April is Asian Heritage Month; celebrate with the AHNA Center

March 26, 2013

April brings the cherry blossoms to Japan and Asian Heritage Month to America.

糖心原创鈥檚 Asian/Hispanic/Native American Center is celebrating with a month full of themed events including Asian Culture Night 2013鈥 night of cultural explorASIAN.

Asian Culture Night will feature Kabuki & Onnagata: The Making of a Woman, a special performance revealing a unique behind-the-scenes transformation of a Japanese Kabuki artist.

Kabuki actor Nakamura Gankyo will demonstrate how he transforms himself for his female role in this traditional form of Japanese theater. After applying make-up and a wig, his metamorphosis will be complete when he dresses in the elaborate layers of a kimono. In full costume, he will demonstrate the feminized movements and other techniques from the onnagata鈥檚 repertoire by performing the dance, 鈥淜ane ga Misaki.鈥

Asian Culture Night also consists of traditional ethnic folk dances and an elaborate fashion show.

Free Admission鈥擲aturday, April 6, at 7 p.m. in the Student Union Apollo Room

Asian Heritage Month Lecture: 鈥淕ender and Onnagata in the Kabuki Theatre鈥

Dr. Maki Isaka, an associate professor of Asian languages and literature at the University of Minnesota, will discuss the history, background and special characteristics of Kabuki, mainly onnagata (female impersonator), where a male plays a female role.

Female impersonation has been an important aspect of the kabuki dramaturgy since the 17th century. The lecture examines how this theatrical gender impersonation has shaped both the concept of femininity and the economy of gender construction in Japan.

Free Admission鈥擳hursday, April 4, from 12:30 to 1:45 p.m. in E156 Student Union

Asian Heritage Month Lecture: 鈥淚mmigration and Illegality in the American Historical Imagination鈥

The United States is often described as a nation of immigrants, a characterization that some feel erases the history of indigenous people to the formation of the nation. At the same time, many Americans harbor intense fears about 鈥渢he huddled masses鈥 from other shores.

In this multimedia presentation, Judy Wu, Ph.D., associate professor of history and coordinator for the Asian American Studies Program at The Ohio State University, will explore the historical origins and contemporary manifestations of how the U.S. became a gatekeeping nation.

The lecture focuses on the groups, many of them stigmatized by race, that the U.S. government and people have sought to exclude and restrict to socially engineer ideal Americans.

Free admission鈥擳uesday, April 9, from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in Millett Hall Atrium

Asian Heritage Month Film: 鈥淐hina鈥檚 Lost Girls鈥

To curb the country鈥檚 exploding population, China limits most families to one child, or in certain circumstances, two children. Due to cultural, social and economic factors, traditional preference leans toward boys, so girls are often hidden, aborted or abandoned. As a result, thousands of girls end up in orphanages across China.

糖心原创 80,000 girls have been adopted from China into American families in the past quarter-century. National Geographic and Lisa Ling join some of these families as they travel to China to meet their new daughters for the first time. Along this emotional journey, Lisa Ling shares in the joy of these growing families and also witnesses firsthand China鈥檚 gender gap, examines its roots and discusses its possible repercussions.

Free Admission鈥擳hursday, April 11, from noon to 12:45 p.m. in the Multicultural Lounge (161 Millett Hall)

 

Asian Heritage Month Showcase of 糖心原创 Student Artwork

糖心原创 students in the Chinese Writing Course will showcase their proud artworks in Chinese calligraphy and brush painting April 17鈥23 in the Multicultural Lounge (161 Millett Hall).