2010.055.059 |
Book |
An aged Chinese grandmother tells some Chinese folk tales and legends to her grandchildren. |
Tales of a Chinese Grandmother |
Carpenter, Frances |
1977 |
Charles E. Tuttle Company |
2010.055.060 |
Book |
|
The Willow Pattern: A Judge Dee Detective Story |
Van Gulik, Robert |
1965 |
Charles Scribner's Sons |
2010.055.061 |
Book |
Judge Dee and his helpers investigate a series of murders despite pressure to solve them quickly. |
The Chinese Nail Murders |
Van Gulik, Robert |
1977 |
University of Chicago Press |
2010.055.062 |
Book |
|
The Chinese Gold Murders |
Van Gulik, Robert |
1979 |
University of Chicago Press |
2010.055.063 |
Book |
|
The Chinese Lake Murders |
Van Gulik, Robert |
1979 |
University of Chicago Press |
2010.055.064 |
Book |
|
The Chinese Bell Murders |
Van Gulik, Robert |
1970 |
Harper and Row, Publishers |
2010.055.065 |
Book |
|
The Haunted Monastery and the Chinese Maze Murders: Two Chinese Detective Novels, with 27 Illustrations by the Author |
Van Gulik, Robert |
1977 |
Dover Publications, Inc. |
2010.055.066 |
Book |
|
A Dream of Red Mansions |
Tsao, Hsueh-chin |
1978 |
Foreign Languages Press |
2010.055.067 |
Book |
|
Midnight |
Mao, Tun |
1979 |
Foreign Languages Press |
2010.055.068 |
Book |
|
The Classic Chinese Novel: A Critical Introduction |
Hsia, C.T. |
1968 |
Columbia University Press |
2010.055.069 |
Book |
Sterling Lung who "grew up in the back of his parents' laundry dreaming of being an American, while speaking Chinese to his mother, English to his friends, and very little to the father he seemed always to disappoint" is now a graduate of Swarthmore and the Culinary Institute of America, involved in "an arm's length-affair with a Jewish-American princess." |
The Barbarians Are Coming: A Novel |
Louie, David Wong |
1999 |
G.P. Putnam's Sons |
2010.055.070 |
Book |
|
Chinese |
Williamson, H.R. |
1977 |
David McKay Company, Inc. |
2010.055.071 |
Book |
|
The Basic English-Chinese Chinese-English Dictionary |
Bergman, Peter M., complier |
1980 |
The New American Library |
2010.055.072 |
Book |
In 531 A.D., a fifteen-year-old princess of the Hsien tribe in southern China keeps a diary which describes her role as liaison between her own people and the local Chinese colonists, in times of both peace and war. |
Lady of Ch'iao Kuo: Warrior of the South |
Yep, Laurence |
2001 |
Scholastic Inc. |
2010.055.073 |
Book |
Da Chen was born in 1962 in Southern China, as millions of Chinese citizens were gripped by Mao Zedong's Cultural Revolution and the Red Guards enforced a brutal regime of communism. |
Colors of the Mountain |
Chen, Da |
2001 |
Random House |
2010.055.074 |
Book |
The Chinese immigrant experience, featuring a girl and her two brothers. The girl is a budding tap dancer, one brother is a weakling, the other a boxer who joins the U.S. Marines. The novel is set in Vancouver, British Columbia, in the years leading to World War II. The anti-Japanese hysteria is also seen through their eyes. |
The Jade Peony: A Novel |
Choy, Wayson |
1995 |
Douglas and McIntyre |
2010.055.075 |
Book |
|
A Daughter of Han: The Autobiography of a Chinese Working Woman |
Pruitt, Ida |
1967 |
Stanford University Press |
2010.056.001 |
Book |
Winnie and Helen have kept each other's worst secrets for more than fifty years. Now, because she believes she is dying, Helen wants to expose everything. And Winnie angrily determines that she must be the one to tell her daughter, Pearl, about the past--including the terrible truth even Helen does not know. And so begins Winnie's story of her life on a small island outside Shanghai in the 1920s, and other places in China during World War II, and traces the happy and desperate events that led to Winnie's coming to America in 1949. |
The Kitchen God's Wife |
Tan, Amy |
1991 |
G.P. Putnam's Sons |
2010.056.002 |
Book |
The bombing of Hiroshima was one of the pivotal events of the twentieth century, yet this controversial question remains unresolved. At the time, General Dwight Eisenhower, General Douglas MacArthur, and chief of staff Admiral William Leahy all agreed that an atomic attack on Japanese cities was unnecessary. All of them believed that Japan had already been beaten and that the war would soon end. Was the bomb dropped to end the war more quickly? Or did it herald the start of the Cold War? |
Hiroshima: Why America Dropped the Atomic Bomb |
Takaki, Ronald |
1995 |
Little, Brown and Company |
2010.056.003 |
Book |
|
The Scar of Race |
Sniderman, Paul M. |
1993 |
Harvard University Press |
2010.056.004 |
Book |
|
The Omni-Americans: Some Alternatives to the Folklore of White Supremacy |
Murray, Albert |
1970 |
Random House |
2010.056.005 |
Book |
The United States is being engulfed by the greatest wave of immigration it has ever faced. The latest immigrants are different from those who came before. These newcomers are less educated, less skilled, more prone to trouble with the law, less inclined to share American culture and values, and altogether less likely to become Americans in name or spirit. Brimelow believes that we cannot continue to admit millions of legal and illegal immigrants if we wish to maintain our standard of living and our national identity. Unless we restore immigration to its more traditional role, he says, the United States risks being turned into an alien nation. |
Alien Nation: Common Sense About America's Immigration Disaster |
Brimelow, Peter |
1995 |
Random House |
2010.056.006 |
Book |
