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Asian American and Asian Diaspora Studies: Digital Archives & Oral History Collections
Resources to explore Asian American and Asian Diaspora Studies.
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Asian American Studies
Community Organizations: San Francisco Bay Area
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AAADS Community Archive
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Chinese American History through Documentary Making
A list of digital collections of primary source materials, including oral histories, related to Asian American and Asian Diaspora Studies.
Ethnic Studies Library Digital Collections
The Ethnic Studies Library has a growing number of digital collections publicly accessible. Collections can be found on
Calisphere
Omeka
and the
Internet Archive
UC Berkeley Library Databases
Afghanistan and the U.S., 1945-1963: Records of the U.S. State Department Classified Files
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Record of declassified U.S. State Department files documenting U.S. and Afghan relations during the height of the Cold War and U.S. policies towards Afghanistan.
Calisphere
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Digitized images including photographs, documents, newspaper pages, political cartoons, works of art, diaries, transcribed oral histories, advertising, and other unique cultural artifacts that reveal the diverse history and culture of California and its role in national and world history.
Gateway to digitized images from the libraries and museums of the University of California campuses, cultural heritage organizations in California, and UC-created websites and collections.
Early Arrivals Records Search (EARS)
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A dataset from Investigation Arrival Case Files, San Francisco and Hawaii, Records of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, Record Group 85, National Archives at San Francisco.
Independent Voices
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Over 1000 alternative press titles focusing on the 60s, 70s and 80s. Includes publications by feminists, dissident GIs, campus radicals, Native Americans, anti-war activists, Black Power advocates, Latinos, gays, lesbians and more. [1960 - 2000]
Japanese American Relocation Camp Newspapers
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Searchable full text database of 25 newspapers written and produced by Japanese Americans interned during World War II.
"Although subject to censorship the newspapers document the day to day life of the internees. Titles includes: Rohwer Outpost, Poston Chronicle, Gila News Courier, Tulean Dispatch, Granada Pioneer, Minndoka Irrigator, Topaz Times, Manzanar Free Press, Denson Tribune, and Heart Mountain Sentinel. (1942-1945)"
Japanese American Relocation Digital Archive, Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley
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The Japanese American Relocation Digital Archives (JARDA) contains thousands of primary sources documenting Japanese American internment.
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Library of Congress Digital Collections
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Access the digital collections of the Library of Congress.
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Migration to New Worlds
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Explores the movement of peoples from Great Britain, Ireland, mainland Europe and Asia to the New World and Australasia. [1800-1980]
Unique primary source diaries, correspondence, photographs, oral histories and journals narrate the vivid realities of ocean travel and life in adopted homelands. Organisational correspondence, government proceedings, shipping company papers and records of advocacy groups provide key context to migrants’ everyday struggles.
My China Roots
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Off campus access via VPN only. My China Roots is a family history database for the Chinese diaspora that includes millions of searchable ancestors in America and Southeast Asia. The database includes thousands of clan books (zupus), immigration registers, burial and obituary records, and overseas Chinese business directories and association records. Surnames or village names are searchable. Most Chinese documents are full-text viewable online.
Personal Justice Denied: Public Hearings of the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment
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Testimony and documents from more than 750 individuals involved in the Japanese American Internment during World War II.
"Includes material from more than 750 Japanese-Americans and Aleuts who had lived through the events of World War II, as well as government officials who ran the internment program, public figures, organizations such as the Japanese American Citizens League, interested citizens, historians, and other professionals who had studied the internment. Documents include personal stories, publications, reports, press releases, photographs, newspaper clippings, etc. (1981, principally covers 1942 - 1945)"
Rafu Shimpo Digital Archive
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Rafu Shimpo began in 1903 and is the longest running Japanese American newspaper in the U. S. During WWII, it was suspended from 1942-1945, and was revived in 1946. The digital archive contains all obtainable issues from 1914 through 2018.
San Francisco Chinese Community and Earthquake Damage, ca. 1906
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he San Francisco Chinese Community and Earthquake Damage album contains 223 photographic prints taken circa 1906.
