Miss India Georgia is an intelligent and insightful video documentary that tells the story of four Indian American teenagers, who in `the process of preparing for Atlanta\u27s annual South Asian beauty pageant reflect on the trials and tribulations of their bi-cultural lives. It is a timeless tale told over and over as each new wave of immigrants has come ashore and their children have had to resolve the incongruities of their multiple ethnicities
In this book, Daniele Conversi compares and contrasts two widely known nationalist movements in Spai...
Alan Trachtenberg's work, Shades of Hiawatha: Staging Indians, Making Americans, 1880-1930, examines...
The author provides a review of the book The American Jewish Story through Cinema, written by Eric G...
Shalini Shankar begins her book by locating her own positionality of growing up in a predominantly w...
Anthropologist Landsman has written a fascinating study about the events surrounding the seizure of ...
Modernity at Large is a collection of essays (most of which are reprinted from other sources, e.g., ...
Ever since western feminist scholarship was accused of defining gender in transhistorical and transc...
Viewers of this film can anticipate a pleasing aesthetic experience as well as an instructive lesson...
So far as I know, Jacquelyn Kilpatrick is the first person of American Indian heritage to write a bo...
In this ethnohistory of American Indian education, Margaret Szasz broadly interprets education to me...
Within recent years the migrant experience in Australia, particularly of non-European peoples, has a...
Review of Bindi: Multifaceted Lives of Indo-Caribbean Women by Rossanne Kanhai; Kingston: University...
In his first book, Playing Indian (1998), Philip Deloria examined the ways that non-Indians used Ame...
In Fashioning Diaspora: Beauty, Femininity and South Asian American Culture, Vanita Reddy examines h...
In this meticulously researched and highly readable work, Susan A. Glenn examines the experiences o...
In this book, Daniele Conversi compares and contrasts two widely known nationalist movements in Spai...
Alan Trachtenberg's work, Shades of Hiawatha: Staging Indians, Making Americans, 1880-1930, examines...
The author provides a review of the book The American Jewish Story through Cinema, written by Eric G...
Shalini Shankar begins her book by locating her own positionality of growing up in a predominantly w...
Anthropologist Landsman has written a fascinating study about the events surrounding the seizure of ...
Modernity at Large is a collection of essays (most of which are reprinted from other sources, e.g., ...
Ever since western feminist scholarship was accused of defining gender in transhistorical and transc...
Viewers of this film can anticipate a pleasing aesthetic experience as well as an instructive lesson...
So far as I know, Jacquelyn Kilpatrick is the first person of American Indian heritage to write a bo...
In this ethnohistory of American Indian education, Margaret Szasz broadly interprets education to me...
Within recent years the migrant experience in Australia, particularly of non-European peoples, has a...
Review of Bindi: Multifaceted Lives of Indo-Caribbean Women by Rossanne Kanhai; Kingston: University...
In his first book, Playing Indian (1998), Philip Deloria examined the ways that non-Indians used Ame...
In Fashioning Diaspora: Beauty, Femininity and South Asian American Culture, Vanita Reddy examines h...
In this meticulously researched and highly readable work, Susan A. Glenn examines the experiences o...
In this book, Daniele Conversi compares and contrasts two widely known nationalist movements in Spai...
Alan Trachtenberg's work, Shades of Hiawatha: Staging Indians, Making Americans, 1880-1930, examines...
The author provides a review of the book The American Jewish Story through Cinema, written by Eric G...