Rise A pop history of Asian America from the nineties to now

Jeff Yang

Book - 2022

"'RISE' is a love letter to and for Asian Americans--a vivid scrapbook of voices, emotions, and memories from an era in which [their] culture was forged and transformed, and a way to preserve both the headlines and the intimate conversations that have shaped [their] community into who [they] are today"--Provided by publisher.

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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 305.895/Yang Due May 8, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
Boston : Mariner Books, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Jeff Yang (author)
Other Authors
Phil Yu (author), Philip Wang (illustrator), Julia Kuo
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
xi, 484 pages : color illustrations, color maps ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780358508090
  • Introduction
  • Before
  • Before: An Essay
  • Who's Asian American?
  • When Inclusion Can Turn into Erasure
  • The Asian American Syllabus: 1980s and Before
  • Undercover Asians: 1980s and Before
  • Original Synth: The Anthems of Young Asian America
  • Twelve Court Cases That Shaped Asian America
  • The Propaganda Family Tree
  • Why Vincent Chin Still Matters
  • How to Yellowface
  • Yellowface: In the Beginning
  • Miss Saigon, but Not Forgotten
  • The Miss Saigon Family Tree
  • The Asian American Playlist: 1980s and Before
  • Where the Heart Is: Asian Ethnic Enclaves
  • Asian American Atlas
  • Founding Fathers and Mothers: 1980s and Before
  • Stuff Asians Like
  • 1990s
  • The 1990s: An Essay
  • Asian Americans on Campus
  • The Asian American Syllabus: 1990s
  • Sa-I-Gu 1992: Remembering the Los Angeles Riots
  • The Long Dark Shadow of "Me Love You Long Time"
  • Asian American Food Glow Up
  • Asian Americans Dot Com
  • How to "AZN"
  • Asian Avenue, Annotated
  • The Style List: 1990s
  • Generasian Gap: 1990s
  • Speed Racers
  • The Asian American Playlist: The 1990s
  • Setting Sail on the Love Boat
  • Spaces: Asian Home
  • Boba Triumphant
  • The Joy Luck Club Remembered
  • How the Golden Age of Hong Kong Cinema Gave Us Hope
  • Bollywood Saved Us
  • Awesome Asian Bad Guys
  • Reflections on Mulan
  • After Connie
  • When Asian American Indie Features Suddenly Mattered
  • It All Began with Margaret Cho
  • What's Funny?: 1990s
  • The Asian American Yearbook: The 1990s
  • Spaces: Asian Grocery Store
  • Founding Fathers and Mothers: 1990s
  • Anime of the People
  • Yellowface in the 1990s
  • DISGRASIAN: 1990s
  • Undercover Asians: 1990s
  • RISE: A Poem
  • 2000s
  • The 2000s: An Essay
  • Suburbasia
  • "Dis-Spelled"
  • Spaces: The Boba Shop
  • The Asian American Syllabus: 2000s
  • 9/11: Remembering a Tragedy and the Dark Days That Followed
  • Spin Doctors: How Filipino American DJs Turned the Tables on Hip-Hop
  • Stepping into the Cypher: Asian American Rappers
  • MC Jin's Greatest Spits
  • The Trials of Dr. Wen Ho Lee
  • Tomorrow Never Dies
  • Animasians: The Cartoon Characters That Shaped Our Kidhood
  • Harold and Kumar
  • Spaces: The Asian American Film Festival
  • Elevated or Appropriated?
  • "Asian Night": The Asian Party Scene
  • The Style List: 2000s
  • Generasian Gap: 2000s
  • The Asian American Reality TV Hall of Fame
  • William Hung Does Not Need Your Sympathy
  • The Asian American Playlist: The 2000s
  • Bhangra Is the Beat
  • The Dance Crew Revolution]p270
  • Tops of the Tube: Pioneers of Asian American YouTube
  • The Musicians: A YouTube Playlist
  • Founding Fathers and Mothers: 2000s
  • The Do-Over
  • Spaces: Finding Our Religion
  • What's Funny: The 2000s
  • The Wonderful World of White Saviors
  • Yellowface in the 2000s
  • The Asian American Yearbook: The 2000s
  • DISGRASIAN: 2000s
  • Undercover Asians: 2000s
  • 2010s
  • The 2010s: An Essay
  • The Asian American Playlist: The 2010s
  • Hashtag #ASIANAMERICA
  • Remembering Linsanity
  • The Asian American Syllabus: 2010s
  • Tops of the Tube: Asian American YouTube Crosses Over
  • The Seven Stages of PSY
  • Clawing Back at Tiger Mom
  • This Isn't Even My Final Form: The Evolution of Asian Memes
  • Appreciation or Appropriation?
  • Hallyu Like Me Now
  • Generasian Gap: 2010s
  • The Style List: 2010s
  • Asians All the Rave
  • Spaces: A Night in Koreatown
  • LOVE, Asian American Style
  • What's Funny?: 2010s
  • The FAQ About Apu
  • #StarringJohnCho
  • Fresh Off the Boat: A Retrospective
  • Three Kings
  • The Road to Crazy Rich Asians
  • Spaces: University Culture Fest
  • Founding Fathers and Mothers: 2010s
  • Asian Celebrity Chefs
  • The Asian American Yearbook: The 2010s
  • Gaming While Asian
  • Coming Out in Public
  • DISGRASIAN: 2010S
  • Undercover Asians: 2010s
  • Yellowface in the 2010s
  • It's a Bird ... It's a Plane ... It's Asian Superheroes
  • Beyond
  • Beyond: An Essay
  • Black and Asian: A Conversation
  • After "Asian August": A Conversation
  • Spaces: Life During COVID
  • The Essential Awkwafina 12-Pack
  • Tomorrow, the World: Talking with the Founders of Subtle Asian Traits
  • BTS: Inside the American ARMY
  • She, Rose: An Interview with Kelly Marie Tran
  • The Math of Andrew Yang
  • A Sign of Things to Come
  • It's an Honor Just to Be Sandra: An Interview with Sandra Oh
  • The First Action Hero
  • Afterword
  • Contributors
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
  • Credits
Review by Booklist Review

