic, and Settler Colonial Relations Cannon, Martin J. 2009. “Changing the Subject in Teacher Education: Centering Indigenous, Diasporic, and Settler Colonial Relations.” Cultural and Pedagogical Inquiry 4 (2): 21–37.

  • Katherine Achacoso (2022)

    Katherine Achacoso (2022)

    Afterword: Is The Ocean a Metaphor? On the Oceanic Turn, Asian Settler Colonialism, and Filipinx Studies in Hawai‘i Achacoso, Katherine. 2022. “Afterword: Is The Ocean a Metaphor? On the Oceanic Turn, Asian Settler Colonialism, and Filipinx Studies in Hawai‘i.” Alon: Journal for Filipinx American and Diasporic Studies 2 (3): 389–97.

  • Peta Stephenson (2005)

    Peta Stephenson (2005)

    “Where are you from?”: New Imaginings of Identity in Chinese-Australian Writing Stephenson, Peta. 2005. “‘Where Are You from?’: New Imaginings of Identity in Chinese-Australian Writing.” In Culture, Identity, Commodity: Diasporic Chinese Literatures in English, edited by Tseen Khoo and Kam Louie, 107–28. Montreal, Canada: McGill-Queen’s University Press. http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/sfu-ebooks/detail.action?docID=3331811.

  • Antonio T. Tiongson (2019)

    Antonio T. Tiongson (2019)

    Asian American Studies, Comparative Racialization, and Settler Colonial Critique Tiongson, Antonio T. 2019. “Asian American Studies, Comparative Racialization, and Settler Colonial Critique.” Journal of Asian American Studies 22 (3): 419–43.