6
2013 Research Showcase Karla Lucht | [email protected] A "Mixed" Bag: Searching for Hapa Characters in Youth Literature

2013 Research Showcase Karla Lucht | [email protected] A "Mixed" Bag: Searching for Hapa Characters in Youth Literature

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: 2013 Research Showcase Karla Lucht | klucht@illinois.edu A "Mixed" Bag: Searching for Hapa Characters in Youth Literature

2013 Research Showcase

Karla Lucht | [email protected]

A "Mixed" Bag: Searching for Hapa Characters in Youth

Literature

Page 2: 2013 Research Showcase Karla Lucht | klucht@illinois.edu A "Mixed" Bag: Searching for Hapa Characters in Youth Literature

Defining “Hapa”

• Mixed Race• “Two or more races” (U.S. Census Bureau).• 9 million individuals identified themselves as mixed-race. • 2.6 million Americans identified themselves as part Asian.

• “Hapa”• Defined as “part” or “mixed,” with no racial or ethnic

meaning.• Stems from the phrase “hapa haole.”• Commonly used to describe Asian Pacific Islanders of mixed

race heritage.

Page 3: 2013 Research Showcase Karla Lucht | klucht@illinois.edu A "Mixed" Bag: Searching for Hapa Characters in Youth Literature

The Search

LOC Subject HeadingRacially mixed people – Fiction

Racially mixed people – Juvenile Fiction

Racially mixed children – Fiction

Subject Indices

Search Engine Keywords

Folksonomies

Page 4: 2013 Research Showcase Karla Lucht | klucht@illinois.edu A "Mixed" Bag: Searching for Hapa Characters in Youth Literature

Keyword Frenzy

Asian American

mixed-race

hapa

Asian Canadian

blasian

Eurasian

Multi-racial

biracial

Amerasian

orientalAfro-asian

Racially-mixed

Page 5: 2013 Research Showcase Karla Lucht | klucht@illinois.edu A "Mixed" Bag: Searching for Hapa Characters in Youth Literature

“When my mother met my father, she was a Japanese schoolgirl and he was an American sailor.”

-How My Parents Learned to Eat

Page 6: 2013 Research Showcase Karla Lucht | klucht@illinois.edu A "Mixed" Bag: Searching for Hapa Characters in Youth Literature

“She was both Vietnamese and American—but she felt like a nobody.”

-The Face in my Mirror cover