Compiled by journalists Yang and Phil Yu and producer Philip Wang, with illustrations by Julia Kuo, Rise documents the history and major shifts in pop culture from the 1980s to the present as experienced by Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPIs). Guided by engaging essays, honest dialogue, and graphics, readers will absorb and understand the struggles and successes of AAPIs in the U.S., particularly in the entertainment industry. Additional, thoughtfully explored issues include yellowface in Hollywood; cultural appropriation; relations between Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders; violence against South Asian Americans, particularly those of Muslim or Sikh faith after 9/11; and anti-Asian hate crime during COVID-19. Several invited contributors share their reflections on the roles of AAPIs impacting social media, food, and sports. An informative, smart, and refreshing book for readers of pop culture, American studies, ethnic studies, Asian Pacific American studies, and American cultural and social history, Rise offers invaluable firsthand accounts and experiences of AAPI writers, artists, and personalities on major milestones and achievements in pop culture.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Cultural critic Yang, Angry Asian Man blogger Yu, and filmmaker Wang take readers on a riveting tour through pop cultural milestones of the 1990s to the 2010s, when the children of the wave of Asian immigrants who came to America after the passage of 1965's Hart-Celler Act were confronted with "the job of trying to fill in the blank of what it meant to be Asian American." In graphic essays and conversations with artists, the authors reflect on how, for decades, finding success as an Asian American "meant making sure you could appeal to white audiences... compromising who you were." From the racially motivated murder of Vincent Chin in Detroit in 1982 to more recent reflections on the racial implications and random violence toward Asians perpetrated by those who falsely believe that Covid-19 is a "Chinese disease," they illustrate the obstacles Asian Americans have come up against and brilliantly juxtapose them with stories of how those barriers have been thwarted (Grey's Anatomy and Killing Eve fans will appreciate behind-the-scenes details of how Sandra Oh landed her roles on those shows). Interspersed throughout are amusing memes featuring K-pop sensation BTS and quirky depictions of Asian grocery stores and boba shops. This celebration of Asian American culture is as revelatory as it is entertaining. (Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

There's no disputing that Asian and Asian American popular culture is a powerhouse in the United States. K-pop is all over the radio, movies like Crazy Rich Asians are blockbusters, and television shows featuring Asian American actors are smash hits. But how did we get here? Years of struggle and hard work--much of it overlooked. Journalist Yang, blogger Phil Yu, and producer Philip Wang, along with a team of writers, chronicle the rise of Asian American popular culture, with a focus on 1990 to the present. Each section takes a deep dive into a specific time period, with extensive coverage of music, television and movies, fashion, dance, and news. The tone varies from irreverent to serious, and the content includes essays, interviews, poetry, lists, and profiles. A team of eight Asian American narrators capably handles this wide variety of content, adjusting the pacing to suit the tone of each individual piece. The sole drawback to the audiobook is that listeners miss out on the illustrations in the print edition, which include comic strips, portraits, and pull-out panoramas--all drawn by Asian American artists. VERDICT This heartfelt and entertaining chronicle serves as a showcase for exceptional Asian American audiobook narrators. A must-listen for pop culture buffs.--Nanette Donohue

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A fun and informative book about the explosion of Asian American culture in recent decades. In the past 30 years, there has been a wave of successful Asian-background artists, writers, actors, bloggers, and entrepreneurs who were born in America or arrived here when young. Until 1965, write Yang, Yu, and Wang, there were limits on the number of (legal) immigrants from Asia; for years after that, most arrivals were fleeing poverty or persecution. They focused mainly on building lives for their families, but the next generation showed an energetic, outward-looking diversity. This book--a collection of essays, interviews, illustrations, and even some comic-book pages--reflects that broad range. There are maps showing where Asian communities have developed and timelines indicating the key steps in overcoming social barriers. There is no question that there has been painful discrimination in the past, and it still exists, but great progress has been made. The authors examine the concept of "yellowface," where White actors played Asians, mainly as caricatures, and several essays look at the roots of racism. In the 1990s and 2000s, Asian countries were beginning to export culture: anime, movies, fashion, and music. That did much to break down anti-Asian sentiment, and the internet provided another springboard for Asian Americans to dive into the cultural currents. There is a difficult duality in the position of coming from one culture and growing into another, although it provides a heightened sense of observation of both sides. The image of the divided self often finds expression in comedy, and the comments from Asian American stand-up comics are hilarious, made more so by the thread of poignancy in the mix. Finding the balance between the future and the past is a continuing journey, and, as for most travelers, the crucial question is what you choose to take with you and what you leave behind. A hip, entertaining book, as imaginative in its presentation and stories as the generation it portrays. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.