Workers, Labor Unions, Progressives, and Radicals
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Focuses on workers and the American labor movement since the Civil War as well as other progressive and radical social movements. Taken as a whole, this category documents the efforts of labor unions and other organizations to impact American and international politics. Notable collections are records of the Knights of Labor; the AFL, CIO, and AFL-CIO; Socialist Party of America, Students for a Democratic Society, Americans for Democratic Action, and the American Jewish Congress. Events documented in this category include major labor strikes such as the Pullman Strike of 1894, the 1912 Lawrence, Massachusetts textile strike, and the National railroad yardmen's strike; presidential elections; the 1955 merger of the American Federation of Labor (AFL) and the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO); the 1962 Port Huron Statement by Students for a Democratic Society; and anti-Vietnam War demonstrations, including those demonstrations organized by Vietnam Veterans Against the War, such as Operation Dewey Canyon III in 1971.
Southeast Asia Digital Library
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The Southeast Asia Digital Library is a growing repository of resources from and about the region of Southeast Asia. It supports Southeast Asian research and education by making these unique digitized materials freely accessible in one website.
"SEADL is a multi-institutional project and our digital collections come from libraries and archives around the world. SEADL supports research and education in Southeast Asian Studies by making these unique digitized materials freely accessible in one website."
A-Z Asian American Studies Digital Archive Collections and Websites
AAPI Community COVID Archival Project
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The AAPI Community COVID Archival Project was active from 2021-2023. Click this link to access the archived website on Internet Archive.
AAPI COVID-19 Project (Harvard University)
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The AAPI COVID-19 Project is a collective research project bringing together faculty, graduate researchers, and undergraduate research assistants at seven academic institutions in the United States. Our project explores multiple layers of harm connected to the pandemic — the virus itself and the intensification of racism and xenophobia that A/AAs & NHPIs have endured in its wake.
Asian American Art Oral History Project (DePaul University)
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Founded in 2009, this ongoing student conducted project led by Laura Kina, Professor in The Art School, is dedicated to collecting oral histories of Asian/Asian American artists and key organizers and participants of Asian/Asian American arts and cultural organizations. While the scope of the project encompasses diasporic and US born Asians across the United States, the primary focus of the archive is to document the history of Midwestern Asian American artists and arts organizations.
Asian American Literary Archive
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The Asian American Literary Archive is a crossroads between artists, scholars, and archivists for preserving, creating, and animating Asian American literary history. Founded in 2023, the Archive aims to connect existing efforts between libraries, literary organizations, artists, and scholars while also serving as a laboratory for new strategies to reproduce, replenish, and recover the memories we need to survive.
Asian American Movement 1968
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This website features the Asian American Movement 40th Anniversary collection from the archives of the Asian Community Center (once located on Kearny St. in San Francisco). The collection focuses on 1968 because that year was the beginning point for the Asian American movement. 1968 witnessed world changing events and many Asian Americans responded to make the world a better place for humanity. This project is sponsored by the Asian Community Center History Group.
Auntie Sewing Squad Oral HIstory Project
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This oral history archive derives from a genealogy of community-based oral history projects that aims to redress the historical absence of women’s lives from archival collections. Throughout CSUMB’s first fully online semester, SBS 112 students worked with oral history archives that centered women's voices during significant historical events, including the Federal Writers Project in the New Deal, the WWII Rosie the Riveter Archive, and the Chicana Feminism Oral History Project. This class emphasizes student-led oral histories and takes its cue from Grace Yoo’s first class on the Auntie Sewing Squad at San Francisco State University. Oral histories provide opportunities for students to drive the interview and Aunties to pass on their stories. Students created an archive dedicated to the histories and activism of the Auntie Sewing Squad during Covid-19.
Beginnings of Activism for the Department of Asian American Studies (BADAAS) at University of California, Irvine collection
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This collection consists of 21 oral histories from the Beginnings of Activism for the Department of Asian American Studies (BADAAS) at University of California, Irvine project. BADAAS was a group created by the chair of the Department of Asian American Studies, Dr. Judy Wu, and Dr. Thuy Vo Dang, director of the Southeast Asian Archive for the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Department of Asian American Studies. They assembled a group of interns to research the history of the creation of Asian American Studies on campus and conducted oral histories with the professors, staff and faculty members, activists, and former students involved its foundation.
