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Tomoko Tokunaga

Learning to Belong in the World


An Ethnography of Asian American Girls
Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2018. 2019. xiii, 156 S. 5 SW-Abb., 5 Farbtabellen. 235 mm
Verlag/Jahr: SPRINGER, BERLIN; SPRINGER SINGAPORE; SPRINGER 2019
ISBN: 981134163X (981134163X)
Neue ISBN: 978-9811341632 (9789811341632)

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This book provides a complex and intricate portrayal of Asian American high school girls - which has been an under-researched population - as cultural meditators, diasporic agents, and community builders who negotiate displacement and attachment in challenging worlds of the in-between. Based on two years of ethnographic fieldwork, Tomoko Tokunaga presents a portrait of the girls´ hardships, dilemmas, and dreams while growing up in an interconnected world. This book contributes a new understanding of the roles of immigrant children and youth as agents of globalization and sophisticated border-crossers who have the power and agency to construct belonging and identity across multiple contexts, spaces, times, activities, and relationships. It has much to offer to the construction of educative communities and spaces where immigrant youth, specifically immigrant girls, can thrive.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Focusing on the experiences of Asian American girls.- Chapter 2 Searching for Belonging in-between homelands.- Chapter 3 Creating Ibasho in-between school walls.- Chapter 4 Fostering Belonging and Identity at a community-based organization.- Chapter 5 Forming Identity and Girlhood through consumer culture.- Chapter 6 Constructing imagined homes in the deterritorialized world.- Chapter 7 Lessons and messages from borderland dwellers.- Epilogue.
Tomoko Tokunaga is a Project Assistant Professor at the International Center, Keio University in Tokyo. She received her Ph.D. in Educational Leadership and Policy Studies (specialization in Socio-cultural Foundations of Education) as a Fulbright Scholar from the University of Maryland, College Park, and her M.A. in Education from the University of Tokyo. Her research focuses on the impact of migration on immigrant youth and their potential roles in a globalized world. She has conducted longitudinal multi-sited ethnographic research with Filipina immigrant girls in Japan and Asian American girls in the United States, focusing on notions of agency, belonging, identity, and borderlands.
More recently, she has explored the possibilities of community engagement in empowering and supporting the creation of ibasho (places where one feels a sense of comfort, safety, and acceptance) for minority youth in Japan and the United States. She was awarded the 2013 Outstanding Dissertation Award from the American Educational Research Association (AERA) Special Interest Group: Research on the Education of Asian and Pacific Americans (REAPA), and the 2013 Presidential Early Career Fellowship from the Council on Anthropology and Education (CAE), a section of the American Anthropological Association (AAA). Her work has appeared in journals, including International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, Ethnography and Education, and Equity & Excellence in Education.