Hide Advanced Options
Courses - Spring 2026
HNUH
University Honors
HNUH268Q
Displaced Lives and Stolen Identities in Asian American Literature and Culture
Credits: 3
Grad Meth: Reg, P-F
Refugee, undocumented, alien, enemy, criminal... These words have been used in American political and popular discourses to conjure images of difference, foreignness, and danger for those who identify as citizens. Using the Asian American context as a case study, this course examines narratives of displacement, forced migration, cultural erasure, and the struggles for visibility and belonging. We will explore how political conflicts, globalization, imperialism, and war have shaped Asian American experiences and identities, considering how traumatic dispersal, interconnectedness, and diasporic citizenship have transformed in fundamental ways our national identity. Students will analyze how immigrants are transformed from ordinary human beings to trespassers and how, through literatures of resistance, they reclaim humanity and agency. Students will also consider their own roles and responsibilities in current debates on immigration, citizenship, and belonging in the U.S.
HNUH268Q is part of the Homeland Insecurity thematic cluster and pairs with HNUH268C to complete the cluster. Homeland Insecurity courses will be offered through Spring 2027.