The Berkeley Revolution Digital Archive
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This website is a collective project, one which emerged from an honors undergraduate seminar in American Studies at UC-Berkeley, “The Bay Area in the Seventies,” taught by Scott Saul in the spring of 2017. The eleven students in that seminar shaped their own research projects, burrowing into archives official and unofficial so as to recover the stories missing from, or hidden within, standard accounts of Berkeley’s history.
Bophana Center
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The Bophana Center is an audiovisual center located in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The center is dedicated to restoring, protecting and enhancing the Cambodian audiovisual heritage.
CAAAV (Committee Against Anti-Asian Violence) Archives
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CAAAV Organizing Asian Communities, formerly known as the Committee Against Anti-Asian Violence, was founded in 1986. For over thirty years, CAAAV has organized low-income Asian immigrant and refugee communities in New York City for racial, economic, and gender justice. Through the decades, the organization has amassed thousands of photographs, newsletters, audiovisual materials, oral histories, and ephemera documenting histories of resistance of Asian American communities in New York and beyond. The digital archive makes these materials accessible to community members, organizers, activists, researchers, students, and artists.
California Cultures: Asian Americans (Calisphere)
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An exhibit of Asian American-related material on Calisphere. Calisphere provides free access to unique and historically important artifacts for research, teaching, and curious exploration. Discover over two million photographs, documents, letters, artwork, diaries, oral histories, films, advertisements, musical recordings, and more.
Center for Lao Studies
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This project, the first of its kind, will document the untold stories of Lao refugees in the US through audio and video media and create an on-line archive of interviews, videos, and historical documents. Currently, there are almost no existing oral history projects and little academic research that focus on the ethnic Lao refugees in the US. By creating a Lao Oral History archive, CLS aims to raise awareness within the Lao-American community and the greater population of the history, culture, and contemporary realities of Lao refugees in the US as well as the Central Intelligence Agencys (CIA) Secret War in Laos in the 1960s and 70s. This project will disseminate the voices of underrepresented population, whose stories of immigration reflect unique moments in both Lao and American history, thereby building bridges between the past and present and between disparate cultures.
Centering Philippine and Filipinx American Histories: Selections from the Bancroft Library
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This exhibit highlights The Bancroft Library’s collections of materials related to the Philippines and Filipinx Americans, from the period of Spanish and American colonization of Indigenous communities in the archipelago through the present. The collections that illuminate Spanish colonial rule (1565-1898) display the religious, legal, and commercial interest of the Spanish Empire in converting these communities to Catholicism and exploiting the islands’ natural, cultural, and human resources.
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A more expansive collection of materials speaks to the history between the United States and the Philippines. During the period of American colonialism (1898-1946), a number of University of California, Berkeley, faculty were deeply involved in the colonization of the Philippines, especially in the field of education, which Americans viewed as a tool for pacifying a conquered population. Bernard Moses and David Prescott Barrows, among others, propagated the myth of the American “civilizing project.” This exhibition features selections that contrast their work with that of Filipinx and Asian American scholars who have critically engaged with, and upended, the white supremacist ideological underpinnings of their “project.”
Filipino students have attended UC Berkeley since at least the early twentieth century, whether as international students from the Philippines or as Filipinx Americans. As scholar Funie Hsu notes, “Filipinos did not always internalize the colonial ideology propagated by colonial educators. … Although colonial education has been used as a weapon of oppression, … it can also be employed critically.” The University Archives, a Bancroft division, holds publications created by these students, which reflect the ways they negotiated their relationship to the Philippines, the United States, and their identities in the aftermath of American imperialism.
Bancroft’s literary collections include the papers of acclaimed author and performance artist Jessica Hagedorn, who has written novels, plays, poetry, song lyrics, and a screenplay, examples of which are on display in this exhibit. Hagedorn employs a kaleidoscope of pop culture references, songs, images, quotes from historical figures, and a galaxy of characters representing different cultures, classes, genders, races, and nationalities in her depictions of the Philippines and Filipinx America.
Chee Kung Tong Archives (UC Berkeley C.V. Starr East Asian Library)
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Chee Kung Tong (致公堂) or Hongmen Society (洪门) was established in 1848. It registered as a nonprofit organization in San Francisco in 1879. The Society has close links to Dr. Sun Yat-sen, who joined a branch of the Hongmen while he was in Honolulu to rally support for the revolution. Chee Kung Tong donated its archive of a few thousands of items including the Society’s historical records and photos to C.V. Starr East Asian Library in May 2018. This archive is under processing and will be accessible in the near future.