From global warming to rain forest destruction, famine, and air and water pollution--why overpopulation is our #1 environmental problem |
The Population Explosion |
Ehrlich, Paul R. |
1991 |
Simon and Schuster |
2010.056.007 |
Book |
|
People and Cultures of Hawaii: A Psychocultural Profile |
McDermott, Jr., John F., ed. |
1984 |
University of Hawaii Press |
2010.056.008 |
Book |
|
Kodomo no tame ni (For the Sake of the Children): The Japanese American Experience in Hawaii |
Ogawa, Dennis M. |
1978 |
University of Hawaii Press |
2010.056.009 |
Journal |
Volume 6, No. 2, Fall 1979; 12, No. 2, 1985-86; 13, No. 2, 1986-87; 14, No. 1, 1988; 14, No. 2, 1988; 15, no. 1, 1989 (Commemorative Issue); 15, No. 2, 1989; 16, No. 2, 1990; |
Amerasia Journal |
|
|
UCLA Asian American Studies Center |
2010.056.010 |
Book |
|
Chinatown Quest: The Life Adventures of Donaldina Cameron |
Wilson, Carol Green |
1950 |
Stanford University Press |
2010.056.011 |
Book |
|
Seattle: Past to Present |
Sale, Roger |
1982 |
University of Washington Press |
2010.056.012 |
Book |
|
Lessons: An Autobiography |
Wang, An |
1988 |
Addison-Wesley Publishing Company |
2010.056.013 |
Book |
From 1954 until Mao Zedong's death twenty-two years later, Dr. Li Zhisui was the Chinese ruler's personal physician, which put him in almost daily - and increasingly intimate - contact with Mao and his inner circle. For most of these years, Mao's health was excellent; thus he and the doctor had time to discuss political and personal matters. Dr. Li recorded many of these conversations in his diaries as well as in his memory. In The Private Life of Chairman Mao he vividly reconstructs his extraordinary experience. The result is a book that will profoundly alter our view of Chairman Mao and of China under his rule." "Dr. Li clarifies numerous long-standing puzzles, such as the true nature of Mao's feelings toward the United States and the Soviet Union. He describes Mao's deliberate rudeness toward Khrushchev when the Soviet leader paid his secret visit to Beijing in 1958, and we learn here, for the first time, how Mao came to invite the American table tennis team to China, a decision that led to Nixon's historic visit a few months later. We also learn why Mao took the disastrous Great Leap Forward, which resulted in the worst famine in recorded history, and his equally strange reason for risking war with the United States by shelling the Taiwanese islands of Quemoy and Matsu." "Dr. Li supplies surprising portraits of Zhou Enlai and many other top leaders. He describes Mao's perverse relationship with his wife, and gives us insight into the sexual politics of Mao's court. We witness Mao's bizarre death and the even stranger events that followed it. Dr. Li tells of Mao's remarkable gift for intimacy, as well as of his indifference to the suffering and deaths of millions of his fellow Chinese, including old comrades. Readers will find here a full and accurate account of Mao's sex life, and of such personal details as his peculiar sleeping arrangements and his dependency on barbiturates. |
The Private Life of Chairman Mao: The Memoirs of Mao's Personal Physician |
Zhisui, Li |
1994 |
Random House |
2010.056.014 |
Book |
|
Asian American Studies: An Annotated Bibliography and Research Guide |
Kim, Hyung-chan, ed. |
1989 |
Greenwood Press, Publishers |
2010.056.015 |
Book |
|
Vietnam Reconsidered: Lesson From a War |
Salisbury, Harrison E., ed. |
1984 |
Harper and Row, Publishers |
2010.056.016 |
Book |
|
A Comprehensive English-Chinese Dictionary |
|
1948 |
The Commercial Press, Limited |
2010.056.017 |
Report |
|
A Review of First-Year Admissions of Asians and Caucasians at th University of California Berkeley: A Report by the Auditor General of California |
Hayes, Thomas W. |
1987 |
Office of the Auditor General, State of California |
2010.056.018 |
Report |
Annual Status Report: Seventh, 1988; Eighth, 1989; Ninth, 1990; Eleventh, 1992 |
Minorities in Higher Education |
|
|
American Council on Education |
2010.056.019 |
Book |
|
New Voices: Immigrant Students in U.S. Public Schools |
|
1988 |
National Coalition of Advocates for Students |
2010.056.020 |
Book |
Drawings with brief comments by the author describe her memories of life in a California internment camp during World War II. |
Citizen 13660 |
Okubo, Mine |
1983 |
University of Washington Press |
2010.056.021 |
Book |
Gwen Kinkead's fascinating book is an explanation of a mystery: Chinatown. In the first book in fifty years to break the code of silence about New York's Chinatown, Kinkead offers us an intimate portrait of an exciting community that is also one of the most insular and, until now, enigmatic in the world. New York City's Chinatown is the largest in the Western Hemisphere, a vibrant, chaotic little piece of China entirely segregated from the United States. Against all odds, Kinkead managed to get recent immigrants to Chinatown to speak to her--an astonishing feat for a low faan (a barbarian, white person) with a notepad. Her portraits of Chinatown's invisible people are intriguing. They work in its garment factories and restaurants, where child labor laws seem not to obtain; they do not speak English and have no desire or opportunity to learn the language; they rarely, if ever, venture outside Chinatown's boundaries and have no interest in the American world surrounding their enclave. Kinkead describes their family associations, the tongs, and the gangs they employ to extort and murder. She charts the growth of Chinese organized crime, now smuggling in half the heroin in the United States. She illuminates the Chinese work ethic, their attitude toward money, the extended-family obligations, their traditions of concubinage, the Chinese penchant for gambling, their newspapers--owned by Chinese in Asia who determine what is reported and how--the importance of food, Chinatown's millionaires, and more. A rich, eye-opening account of a little-known community, Chinatown is also a provocative reflection on assimilation and racism in this country. |
