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| Histories, Traditions, and the Diaspora Educate yourself, and each other, about Asian histories, traditions, and the diaspora. |
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#1
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Collection of articles from Time Asia, I haven't read all of them yet, but they look interesting:
http://www.time.com/time/asia/2003/journey/story.html The Journey Home As Asians set down new roots around the world, home is no longer a fixed destination, explains Pico Iyer. It is as much a favorite dish, a memory or an idea as it is an old house. In this special issue, TIME invites some of the Asian diaspora's top writers to embark on physical and mental voyages of return JOHN STANMEYER/VII FOR TIME Homeward Bound: For many Asians, home is an intangible thing Where do you come from?" "what do you call home?" The simplest questions these days bring ever more complex answers—when they bring answers at all. Which is another way of saying that the fundamental, defining questions of any life have been spun around and sometimes exploded in the modern, mongrel world. I, for example, am 100% Indian by blood and heritage. Most of my relatives live in India, my family name places me very specifically in terms of caste and region and religion, and everything about my face shouts out, unanswerably, "India!" Yet I've never lived in India or worked there. I speak not a word of any of the country's 1,652 dialects. And when I return to what is, on paper at least, my ancestral home—Bombay—I feel more a stranger there, often, than do many of my friends from San Francisco or North London. Ask me to take a journey home, and my first question is: do you mean Oxford, England (where I was born), or California (where I keep my things and pay my taxes)? Or do you mean Japan (my adopted home, where I spend seven or eight months of every year)? The one place that does not come to mind is India. For the Asian diaspora, home, like everything in the modern floating world, has gone global and fragmented, portable and underground. What once might have resembled a well-creased snapshot now looks more like an MTV video. To better understand what home means in the midst of constant flux, what exile truly is, and what it involves to live in many places all at once, Time invited leading Asian writers to stage some version of the classic journey home in the pages that follow. Some found themselves in places they hardly recognized. Others went to lands where the only roots they could see were as indecipherable as the roots of a language they could not speak. Still others chose not to leave their Western homes at all and instead fashioned their sense of belonging at their desks. When Ma Jian returned to his beloved home street in Beijing, he realized that the only home that lasts, and will be safe from time and history, is invisible, inside himself. Gish Jen, an American by choice, takes apart the very meaning of "Chineseness," while Chang-rae Lee seems to dissolve the very category of "Korea" in his return to a family far away. Wendy Law-Yone suggests, thinking of her native Burma in her exile home in London, that home may be the place you long to flee (and exile may be a haven, a glad escape). And Pankaj Mishra, staying put, writes wistfully of how the quiet home he has found is changing around him daily.
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我討厭訓導主任的嘴臉 討厭被束縛 That's true 很多人不屑我的態度 他們說我太酷 警察不爽我都曾將我逮捕 I don't give a fuck about 人家說什麼 他們想說什麼就說什麼 但是他們算什麼 沒有誰有權利拿他的標準衡量我 主宰是我自己 隨便人家如何想 我還是我 - 宋岳庭 |
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#2
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For me, home will always be Beijing, China.
I have a lot of emotional attachments to that city. :) |
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#4
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QUOTE:
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#6
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Dude, Beijing rules, although my number 2 area is
Honolulu, Hawaii, and number three Minneapolis, Minnesota :P |
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#8
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It's tourist hell and it's a fucking jungle climate in the summer, but Orlando, FL will always be my home [feel free to laugh! :lol: ], born and raised there.
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DAMN IT'S GOOD TO BE KING! |
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#9
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<!--QuoteBegin-SunWuKung+Aug 13 2003, 06:52 PM--></div><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (SunWuKung @ Aug 13 2003, 06:52 PM)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'><!--QuoteEBegin--> wow, do we have a contingent of tongue-curling Beijingers on YW?
and where has Tess been? [/b][/quote] my family don't curl our tongue....and besides, it's the correct way of pronounciation anyways :P |
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#10
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Home is Malaysia, not China, Taiwan, HK, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, or whatnot. Merdeka was our Merdeka. Malaysian Chinese and Malaysian Indians figured this one out a long time ago. And as usual, a bunch of American writers just got it, and now they think it's an amazing original insight about a new kind of lifestyle, attributable only to "modern transnationalism" and "the globalizing economy."
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#11
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<!--QuoteBegin-Tao+Aug 13 2003, 08:05 PM--></div><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (Tao @ Aug 13 2003, 08:05 PM)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'><!--QuoteEBegin--> <!--QuoteBegin-SunWuKung+Aug 13 2003, 06:52 PM--></div><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (SunWuKung @ Aug 13 2003, 06:52 PM)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'><!--QuoteEBegin--> wow, do we have a contingent of tongue-curling Beijingers on YW?
and where has Tess been? [/b][/quote] my family don't curl our tongue....and besides, it's the correct way of pronounciation anyways :P [/b][/quote] I do roll my tounges, my I guess cauz I'm a hardcore Beijinger! Actually, I'm not that hardcore. :P |
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#12
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<!--QuoteBegin-SunWuKung+Aug 13 2003, 07:43 PM--></div><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (SunWuKung @ Aug 13 2003, 07:43 PM)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'><!--QuoteEBegin--> i want to visit BJ to check out the underground rock scene. [/b][/quote]
I heard the UG rock scene in beijing is pretty solid, but I'll go back for the hot girls! :P |
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#13
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For me home is japan and always will be japan. Nothing will change this.
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#14
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<!--QuoteBegin-MellowDrama+Aug 13 2003, 11:50 PM--></div><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (MellowDrama @ Aug 13 2003, 11:50 PM)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'><!--QuoteEBegin--> It's tourist hell and it's a fucking jungle climate in the summer, but Orlando, FL will always be my home [feel free to laugh! :lol: ], born and raised there. [/b][/quote]
hey i lived in Orlando for a year, moved away, and then lived there again for a few months just before i came to DC. my parents live in Orlando. where in Orlando are you? my parents live in Apopka. |
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#15
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Dao!!!
Beijinger reporting to SWK..!!! ^_~ Oh my...this "YoMama" individual...is like a male version of me... Biz school...Finance major...hardcore Beijing accent... :blink:
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"Great men often encounter opposition from inferior minds..."--From Einstein and Xishi... |
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