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Asian American Resource Center Austin, TX

Preschool (0 to 4 years old), Primary (5 to 8 years old), Elementary (9 to 12 years old), Middle School (13 to 15 years old), High School (16 to 18 years old), Adults, Post-Secondary
Language Arts And English, Social Studies, Arts, Other

Asian American Resource Center Austin, TX's collections

 

Where I Belong

<p><strong>"Where I Belong"</strong> was an exhibit co-curated by Austin based, Asian American photojournalist Lizzie Chen, and the City of Austin's Asian American Resource Center.  Chen collaborated with the AARC to document mixed race Asian American youth in the Austin area. The project is a series of documentary style portraits using natural lighting in the participants home.</p> <p><strong>Lizzie Chen </strong>is a visual storyteller based in Austin, Texas. With a photojournalism and documentary storytelling background, she is interested in long-form and collaborative projects.   Her work has been published across the nation, including NPR News, The Guardian, PBS Newshour, NBC News, Smithsonian Asian Pacific Islander Center, The Center for Public Integrity, KUT News, Texas Observer and other media outlets. </p> <p>View Chen's website<a href="https://www.lizziechen.com/" target="_blank"> here</a>. </p> <p><br></p>
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Inter/sected - LGBTQ + Asian Pacific Americans

<p><em>Inter/sected</em>, was a photo exhibit on display at the City of Austin's Asian American Resource Center July 5 to September 22, 2019, that celebrated the intersected identities of Queer Asian Pacific Americans. The AARC worked with local Austin photographer Ben Aqua. Ben has titled their photo series “Slaysians,” portraits of LGBTQ+ Asians/Pacific Islanders on their Instagram account at <a href="https://www.instagram.com/b3naqua/" target="_blank">@b3naqua</a>. Ben's pronouns are they/them/theirs.</p> <p>Teachers and students may use this collection to discuss intersectionality, Asian American identities, gender spectrum/non binary, culture and resistance to assimilation, and expressions through art.  Articles, photographs, and supplemental film, podcast and archive resources are included for further analysis on queer Asian American experiences in the US.</p> <p><em>This Smithsonian Learning Lab collection received Federal support from the Asian Pacific American Initiatives Pool, administered by the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center. </em></p> <p>Keywords: asian americans, queer, LGBTQ, intersectionality, gender, queer</p> <p> #EthnicStudies</p>
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Waves of Hope: Asian American History in Austin

<p>In this collection, students will learn about Asian American history in Austin. Austin is home to many Asian Americans along with their rich history, culture, and traditions that are preserved and passed on to future generations by their families and communities. This exhibit showcases some of the history that is lesser known but nevertheless important to document and remember. All of the images can be found at the Austin History Center, which houses an Asian American Archival Collection of manuscript collections, photographs, clippings, books, periodicals and other items.</p> <p>This exhibit was developed by the City of Austin's Asian American Resource Center and the Austin History Center.</p> <p>Educators and students may use this online exhibit to supplement Texas History lessons and as a supplement to the full exhibit stored at the City of Austin's Asian American Resource Center (AARC). Currently, Waves of Hope is not on display at the AARC. Please contact the site at 512-974-1700 or aarc@austintexas.gov with any questions.</p> <p>keywords: texas history, asian american,  Texas asians, austin, austin history, austin history center, immigration</p> <p><br /></p> <p>#APA2018 #EthnicStudies</p> <p>#TCSAARC  </p>
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