Chinatown: A Portrait of a Closed Society |
Kinkead, Gwen |
1992 |
HarperCollins |
2010.056.022 |
Book |
|
Issei, Nisei, War Bride: Three Generations of Japanese American Women in Domestic Service |
Glenn, Evelyn Nakano |
1986 |
Temple University Press |
2010.056.023 |
Report |
|
Southeast Asian Refugee Self-Sufficiency Study: Final Report |
Caplan, Nathan |
1985 |
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services |
2010.056.024 |
Book |
|
Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind, Volume 1 |
Miyazaki, Hayao |
1988 |
Tokuma Publishing |
2010.056.025 |
Book |
Teaches kids what the Chinese characters mean. |
[Chinese Kids' book] |
|
|
|
2010.056.026 |
Book |
|
How We Lost the Vietnam War |
Nguyen, Cao Ky |
1984 |
Stein and Day, Publishers |
2010.056.027 |
Book |
|
Frontiers of Asian American Studies: Writing, Research, and Commentary |
Nomura, Gail M., ed. |
1989 |
Washington State University Press |
2010.056.028 |
Book |
|
My Life in the United States |
Chou, Cynthia L. |
1970 |
The Christopher Publishing House |
2010.056.029 |
Binder |
|
Education articles binder |
|
|
|
2010.057.001 |
Book |
|
A Kung-Fu Master's Journey: The Life and Martial Arrts Experiences of an Asian American |
Chinn, Allen J. |
2009 |
Allen J. Chinn |
2010.058.001 |
Book |
Growing Up Asian American is the first anthology of its kind and fills a void in the American cultural library. Editor Maria Hong has selected thirty-two classic stories and essays by some of American's most respected and loved authors as well as compelling and touching works from new and lesser-known writers. |
Growing Up Asian American: An Anthology |
Hong, Maria, ed. |
1993 |
William Morrow and Company, Inc. |
2010.058.002 |
Book |
Iris Chang, the daughter of second-wave Chinese immigrants, has written a narrative that encompasses the entire history of one of the fastest growing ethnic groups in the United States, an epic story that spans 150 years and continues to the present day. Chang takes a fresh look at what it means to be an American and draws a complex portrait of the many accomplishments of the Chinese in their adopted country, from building the transcontinental railroad to major scientific and technological advances. A sensitive, deeply moving story of individuals whose lives have shaped and been shaped by this history, The Chinese in America is a saga of raw human tenacity and a testament to the determination of a people to forge an identity and destiny in a strange land. |
The Chinese in America: A Narrative History |
Chang, Iris |
2003 |
Penguin Books |
2010.058.003 |
Book |
Stella Dong's biography of Shanghai explains precisely why a missionary once declared, "If God lets Shanghai endure, he owes an apology to Sodom and Gomorrah." The greatest metropolis in Asia during its heyday - from the turn of the nineteenth century until Mao's army swept away its decadence in 1949 - this corrupt, pleasure mad, and squalor-ridden city combined the exuberant vulgarity of Rio during Mardi Gras with a Wild West lawlessness." "Dong chronicles how a wilderness of swamps was transformed into a dazzling, modern-day Babylon. The sickly sweet smell of opium permeated every lane and side street, and in its myriad fleshpots labored a tragic army of prostitutes and "taxi dancers." Seductive and cruel, Shanghai was no place for the innocent: a powerful criminal underworld controlled the port in league with the city's wealthiest citizens and military satraps. Along with its predatory climate, Shanghai was the most turbulent spot in the Orient, for war, rebellion, and economic disaster were never far from its door. |
Shanghai: The Rise and Fall of a Decadent City |
Dong, Stella |
2000 |
William Morrow and Company, Inc. |
2010.058.004 |
Book |
Labor history of the Chinese in America |
Chinese Working People in America: A Pictorial History |
Wei Min She Labor Committee |
1974 |
United Front Press |
2010.058.005 |
Book |
History of the California town of Locke, Walnut Grove |
Bitter Melon: Inside America's Last Rural Chinese Town |
Gillenkirk, Jeff |
1987 |
Heyday Books |
2010.058.006 |
Book |
Through 71 intimate stories and portraits, elders in Seattle's Chinese American community share, for the first time, their personal memories, both sweet and bitter. In their own voices, they describe their early life in Chinese villages, their passage to America and Seattle's Chinatown. They share their experiences working in laundries, restaurants and canneries. They tell of the climate of racial discrimination, the era of World War II and the community that emerged after the war. |
Reflections of Seattle's Chinese Americans: The First 100 Years |
Chew, Ron, ed. |
1994 |
University of Washington Press |
2010.058.007 |
Book |
Warm, funny, and deeply moving, China Boy is a brilliantly rendered novel of family relationships, culture shock, and the rites of passage that are the universal perils of growing up. |
China Boy |
Lee, Gus |
1992 |
Penguin Books |
2010.058.008 |
Book |
