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Asian Americans--Cultural assimilation

 Subject
Subject Source: Library of Congress Subject Headings

Found in 22 Collections and/or Records:

Journey Wall Oral History Project

 Collection
Identifier: 20XX.0XX
Abstract The Journey Wall is a custom art installation created for MOCA's lobby by renowned artist/designer Maya Lin. The wall is composed of bronze tiles through which Chinese Americans can permanently honor and remember their family roots. Each tile bears the name of an individual or family, their ancestral home, and current place of residence in America. The complete wall will highlight the expansiveness of the Chinese American Diaspora and the diversity of immigration stories from across the...
Dates: 2014-2022

Lisa Eng, 1940 - 1956

 Sub-Series
Identifier: 2019.031
Scope and Contents

351 photographs digitized in 600dpi. The photographs depict pictures of the donor's family.

Dates: 1940 - 1956

Manuscript collection

 Collection
Identifier: 2014.030
Dates: 1930-2010 (bulk 1977-1993)

Oral History Interview with Cecilia Birge, August 16, 2020

 Item
Identifier: 2020.020.003
Abstract Recently appointed the Acting Assistant Principal of the Princeton High School, Cecilia Birge has also had extensive experience working in local politics, once serving as the mayor of Montgomery township, After emigrating from Beijing, China many years ago, Cecilia currently sees herself as being a Chinese-American as well as a proud democrat. Cecilia has long stay connected with the Chinese communities, citing that she could not have won her former mayorship with just the Chinese support,...
Dates: August 16, 2020

Oral History Interview with Charlie Lai , 2012-07-12 - 2012-08-09

 Item
Identifier: 2021.022.001
Abstract Charlie Lai along with Jack Tchen are founders of the Chinatown History Project, which has gone on to become the Museum of Chinese in America. In this five part interview conducted over the course of several months Charlie talks about his childhood in Hong Kong and how his family eventually decided to immigrate to the United States when he was nine years old. He talks about living with his uncle when they first arrived in the states and saying on Long Island. His family eventually moves into...
Dates: 2012-07-12 - 2012-08-09

Oral History Interview with Chun Wai Wong, 1993-05

 Item
Identifier: 1994.007.026
Abstract In this interview, Chun Wai "Billy" Wong discusses his arrival to America and living in the Sunset Park neighborhood of Brooklyn as compared to his birthplace of Hong Kong, China. He cites reasons why he likes living in New York. Wong describes the culture and lifestyle of the working Chinese community; the differences between Mainland Chinese people and Chinese people from Hong Kong, the means in which the Chinese travel back and forth from the neighborhoods, shopping at food stores, and...
Dates: 1993-05

Oral History Interview with Eric Lee, August 4, 2021

 Item
Identifier: 2021.025.006
Abstract Capturing daily life during the COVID-19 pandemic, Asian American Photojournalist Eric Lee roamed the streets of Washington D.C and New York recording his experience through street photography. Selected shots from the project have been put together for his photo series “a distanced memory” which explores his feelings of despair, isolation, loneliness and hope. In this interview, he discusses graduating from Corcoran College of the Arts and Design during the pandemic and his thesis exploring...
Dates: August 4, 2021

Oral History Interview with Ivan Small, July 31, 2020

 Item
Identifier: 2020.020.013
Abstract Dr. Ivan Small is a professor of sociocultural anthropology at Central Connecticut State University. Professor Small is a bi-racial Vietnamese American and first became interested in his Asian heritage after visiting his relatives in Vietnam during his college years. His research weaves together cultural anthropology with Asian studies, economic anthropology and research about migration and transnationalism. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Professor Small published an article in the...
Dates: July 31, 2020

Oral History Interview with Jack Tchen , 2012-09-05

 Item
Identifier: 2021.022.002
Abstract Jack Tchen along with Charlie Lai are founders of the Chinatown History Project, which has gone on to become the Museum of Chinese in America. In this multiple part interview Tchen discusses growing up in Wisconsin and his family’s ties to China. He then recounts his time at Madison college and how he got more involved in activism and Asian American studies. Next he discusses his time working at Basement workshop, how he met Charlie and working on exhibitions. He left Basement workshop with...
Dates: 2012-09-05