Chinatown Records Archive
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Homebased in NYC’s Manhattan Chinatown, DJ historian yiuyiu 瑶瑶 takes on her childhood name to care for & activate the Chinatown Records archive of over 30 record/CD/tape collections inherited from her family & neighbors.
Chinese Canadian Stories
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These digitized collections consist of materials that document Chinese Canadian history represented in the holdings of UBC Library, SFU Library, City of Vancouver Archives, Community Historical Recognition Program (CHRP) community partners, and other community contributors. The collections contain digitized photographs, audio/video recordings, manuscripts (including correspondence and diaries), newspapers and other publications. The digital collections can be searched individually or all at once. To conduct a search, enter keywords, place names, personal names, or dates using our Search function. You can also Browse the collections individually.
Chinese Workers Mutual Aid Association Records on the Internet Archive
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Digitized Federal Bureau of Investigation File on the Chinese Workesr Mutual Aid Association.
Densho: The Japanese American Legacy Project
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Densho is a nonprofit organization started in 1996, with the initial goal of documenting oral histories from Japanese Americans who were incarcerated during World War II. This evolved into a mission to educate, preserve, collaborate and inspire action for equity. Densho uses digital technology to preserve and make accessible primary source materials on the World War II incarceration of Japanese Americans. We present these materials and related resources for their historic value and as a means of exploring issues of democracy, intolerance, wartime hysteria, civil rights and the responsibilities of citizenship in our increasingly global society.
FoundSF: San Francisco's Digital Archive
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FoundSF is a wiki that invites history buffs, community leaders, and San Francisco citizens of all kinds to share their unique stories, images, and videos from past and present. There are over 1,800 articles here presenting primary sources, essays, and images from history.
Hmongstory 40
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The year 2015 marked 40 years of the Hmong migration from Laos and Thailand to the United States of America. To commemorate this special anniversary, an exhibition comprised of photographs, stories, fine art, and artifacts was create to showcase the Hmong experience.
Hmongstory 40 is a joint effort from many people from throughout the state of California. It represents a collaborative that shares a common vision. This exhibition provides a rare and intimate opportunity to connect with the Hmong people. From the past to the present, Hmongstory 40 constructed a narrative that was absent within the Hmong community and to the general public at large.
Hoji Shinbun Digital Collection: Japanese Diaspora Initiative, Hoover Institution Library & Archives, Stanford University
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The Hoji Shinbun Digital Collection is currently the world’s largest online archive of open-access, full‑image Japanese American and other overseas Japanese newspapers. All image content in this collection has enhancements added where possible, thus rendering the text maximally searchable. The holdings of each title are also browsable by date, with each title cross searchable with other titles on the platform. This collection is planned to contain some sixty newspapers published in Hawaii and North America. Most publications present a mix of content in Japanese and English, with formats and the proportionality of Japanese/English often changing as a reflection of shifting business and social circumstances.
Immigrant Stories (University of Minnesota)
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Immigrant Stories helps people tell, share, and preserve personal and family immigration stories. Use this website and create a digital story: a 3-5 minute video made from your own photos, text, and audio.
Kearny Street Workshop archives (Calisphere)
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The nonprofit agency Kearny Street Workshop (KSW) is the oldest multidisciplinary Asian American arts organization in the United States. Established in 1972 as a collective of artists in San Francisco's Chinatown/ Manila town neighborhood, KSW is now a nonprofit agency that serves many Asian/Pacific American communities from its office in San Francisco. This collections covers material from 1972 - 2002. It contains posters, publications, and photos. The struggles of the neighborhood such as low-income housing, strikes by garment and electrical union workers, and the eviction of the elderly tenants defines much of the art in this collection.