In 1949, four Chinese women--drawn together by the shadow of their past--begin meeting in San Francisco to play mah jong, invest in stocks and "say" stories. They call their gathering the Joy Luck Club--and forge a relationship that binds them for more than three decades. |
The Joy Luck Club |
Tan, Amy |
1989 |
Random House |
2010.058.009 |
Book |
The loves of Raymond Ding, a Chinese-American who wonders if one can be a lapsed Chinese "like a lapsed Catholic." He becomes the first divorced person in his family, but eventually finds true love with a half-Japanese, half-Irish girl from the Midwest who cures him of his ethnic angst. |
American Knees |
Wong, Shawn |
1996 |
Simon and Schuster |
2010.058.010 |
Book |
AIIIEEEEE! is an anthology of the writings of fourteen accomplished Americans of Japanese Chinese and Filipino descent. |
AIIIEEEEE!: An Anthology of Asian American Writers |
Chin, Frank, ed. |
1974 |
Howard University Press |
2010.058.011 |
Book |
When the first volume of this collection of Asian American literature appeared in 1974, it showed readers the roots and richness of Chinese American and Japanese American writing. The authors called their anthology Aiiieeeee! because that was the shout, the scream, often the only sound coming from the yellow man or woman in American movies, television, or comic books. But as that work demonstrated, the Asian American writer, long ignored and excluded from participating in American culture, has an articulate and creative voice. |
The Big AIIIEEEEE!: An Anthology of Chinese American and Japanese American Literature |
Chan, Jeffery Paul, ed. |
|
|
2010.058.012 |
Book |
An exciting and passionate personal odyssey of adventure, The Chinese is also the most revealing and cliche-shattering portrait of the inhabitants of the People's Republic of China yet to appear. |
The Chinese: Portrait of a People |
Fraser, John |
1982 |
Totem Books |
2010.058.013 |
Book |
A Different Battle features over 50 stories from veterans of Asian and Pacific Islander descent living in Washington. Their Stories reveal the unique struggles Asian Pacific American veterans faced because of racism. |
A Different Battle: Stories of Asian Pacific American Veterans |
del Rosario, Carina A., ed. |
1999 |
University of Washington Press/Wing Luke Asian Museum |
2010.058.014 |
Book |
Born in 1937 in a port city a thousand miles north of Shanghai, Adeline Yen Mah was the youngest child of an affluent Chinese family who enjoyed rare privileges during a time of political and cultural upheaval. But wealth and position could not shield Adeline from a childhood of appalling emotional abuse at the hands of a cruel and manipulative Eurasian stepmother. |
Falling Leaves: The True Story of an Unwanted Chinese Daughter |
Mah, Adeline Yen |
1999 |
John Wiley and Sons, Inc. |
2010.058.015 |
Book |
Winnie and Helen have kept each other's worst secrets for more than fifty years. Now, because she believes she is dying, Helen wants to expose everything. And Winnie angrily determines that she must be the one to tell her daughter, Pearl, about the past--including the terrible truth even Helen does not know. And so begins Winnie's story of her life on a small island outside Shanghai in the 1920s, and other places in China during World War II, and traces the happy and desperate events that led to Winnie's coming to America in 1949. |
The Kitchen God's Wife |
Tan, Amy |
1991 |
G.P. Putnam's Sons |
2010.058.016 |
Book |
Here is a true story, woven from letters, photographs, and memories, with more twists and turns than any novel. It is a story of the lives of one family living on two different sides of the globe: in a village in South China before and after the Communists took power, and in the gritty Chinatowns on North America's west coast. The "at-home" wife would hold sacred the honor of the family; supporting her was the concubine who sacrificed her own family in working the tea houses abroad, in "Gold Mountain." In tow was her youngest daughter, the author's mother. It was she who unlocked the past for her daughter, whose curiosity about some old photographs ultimately reunited this family, who had been divided for most of this century. |
The Concubine's Children |
Chong, Denise |
1994 |
Penguin Books |
2010.058.017 |
Book |
Maxine Hong Kingston brings her richly astonishing perception to the San Francisco of the sixties and its life of youth and art. Her hero is Wittman Ah Sing, a young Chinese American one year out of Berkeley, six feet tall, skinny, hip, an unstoppable, word-drunk playwright, poet and talker. Wittman is (naturally, given the time and place) a rebel. But, like Monkey - the blessed saint-troublemaker of Chinese legend who helped bring the Buddhist scriptures from India, and to whom our hero bears more than a passing resemblance - Wittman is a rebel with a cause. |
Tripmaster Monkey: His Fake Book |
Kingston, Maxine Hong |
1989 |
Alfred A. Knopf |
2010.058.018 |
Book |
The Rice Room is a brilliant and moving memoir of growing up in Oakland's Chinatown, by one of America's preeminent journalists. |
The Rice Room: Growing Up Chinese-American from Number Two Son to Rock'n'Roll |
Fong-Torres, Ben |
1994 |
Hyperion |
2010.058.019 |
Book |
Rough Guides are designed to be good to read and easy to use. The book is divided into the following sections and you should be able to find whatever you need in one of them. |
The Rough Guide to China |
Leffman, David |
2005 |
Rough Guides |
2010.058.020 |
Book |
