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InvAsian
Available through the SF Study Center.
$18 plus shipping and handling
($4.50 book rate, or $6 UPS ground or priority mail) plus tax for CA residents.
Toll free: 888-281-3757
email: rumi@studycenter.org
fax: 415-626-7276
Reviews
"Impressively presented collection...A memorable, rewarding and insightful read, InvAsian is a seminal work...highly recommended contribution to Women's Studies in general and Asian/American Studies in particular."
— The Midwest Book Review, June 2003
"A fabulous collection...
— AsianWeek.com, April 30, 2003
"Busts every stereotype in the book about Asian American women...rich with witty, entertaining, and sometimes heartbreaking essays and poems."
— S.F. Weekly, April 30 - May 6, 2003
This collection of poetry and prose explores the issue of being Asian American and female in the United States.
— Filipinas, July 2003
(Read excerpts from the book.)
Foreword
I couldnt sleep the night before my 20th birthday. I just knew that the next morning, when the -teen dropped from my age, I would be forever transformed into someone more mature, more responsible, more
well, into an ADULT. Id encountered the same restlessness rumbling under my chest many times beforein the still and nervous moments before my house awakened each Christmas morning, as I clutched the steering wheel before my drivers test, as I stared at the clover flowers on the soccer field before my first kiss, when the door clicked as my parents walked out of my dorm room the day I moved into college.
So. You can imagine my surprise when I awoke the next morning, feeling like the exact same girl. That was six years ago, and some things still havent changed.
Dont get me wrongthere have been plenty of new things to excite me, to break my heart, to worry about, and to hope for. But I still read fashion magazines and wonder what Id do with Gwyneth Paltrows wardrobe, or a runway models height. I now live 600 miles away, but when I go home, my parents still ask me where Ive been, who I was with, and when I will become a doctor. I still get butterflies when Im around someone I like. I still get zits (aargh!). I still have dreams.
Thank goodness growing up doesnt have to happen overnight. Its overwhelming enough already. And if youve grown up with parents or grandparents from another country, or with strangers always asking you where youre from, or without seeing too many actresses, or senators, or singers, or athletes who look like you, then you know it can seem overwhelming, TIMES TEN. Thats why this book is for YOU.
You wont find what weve collected here in beauty magazines or music videos. Your teachers arent going to tell you about the thoughts and emotions youll encounter within these pages. This book is about the things that we see and understand as only Asian girls do. It affirms what youve known deep down, all alongthat our identities pit us against challenges that other people dont have to deal with, but that we are more than capable of conquering them with attitude and with grace, because we are female and we are Asian in America.
Be forewarned. Once you choose to flip through these pages, you make the decision to come face to face with the complicated and the diverse, the painful and the beautifulto confront the courageous and unforgettable emotions, images, and voices of your Asian American sisters. Youll begin to envision yourself and the heritages youve inherited in new ways. Youll laugh and cry out loud, seeing your pain, your anxieties, your exhilaration, your confusion, and your pride reflected in our stories and poems. You will be infuriated, comforted, inspired. Your inner creator/artist/storyteller will be awakened, and she will invade your soul and stir your imagination.
A-ha! Weve got you already! Theres no turning back now; so just sit back, and enjoy this ride while it lasts.
Evelyn I. Rodriguez
Asian Women United Board & InvAsian Editorial Committee Member
BIO: Evelyn Ibatan Rodriguez
Second-generation Pinay, born in Honolulu, raised in San Diego, and now living Berkeley, California. Devotee of the idea that learning and a commitment to sharing can open our imaginations to new possibilities and better realities. A fourth year Ph.D. student, who leaped right into the UC Berkeley Sociology program after finishing her Bachelors with highest distinction at UC San Diego. Future plans include visiting the seven wonders of the world, starting a business with her sister, starting and completing her doctoral dissertation, and
cleaning her dads garage.
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