Kearny Street Workshop Asian American Virtual Histories / Pilipinx Virtual Histories
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Kearny Street Workshop (KSW) is the oldest Asian Pacific American (APA) multidisciplinary arts organization in the United States. Asian American Virtual Histories is an intergenerational oral history project. Originally conceived in collaboration with Balay Kreative, the collected interviews of this initiative conducted with recognized trailblazers like Jessica Hagedorn and Leland Wong, and emerging artists alike, illuminate Kearny Street Workshop’s 50 years of community arts dating back to the height of the Asian American Movement. All videos are presented in 360 VR format.
Korean American Digital Archive, University of Southern California
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The Korean American Digital Archive brings more than 13,000 pages of documents, over 1,900 photographs, and about 180 sound files together in one searchable collection that documents the Korean American community during the period of resistance to Japanese rule in Korea and reveal the organizational and private experience of Koreans in America between 1903 and 1965.
Manilatown Heritage Foundation archives (California Revealed)
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The Manilatown Heritage Foundation’s core program is to maintain the legacies of San Francisco’s historic Manilatown neighborhood and the 1977 International Hotel Eviction by maintaining the International Hotel Manilatown Center as both a memorial to these legacies and as a multipurpose community gathering space for creative expressions relevant to today’s community.
Memories to Light: Asian American Home Movies (Center for Asian American Media)
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Memories to Light: Asian American Home Movies is a project of the Center for Asian American Media to digitize and make available home movies that reveal life the experiences of Asian American communities in California from the 1920s through the 1980s.
MITx: Visualizing Imperialism & the Philippines, 1898-1913
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Remarkable political cartoons and photography at the turn of the 20th century reveal debates over US entry into global imperialism through the conquest and occupation of the Philippines. Join historians on a journey through this rich content drawn from MIT Visualizing Cultures.
No-No Boy: A Snapshot of the Archive
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Created by Tara Fickle, this site contains snapshots of archives associated with Aiiieeeee: An Anthology of Asian American Writers third edition published in 2021.
An Other War Memorial: Memories of the American War in Viet Nam
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How do nations remember wars? Usually nations remember their own soldiers and citizens, and usually nations will build memorials to those who have died fighting their wars. But memorials help us to forget as much as they help us to remember. An Other War Memorial questions why nations should remember only their own, and why soldiers are the ones recalled in memorials. The war commemorated here is what some call the Vietnam War and what some call the American War. The people commemorated here are both the living and the dead, soldiers and civilians. Visitors can begin by clicking on a portrait to see the profile of someone who died in the war, survived the war, witnessed the war, or protested against it.
Punjabi and Sikh Diaspora Digital Archive, Unversity of California, Davis
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This archive offers a window into the story of South Asian immigrants from the Punjab region in north India to California since the turn of the twentieth century. Explore over 700 video interviews, speeches, diaries, photographs, articles, and letters in which Punjabi Americans share their life stories, values, and contributions to California’s history over the last hundred and twenty years.
Sacramento COVID-19 Asian American Oral History Project
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This project documents the experiences of the Asian Americans during the Covid-19 pandemic in the Sacramento region and beyond. Students in Asian American Communities, ETHN 113, identified and conducted oral histories with members of the Asian American community about their experiences during the Covid-19 pandemic. Topics include balancing work and employment during the pandemic, the rise in anti-Asian hate, the experiences of frontline workers, and how the social disruptions of the pandemic were connected to race and racialization. This community history project is overseen by Dr. William Gow.
SEA 50
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Digital resource created by the Southeast Asian Freedom Network (SEAFN) marking the 50th anniversary of Southeast Asians in the United States since the U.S. Wars in Southeast Asia. SEAFN is a national movement family of grassroots organizations working to mobilize Southeast Asians toward abolition.
Seattle Civil Rights and Labor History Project, University of Washington
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This multi-media web site brings the vital history of Seattle's civil rights movements to life with scores of video oral histories, hundreds of rare photographs, documents, movement histories, and personal biographies, more than 300 pages in all. Based at the University of Washington, the Seattle Civil Rights and Labor History Project is a collaboration between community groups and UW faculty and students.
Self Evident Oral History Story Archive and Oral History Toolkit
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Self Evident was launched in 2019 with "a goal to build serious infrastructure for Asian Americans to become the authors of their own stores." Their oral history story archive includes are available online. They have also created an oral history toolkit designed for all experience levels. You can view it here: https://selfevidentshow.com/oral-history-toolkit
South Asian American Digital Archive
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SAADA creates a more inclusive society by giving voice to South Asian Americans through documenting, preserving, and sharing stories that represent their unique and diverse experiences.
