[Libs-Or] Fwd: [REFORMANET] The Augusta Baker Diversity Lecture Series with Sarah Park Dahlen, 2/18 4pm EST

Max Macias max.macias at gmail.com
Wed Feb 3 13:04:54 PST 2021


FYI


Max

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: AEdCS <aedcs7 at gmail.com>
Date: Wed, Feb 3, 2021 at 12:01 PM
Subject: [REFORMANET] The Augusta Baker Diversity Lecture Series with Sarah
Park Dahlen, 2/18 4pm EST
To:


Apologies for cross-posting. Of possible interest, this whole *free* series
has hosted amazing speakers :-)

Ana Elisa de Campos Salles
Councilor-at-large, American Library Association
Member, Patty Wong Presidential Advisory Committee
Member, RRT Fundraising Committee
she, her, hers

2011 ALA Spectrum Scholar
2013 ALA Emerging Leader


---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Arlene Yu <arlene85 at post.harvard.edu>
Date: Tue, Jan 26, 2021 at 6:48 AM
Subject: [apala-l] The Augusta Baker Diversity Lecture Series with Sarah
Park Dahlen, 2/18 4pm EST
To: APALA <APALA-L at lists.gseis.ucla.edu>


Found this on Eventbrite at
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-augusta-baker-diversity-lecture-series-with-sarah-park-dahlen-tickets-136843896779
:

The Augusta Baker Diversity Lecture Series with Sarah Park Dahlen

Children’s literature depicting the Asian diaspora has grown and
diversified considerably over the past few decades, partly because the 1965
Immigration Act made it possible for more Asian people to immigrate to the
United States; the “children of 1965,” as Min Hyoung Song calls them, have
come of age and are publishing some of the most highly regarded books in
the industry. In this lecture, Park Dahlen argues that Asian American youth
literature may be approaching a “golden age,” as measured by both
popularity and critical acclaim, but despite significant gains, this
literature has a long way to go. By examining children’s literature
addressing two specific topics—Asian bodies and Asian food—Park Dahlen
demonstrates how this literature still suffers from persistent distortions
and erasure, and suggests some interventions we need to make in order to
diversify and complicate depictions of the Asian diaspora in an
increasingly transnational world.

Thanks,
Arlene

Arlene Yu, MSILS
arlene85 at post.harvard.edu
+1 917 209 9239

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