The author uses proverbs to paint a portrait of the history and culture of China, revealing the historical events and personalities behind the proverbs, as well as assessing their relevance and influence in modern life. |
A Thousand Pieces of Gold: My Discovery of China's Character in Its Proverbs |
Mah, Adeline Yen |
2002 |
HarperCollins |
2010.058.021 |
Book |
A fictionalized biography of botanist Lue Gim Gong, the "plant wizard" who created Florida's orange hybrids. A tale of the Chinese immigrant experience narrated by three women, one a daughter of black slaves who worked with him. By the author of Thousand Pieces of Gold. |
Wooden Fish Songs |
McCunn, Ruthanne Lum |
1995 |
Penguin Books |
2010.058.022 |
Book |
In this remarkable memoir, Tung Pok Chin casts light on the largely hidden experience of Chinese who immigrated to this country with false documents during the Exclusion era. |
Paper Son: One Man's Story |
Chin, Tung Pok |
2000 |
Temple University Press |
2010.058.023 |
Book |
Chronicles the systematic attempts to purge Chinese enclaves across the West from the Gold Rush era to the turn of the twentieth century, documenting the efforts of the Chinese Americans to achieve reparations and attain rights. |
Driven Out: The Forgotten War Against Chinese Americans |
Pfaelzer, Jean |
2007 |
Random House |
2011.008.001 |
Yearbook |
Garfield Yearbook Arrow 1949
owned by Kito Kaneta |
Arrow 1949 |
|
1949 |
|
2011.009.011 |
Booklet |
Quilted jacket designs |
Sashiko Quilting |
Ota, Kimi |
1981 |
|
2011.018.001 |
Book |
|
Mitsu and Little Girl of Japan |
Barnard, Winifred E. and Helen Jacobs |
1930 |
|
2011.018.002 |
Book |
|
Japanalia |
Bush, Lewis |
1959 |
|
2011.018.003 |
Book |
|
First Book of Japan |
Mears, Helen |
1953 |
|
2011.018.004 |
Book |
|
Storied Cities of Japan |
Nishida, Kazuo |
1963 |
|
2011.019.001 |
Book |
|
We, the Asian Americans |
|
June 1970 |
|
2011.019.002 |
Book |
Delivering services to elderly Asian Pacific Islanders |
Critcal Factors in Service Delivery |
|
1977 |
Pacific/Asian Elderly Research Project |
2011.019.003 |
Book |
|
Health, Welfare amd Social Organization in Chinatown, New York City |
Cattell, Stuart H. |
1962, 1970 |
|
2011.019.004 |
Book |
High school produced yellow pages directory of unpaid listings |
People's Yellow Pages |
|
1975 |
|
2011.019.005 |
Book |
|
State of Washington Educational Directory and Minority Resource Directory |
|
1974 |
Washington Council on High School College Relations and the Council on Higher Education |
2011.019.006 |
Book |
|
Scan Asians: A Directory of Asian American State Employees in Olympia |
Tadano, Marsha |
1976 |
'washington State Commission on Asian American Affairs |
2011.019.007 |
Book |
|
Critical Issues in Service Delivery Research |
|
1978 |
Pacific/Asian elderly Research Project |
2011.019.008 |
Book |
|
Final Report: Pacific/Asian Elderly Research Project |
|
May 1978 |
Pacific/Asian Elderly Research Project |
2011.019.009 |
Book |
A mini conference held in San Francisco representing the elderly, service providors, academicians, officials and citizens. |
Proceedings of Pacific/Asians: The Wisdom of Age |
|
1981 |
|
2011.019.010 |
Book |
|
The Tublerculosis Problem: A Quiet Legacy of the Japanese American Internment Camps |
Kikuchi, Julie Sumie |
1995 |
|
2011.019.011 |
Book |
|
Selected Proceedings of the 3rd Annual Conference on Minority Studies Vol II |
|
1975 |
Institute for Minority Studies |
2011.019.012 |
Book |
|
Selected Proceedings of the 3rd Annual Conference on Minority Studies Vol III |
Carter, George E., and James Parker, eds. |
1977 |
Institute for Minority Studies |
2011.019.013 |
Book |
|
Selected Proceedings of the 3rd Annual Conference on Minority Studies Vol IV |
Carter, George E., and James Parker, eds. |
1977 |
Institute for Minority Studies |
2011.019.014 |
Book |
See
Teaching Asian Studies by Sucheng Chan |
Selected Proceedings of the 3rd Annual Conference on Minority Studies Vol V |
Carter, George E., and James Parker, eds. |
1977 |
Institute for Minority Studies |
2011.019.015 |
Book |
|
Selected Proceedings of the 3rd Annual Conference on Minority Studies Vol V |
Carter, George E., and James Parker, eds. |
1977 |
Institute for Minority Studies |
2011.019.016 |
Book |
|
A Bibliography of Asian and Asian American Books For Elementary School Youngsters |
|
1975 |
|
2011.019.017 |
Book |
|
Mental Capacity of American Born Japanese Children |
Darsie, Marvin |
1926; 1967 |
Comparative Psychology Monographs |
2011.019.018 |
Book |
A look at residences and housing in the Chinatown/International District in the late 1960s |
Housing in the International District |
Lew, Willon |
1970 |
University of Washington |
2011.019.019 |
Booklet |
|
The Japanese American Incarceration: A Case for Redress |
|
1978 |
Japanese American Citizens League |
2011.019.020 |
Book |
|
Prejudice; Japanese-Americans: Symbol of Racial Intolerance |
McWilliams, Carey |
1971 |
Archon Books |
2011.019.021 |
Book |
|
Personal Justice Denied: Report of the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civlians |
|
1982 |
U.S. Government Printing Office |
2011.019.022 |
Book |
|
The Two Worlds of Jim Yoshida |
Yoshida, Jim |
1972 |
William Morrow and Company, Inc. |
2011.019.023 |
Book |
|
The Promised Year |
Uchida, Yoshiko |
1959 |
Harcourt Brace and World, Inc. |
2011.019.024 |
Booklet |
|
Issei, Nisei, Sansei: Japanese in America |
|
1972 |
Amerasia Resources, Inc. |
2011.019.025 |
Book |
|
Journey to Washington |
Inouye, Daniel K. |
1969 |
Prentice Hall |
2011.019.026 |
Book |
|
Exile of a Race |
Fisher, Anne Reeploeg |
1987 |
Anne Reeploeg Fisher |
