Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Happy Year of the Horse!  

There are several events on campus to celebrate Chinese New Year.  Click here for more details.

Dear students,

The Asian Studies Department is extending a special invitation to us to attend a play by Tony Award winning playwright David Henry Hwang in NYC.  Transportation to and from the play by bus will be provided by Kean:

Kung Fu by David Henry Hwang  

When: Wednesday, February 26, 2014
Time: 12:30 PM meet in front of the Little Theater
Where: Signature Theatre Company 480 West 42nd Street
New York, NYC

Cost: ONLY $10.00!!!!

Click on this link for further details:

Monday, January 27, 2014

Twitter account tutorial


A short tutorial on how to set up your class twitter account:




Getting Started With Blogger


Here is a reference for all of you on how to get your blogger account up and running:


Wednesday, January 22, 2014



Welcome to Ethnic American Literature!  This course explores the way in which writers engage directly with dominant narratives of America. We will consider the role the selected literature has played in interrogating questions of ethnicity, class, gender and sexuality in American culture. Issues and topics addressed include: cultural pluralism, the melting pot and American "identity", ethnic and cultural difference; immigration, displacement, and migratory identities; geographical and metaphorical borderlands; mixed blood and the divided self; ethnic nationalism and cultural survival; and "whiteness" as a racial and ethnic category. 

Throughout the course, our focus will be on textual analysis – on how particular literature and films give formal shape to the experiences they depict. You can expect to leave this course able to articulate some of your own claims about how literature interacts with, and shapes, the social context out of which authors write. In the course, you will learn to engage in important conversations about the boundaries of America, by paying close reading attention to the complexity of the literary texts at hand.  You will also tell you own stories, and you will do so in a digital context.  This blog will be our "home base" for sharing and reflecting on our collective American stories.

Looking forward to a special semester with all of you,

Dr. Zamora