Southeast Asian Archive, University of California, Irvine
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Since the end of the Vietnam Conflict in 1975 a large number of refugees and immigrants from Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam have come to the United States, and especially to California. In order to document their experiences in a new culture, the UC Irvine Libraries established the Southeast Asian Archive in 1987. The Archive's collection is broad and interdisciplinary in documenting the social, cultural, religious, political, and economic life of Americans of Southeast Asian origin. Strengths include materials relating to the resettlement of Southeast Asian refugees and immigrants in the United States, refugee camp and other experiences of the "boat people" and land refugees, and the development and progress of new ethnic communities. There is a special focus on materials pertaining to Southeast Asian Americans in Orange County and California.
Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum
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The Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum preserves the memory of the S-21 prison site, where tens of thousands of Cambodians were killed during the Khmer Rouge era. Their archival collections are searchable and include pictures, documents, and more.
UMass Lowell Southeast Asian Digital Archive
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The UMass Lowell Southeast Asian Digital Archive is a community-centered archive of cultural heritage materials from Southeast Asian American communities in the greater Lowell, Massachusetts region. Lowell, Massachusetts is home to a large community of Southeast Asian refugees and the second largest Cambodian American community in the United States.
Vietnamese American Heritage Foundation (VAHF) Interviews, Rice University
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This collection consists of video interviews dating from 2011 and conducted by the Vietnamese American Heritage Foundation. These interviewees are Texas-based, and form part of the national 500 Oral Histories Project conducted by the Vietnamese Heritage Foundation. These interviews are online at https://scholarship.rice.edu/handle/1911/79696. Most are in Vietnamese, although some are in English. The collection guide can be found at https://legacy.lib.utexas.edu/taro/ricewrc/00865/rice-00865.html.
Viet Rainbow of Orange County Queer And Trans Viet Oral History Project
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Viet Rainbow OC’s oral history project envisions an oral history collection grounded in connection, belonging, and possibility across the spectrum of queer and trans Viet experience.
Viet Stories: Vietnamese American Oral History Project, University of California, Irvine
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Viet Stories: Vietnamese American Oral History Project at the University of California, Irvine actively assembles, preserves, and disseminates the life stories of Vietnamese Americans in Southern California. The project contributes to expanding archives on Vietnamese Americans with the primary goal of capturing first-generation stories for students, researchers, and the community. Launched in 2011, VAOHP is housed in the Department of Asian American Studies in the School of Humanities and collaborates with the UCI Libraries Southeast Asian Archive.
Visual Communications Archives (California Revealed)
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Visual Communications is the first non-profit organization in the nation dedicated to the honest and accurate portrayals of the Asian Pacific American peoples, communities and heritage through the media arts. The Visual Communications Archives is the repository for the records generated by and related to the history of Visual Communications. Its purpose is to document the history of the organization by organizing, preserving, and creating access to primary materials for staff use, as well as by scholars who are interested in Visual Communications’ role in the Asian American communities and history.
Watsonville is in the Heart: A Community Archive and Research Initiative
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The Watsonville is in the Heart digital archive preserves and uplifts the stories of the “manong” generation (Ilokano/Tagalog for "older brother"), the first wave of Filipino migrant farmworkers to arrive in the United States at the beginning of the 20th century. Focused on the pioneering families of Watsonville and the greater Pajaro Valley, the archive enshrines the manongs’ and their descendents’ memories of migration, labor, leisure, and community formation. The digital archive includes oral histories, family photographs, family heirlooms, letters and correspondences, and newspaper clippings.
Welga Project Digital Archive and Repository (UC Davis Bulosan Center)
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The Welga Project Digital Archive and Repository focuses on preserving and presenting primary sources regarding the Filipino American Labor and Activism History. Currently, most our collections focus on mid-20th century labor history. From 2017 forward, we are committed to expanding our collection to include the broad topic of Filipino American activism and labor history.
Wells Fargo Archives: Directories
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Business directories published by Wells Fargo offer important resources for researchers and family historians. In particular, several Chinese business directories from the 19th century have been digitized and are available here.
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