2011.019.027 |
Book |
|
Prejudice, War and the Constitution |
tenBroek, Jacobus |
1968 |
University of California Press |
2011.019.028 |
Book |
|
The Spoilage: Japanese-American Evacuation and Resettlement During World War II |
Thomas, Dorothy Swaine |
1969 |
University of California Press |
2011.019.029 |
Book |
The History of the Japanese American Citizens League |
JACL in Quest of Justice |
Hosokawa, Bill |
1982 |
William Morrow and Company, Inc. |
2011.019.030 |
Book |
|
The Governing of Men: General Principles and Recommendations Based on Experience at a Japanese Relocation Camp |
Leighton, Alexander H. |
1968 |
Princeton University Press |
2011.019.031 |
Book |
|
The United States and Japan |
Reischauer, Edwin O. |
1966 |
The Viking Press |
2011.019.032 |
Book |
|
For Men with Yen: A Guide to the Japanese Hostess System |
Rosenberg, Alan |
1969 |
The Wayward Press |
2011.019.033 |
Book |
|
Nisei: The Quiet Americans |
Hosokawa, Bill |
1969 |
William Morrow and Company, Inc. |
2011.019.034 |
Book |
Drawings with brief comments by the author describe her memories of life in a California internment camp during World War II. |
Citizen 13660 |
Okubo, Mine |
1966 |
AMS Press, Inc. |
2011.019.035 |
Book |
Tina Suzuki, a grad student at UC Berkeley, tries to convince a Japanese calligraphy teacher crippled by a stroke to become her research subject. Tina doesn't realize how this will shed light on her family's secret past. |
The Fourth Treasure: A Novel |
Shimoda, Todd |
2002 |
Doubleday |
2011.019.036 |
Book |
Surveys the experiences of Japanese immigrants to the United States and those of their descendants, appraising their changing status during and since World War II and their contributions to American life and culture. |
The Japanese American Story |
Fukei, Budd |
1976 |
Dillon Press, Inc. |
2011.019.037 |
Book |
|
The Experience of Japanese Americans in the United States: A Teacher Resource Manual |
|
1975 |
Japanese American Citizens League |
2011.019.038 |
Book |
|
American in Disguise |
Okimoto, Daniel I. |
1971 |
John Weatherhill, Inc. |
2011.019.039 |
Book |
Two volumes: Vol. 1, "The Past: The Road from Isolation"; Vol. 2, "The Present: Coping with Affluence." |
Through Japanese Eyes |
Minear, Richard H., ed. |
1974 |
Praeger Publishers |
2011.019.040 |
Journal |
Volume I, Autumn 1974; I, No. 2, 1974; V, No. 2, Summer 1978; VI, No. 1, Spring 1979; VI, No. 2, Summer 1979; VI, No.3, Autumn 1979 |
RIKKA: The Six Beautiful Essences |
|
|
RIKKA |
2011.019.041 |
Book |
|
Chinese History in the Pacific Northwest |
Wong, Karen C. |
1972 |
Karen C. Wong |
2011.019.042 |
Book |
|
Childhood in China |
Kessen, William, ed. |
1977 |
Yale University Press |
2011.019.043 |
Book |
Describes the events of December 7, 1941, before, during, and after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, as well as the reactions of the men who lived through the attack. |
Day of Infamy |
Lord, Walter |
1957 |
Bantam Books |
2011.019.044 |
Book |
|
Hawaii Pono: A Social History |
Fuchs, Lawrence H. |
1961 |
Harcourt Brace and World, Inc. |
2011.019.045 |
Book |
|
Ambassadors in Arms: The Story of Hawaii's 100th Battalion |
Murphy, Thomas D. |
1955 |
University of Hawaii Press |
2011.019.046 |
Book |
|
Pearl Harbor: The Story of the Secret War |
Morgenstern, George |
1947 |
The Devin-Adair Company |
2011.019.047 |
Book |
|
Pearl Harbor: Roosevelt and the Coming of the War |
Waller, George M., ed. |
1976 |
D.C. Heath and Company |
2011.019.048 |
Book |
|
The Final Secret of Pearl Harbor: The Washington Contribution to the Japanese Attack |
Theobald, Robert A. |
1954 |
The Devin-Adair Company |
2011.019.049 |
Book |
The Commander at Pearl Harbor during the Japanese attack tells his story of the disaster and gives his explanation of it. |
Admiral Kimmel's Story |
Kimmel, Husband E. |
1955 |
Henry Regnery Company |
2011.019.050 |
Book |
|
Indians of the United States |
Wissler, Clark |
1966 |
Doubleday and Company, Inc. |
2011.019.051 |
Book |
|
Learning About Peoples and Cultures |
Fersh, Seymour, ed. |
1974 |
McDougal, Littell and Company |
2011.019.052 |
Book |
|
Learning About Peoples and Cultures: A Guide for Teachers |
Fersh, Seymour, ed. |
1974 |
McDougal, Littell and Company |
2011.019.053 |
Book |
|
Our Oriental Americans |
Ritter, Ed |
1965 |
McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc. |
2011.019.054 |
Book |
A report from the Second Annual Conference on Special Emerging Programs in Higher Education. Seattle, Washington, November 7-9, 1974, |
Tomorrow's Imperative Today: Multi-Ethnic Programs |
Morell, Karen L., ed. |
1974 |
University of Washington |
2011.019.055 |
Book |
|
Asian Pacific Americans: A Handbook on How to Cover and Portray Our Nation's Fastest Growing Minority Group |
Sing, Bill, ed. |
1989 |
Asian Pacific Media Image Task Force |
2011.019.056 |
Book |
|
Vashon Island's Agricultural Roots: Tales of the Tilth as Told by Island Farmers |
Woodroffe, Pamela J. |
2002 |
Writers Club Press |
2011.019.057 |
Book |
|
American Racism: Exploration of the Nature of Prejudice |
Daniels, Roger |
1970 |
Prentice Hall |
2011.019.058 |
Book |
The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science |
Chinese and Japanese in America |
Johnson, Emory R., ed. |
1970 |
R and E Research Associates |
2011.019.059 |
Book |
|
California and the Oriental: Japanese, Chinese, and Hindus |
|
1970 |
R and E Research Associates |
2011.019.060 |
Book |
|
The Many Roads to Highline |
Eyler, Melba |
1972 |
The Highline Publishing Co. |
2011.019.061 |
