On three of the
many things I learned from an inspiring roundtable.
The other panel
I had the chance to attend was a roundtable on New Directions in Teaching Asian
American Literature, where Yoonmee
Chang, Patricia
Chu, Lawrence-Minh Bùi
Davis, and Caroline
Rody shared a number of exciting strategies and ideas from their own
teaching. Here I’ll just highlight three of my takeaways from this great panel:
1)
I’ve written before, here
and elsewhere,
about my work with a multi-generational family timeline and history project in
my ethnic American literature course. But Patricia shared a text that provides
its own version of such a project, May-Lee Chai and Winberg Chai’s The Girl
from Purple Mountain (2002), as well as ways in which she gets her
students to conduct their own interviews and analyses through their work with
the book. Now I can’t wait for the chance for the next time I teach the ethnic
course, to bring this book into the course and enrich the student projects
immeasurably as a result.
2)
Besides his teaching and work toward a PhD in
English, Lawrence is also a founding director of the non-profit Asian American
Literary Review, as well as the developer of its education project the Mixed Race Initiative. I
look forward to learning more about both of those endeavors, but was
particularly struck at this panel by the special issue of AALR that Lawrence brought with him: it’s entitled Mixed Race in a
Box, and I honestly don’t think I can do it justice in mere words.
Check out the pictures at that link, and if you get a chance to look further
into this unique and wonderful project, you definitely should. I know I will!
3)
In her talk, Caroline highlighted numerous books
she’s taught in her Asian American, ethnic American, and contemporary
literature courses—some
I’ve taught myself, some I’ve read and hope to teach, some I’ve heard of and
hope to read, and some I had never heard of and now can’t wait to check out. In
the latter category falls Lore Segal’s The
Education of Ilka Weissnix (1995), a cross-cultural, inter-ethnic,
historical fiction that sounds as if it couldn’t have been tailored to my
interests and obsessions any more fully if I had ordered it created. As with
everything that these four presenters highlighted, learning about this book
promises to deeply enrich my work and teaching.
Next follow up
tomorrow,
Ben
PS.
Were you at ALA? If so, what stood out to you?
Thanks for the wrap-up, Ben! I couldn't make this session but sounds like it was great. :)
ReplyDeleteSure, Sue! Any thoughts or takeaways of yours from other ALA sessions that I can add to the weekend post?
ReplyDeleteBen