Book |
|
Lieutenant Maury's Island and the Quartermaster's Harbor |
Lynn, Howard W. |
1975 |
Beachcomber Press |
2011.019.062 |
Book |
|
Van Olinda's History of Vashon-Maury Island |
Carey, Roland |
1985 |
Alderbook Publishing Company |
2011.019.063 |
Spiral-Bound |
|
Voting in the Asian Pacific American Community: Asserting Our Rights, Asserting Our Voice |
|
2004 |
National Asian Pacific American Legal Consortium |
2011.019.064 |
Report |
|
Report to the Governor on Discrimination Against Asians: Public Hearing Conducted on March 3, 1973: Seattle, Washington |
|
1973 |
State of Washington Asian-American Advisory Council |
2011.019.065 |
Report |
|
1970 Census of Population: Subject Report: Japanese, Chinese, and Filipinos in the United States |
|
1973 |
U.S. Department of Commerce |
2011.019.066 |
Book |
|
Seattle's Other History: Our Asian-American Heritage |
Burke, Edward |
1979 |
Profanity Hill Press |
2011.019.067 |
Report |
Annual Meeting Workshop No. 27. Seattle, WA. January 27, 1971. |
What Do Asians Want? Asian-Americans: An Examination of Issues in Social Work Education Regarding Students, Faculty and Enrichment of Curriculum |
Kuramoto, Ford H. |
1971 |
Ford H. Kuramoto |
2011.019.068 |
Booklet |
|
Concerns of Asian American Women |
|
1976 |
Commission on Asian American Affairs |
2011.019.069 |
Book |
|
Japanese in the United States |
Ichihashi, Yamato |
1969 |
Arno Press and the New York Times |
2011.019.070 |
Book |
|
Social and Cultural Change in Japanese-American Kinship |
Yanagisako, Sylvia Junko |
1975 |
University of Washington |
2011.019.071 |
Book |
|
Birthright of Barbed Wire: The Santa Anita Assembly Center for the Japanese |
Lehman, Anthony L. |
1970 |
Westernlore Press |
2011.019.072 |
Book |
The Annals. Volume XCIII. January, 1921. The American Academy of Political and Social Science. |
Present-Day Immigration with Special Reference to the Japanese |
Kelsey, Carl, ed. |
1971 |
R and E Research Associates |
2011.019.073 |
Book |
59th Congress, 2nd Sessio. Document No. 147. Dec. 18, 1906. |
Japanese in the City of San Francisco, Cal.: Message from the President of the United States |
|
1971 |
R and E Research Associates |
2011.019.074 |
Book |
|
Discrimination Against the Japanese in California: A Review of the Real Situation |
Johnson, Herbert B. |
1971 |
R and E Research Associates |
2011.019.075 |
Book |
|
The Japanese Problem in California |
Harada, Tasuku, ed. |
1971 |
R and E Research Associates |
2011.019.076 |
Book |
|
Japanese Immigration and Colonization: Brief Prepared For Consideration of the State Department |
McClatchy, V. S. |
1970 |
R and E Research Associates |
2011.019.077 |
Book |
Produced on a U.S. Works Progress Administration project. Administration project number 165-05-6336. District serial 0803-1166. Work project 7456. Sponsored by the University of California. Prep. under the direction of Emil T.H. Bunje. |
The Story of Japanese Farming in California |
Bunje, Emil T. H. |
1971 |
R and E Research Associates |
2011.019.078 |
Spiral-Bound |
|
Minidoka Internment National Monument: Draft General Management Plan and Environmental Impact Statement |
|
2005 |
National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior |
2011.019.079 |
Book |
On her third birthday, Momo (whose name means "Peach" in her parents' native Japan) receives rubber boots and an umbrella. Impatiently she waits for a rainy day so she can try out her new apparel. |
Umbrella |
Yashima, Taro |
1958 |
The Viking Press |
2011.019.080 |
Book |
|
Museum Meiji-Mura |
|
1980 |
Museum Meiji-Mura |
2011.019.081 |
Spiral-Bound |
Nichi Bei Times Commerative Edition Spring 1969. |
Japanese Cultural and Trade Center Commemorative Book: History of the Japanese Community, U.S.A. |
|
1969 |
Nichi Bei Times |
2011.019.082 |
Book |
|
The Rice Cycle: The Grain that Created a Culture |
Sesoko, Tsune, ed. |
1974 |
Japan External Trade Organization |
2011.019.083 |
Spiral-Bound |
|
Bainbridge Island Japanese American Memorial: Study of Alternatives/Environmental Assessment |
|
2005 |
Jones & Jones Architects and Landscape Architects, Ltd. |
2011.019.084 |
Pamphlet |
No. 22. Argued October 11, 12, 1944. - Decided December 18, 1944. |
Leading Decisions of the United States Supreme Court: Korematsu v. United States |
Aikin, Charles, ed. |
1963? |
Chandler Publishing Company |
2011.019.085 |
Book |
|
Japanese Mythology |
Piggott, Juliet |
1969 |
Paul Hamlyn |
2011.019.086 |
Binder |
|
Go For Broke: A 100th Bn/442nd Regimental Combat Team Story |
Yamane, George |
2000 |
George Yamane |
2011.028.001 |
Book |
Oral Histories of 35 Chinese Americans who immigrated 1934-1968 |
Voices of the Second Wave: Chinese Americans in Seattle |
Yang, Dori Jones |
2011 |
East West Insights |
2011.028.002 |
Booklet |
Award ceremony booklet on Melvin R. Lohmann Medal, which is awarded by the College of Engineering, Architecture, and Technology from Oklahoma State University. This booklet honors Dr. Paul Liao. |
Celebrating Accomplishment 1991-2011 |
|
2011 |
Oklahoma State University |
2011.028.003 |
Book |
|
[Autobiography of Dr. Paul B. Liao] |
Liao, Paul B. |
2010 |
|
2011.028.004 |
Booklet |
|
Integrating Worldwide Chinese Talents and Resources |
|
|
|
2011.033.001 |
Book |
|
Chinese on the American Frontier |
Dirlik, Arif, ed. |
2003 |
Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc. |
2011.033.002 |
Book |
|
Dreaming of Gold, Dreaming of Home: Transnationalism and Migration Between the United States and South China, 1882-1943 |
Hsu, Madeline Yuan-yin |
2000 |
Stanford University Press |
2011.033.003 |
Book |
|
Chinese Immigrants, African Americans, and Racial Anxiety in the United States, 1848-82 |
Aarim-Heriot, Najia |
2003 |
University of Illinois Press |
2011.033.004 |
Book |
|
The Transnational History of a Chinese Family: Immigrant Letters, Family Business, and Reverse Migration |
Liu, Haiming |
2006 |
Rutgers University Press |
2011.033.005 |
Book |
|
The Anti-Chinese Movement in California |
Sandmeyer, Elmer Clarence |
1991 |
University of Illinois Press |
2011.033.006 |
Book |
Considers the many ways in which Chinese living in the United States during the exclusion era maintained ties with China through a constant flow of people, economic resources, as well as political and cultural ideas. This book describes the changing patterns of Chinese immigration and strategies for circumventing exclusion laws. |
Chinese American Transnationalism: The Flow of People, Resources, and Ideas between China and America during the Exclusion Era |
Chan, Sucheng, ed. |
2006 |
Temple University Press |
2011.033.007 |
Book |
|
Claiming America: Constructing Chinese American Identities during the Exclusion Era |
Wong, K. Scott, ed. |
1998 |
Temple University Press |
2011.033.008 |
Book |
|
Chinese American Voices: From the Gold Rush to the Present |
Yung, Judy, ed. |
2006 |
University of California Press |
2011.033.009 |
Book |
|
In Search of Equality: The Chinese Struggle against Discrimination in Nineteenth-Century America |
McClain, Charles J. |
1994 |
University of California Press |
2011.033.010 |
Book |
|
Unbound Feet: A Social History of Chinese Women in San Francisco |
Yung, Judy |
1995 |
University of California Press |
2011.033.011 |
Book |
|
Chinese Americans: The Immigrant Experience |
Miscevic, Dusanka |
2000 |
Hugh Lauter Levin Associates, Inc. |
2011.033.012 |
Book |
Traces the evolution of the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, including the history of Chinese immigration to the United States, the factors that served to increase their populations here, and the subsequent efforts to limit further immigration and encourage the departure of the Chinese already in America. |
The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 |
Soennichsen, John |
2011 |
ABC-CLIO, LLC |
2011.033.013 |
Book |
|
Radical Heritage: Labor, Socialism, and Reform in Washington and British Columbia, 1885-1917 |
Schwantes, Carlos A. |
1994 |
University of Idaho Press |
2011.033.014 |
Book |
|
Asian America: Chinese and Japanese in the United States since 1850 |
Daniels, Roger |
1995 |
University of Washington Press |
2011.040.001 |
Book |
|
Voices of War |
Castillo, Obdulia Rigor |
2011 |
Gorham Printing |
2011.040.002 |
Book |
|
Raindrops |
Castillo, Obdulia Rigor |
2000 |
Gorham Printing |
2011.040.003 |
Book |
|
Journey to Sunrise |
Castillo, Obdulia Rigor |
2005 |
Gorham Printing |
2011.040.004 |
Book |
|
Of Bamboo Poles and Boys: Ang Palo-Sebo |
Castillo, Obdulia Rigor |
2005 |
Rex Printing Inc |
2011.040.005 |
Book |
|
Let's Sing and Dance: A Handbook of Rhythmic Activities |
Castillo, Obdulia Rigor |
2003 |
Gorham Printing |
2011.043.001 |
Book |
The story of two sisters, one brought up in the U.S., the other in China. The American sister is contemptuous of the other's belief in ghosts until events cause her to understand what they can do. |
The Hundred Secret Senses |
Tan, Amy |
1995 |
Ballantine Books |
2011.043.002 |
Book |
Winnie and Helen have kept each other's worst secrets for more than fifty years. Now, because she believes she is dying, Helen wants to expose everything. And Winnie angrily determines that she must be the one to tell her daughter, Pearl, about the past--including the terrible truth even Helen does not know. And so begins Winnie's story of her life on a small island outside Shanghai in the 1920s, and other places in China during World War II, and traces the happy and desperate events that led to Winnie's coming to America in 1949. |
The Kitchen God's Wife |
Tan, Amy |
1991 |
Ballantine Books |
2011.043.003 |
Book |
The Changs immigrated to the United States from China for education and safety but are distracted by other goals. |
Typical American |
Jen, Gish |
1991 |
Houghton Mifflin Company |
2011.043.004 |
Book |
|
Dear Diane: Questions and Answers for Asian American Women |
Wong, Diane Yen-Mei |
1983 |
Asian Women United of California |
2011.043.005 |
Book |
|
Dear Diane: Letters From Our Daughters |
Wong, Diane Yen-Mei |
1983 |
Asian Women United of California |
2011.043.006 |
Book |
|
The Indian Way |
Koller, John M. |
1982 |
Macmillan Publishing Company |
2012.003.001 |
Book |
|
Hawaiian Heritage: A Brief Illustrated History |
Mellen, Kathleen Dickenson |
1963 |
Hastings House |
2012.003.002 |
Book |
|
The Year of the Dog |
Liu, Hung |
1994 |
Steinbaum Krauss Gallery |
2012.003.003 |
Book |
An anecdotal account of a young black woman growing up in Seattle. |
The Good Times are Killing Me |
Barry, Lynda |
1988 |
The Real Comet Press |
2012.003.004 |
Book |
|
Everything in the World |
Barry, Lynda |
1986 |
Harper and Row, Publishers |
2012.003.005 |
Book |
|
Big Ideas |
Barry, Lynda |
1983 |
HarperCollins |
2012.003.006 |
Book |
|
Girls and Boys |
Barry, Lynda |
1981 |
The Real Comet Press |
2012.003.007 |
Book |
|
The Fun House |
Barry, Lynda |
1987 |
Harper and Row, Publishers |
2012.003.008 |
Book |
|
The Freddie Stories |
Barry, Lynda |
1999 |
Sasquatch Books |
2012.003.009 |
Book |
|
Down the Street |
Barry, Lynda |
1988 |
Harper and Row, Publishers |