Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Carrot #2

I've run into a particular idiom "carrot or stick" several times this semester in discussions with people about trying to get my dissertation done this semester. Basically, carrots are rewards while sticks are punishments. Being partial to carrots over sticks in this instance, I wanted to post another one (in my previous post I talked about reading Kathy Reichs' novels featuring Dr. Temperance Brennan) to remind myself what lays ahead/beyond.

Today I got an email from The New Press which featured Secret Identities:
The Asian American Superhero Anthology
edited by Jeff Yang, Parry Shen, Keith Chow, and Jerry Ma (2009) ISBN 978-1-59558-398-7



A groundbreaking graphic collection that explores Asian American culture, identity, and history through all-new superhero comics
What if we told you a tale about a quiet, unassuming guy with black hair and thick glasses; an immigrant, who’s done his best to fit into a world that isn’t his? Many Asian Americans fit that bill. But so does Clark Kent, better known to the world as Superman. —The editors of Secret Identities

Appealing to both comics fans and Asian Americans seeking to claim their place in American culture, Secret Identities makes brilliant use of the conventions of the superhero comic book to expose the real face of the Asian American experience.

This groundbreaking graphic anthology brings together leading Asian American creators in the comics industry—including Gene Yang (National Book Award finalist for American Born Chinese), Bernard Chang (Wonder Woman), Greg Pak (The Hulk), and Christine Norrie (Black Canary Wedding Special )—to craft original graphical short stories set in a compelling “shadow history” of our country: from the building of the railroads to the Japanese American internment, the Vietnam airlift, the murder of Vincent Chin, and the incarceration of Dr. Wen Ho Lee.

Entertaining and enlightening, Secret Identities offers whiz-bang action, searing satire, and thoughtful commentary from a community too often overlooked by the cultural mainstream, while showcasing a vivid cross-section of the talents whose imagination and creativity is driving the contemporary comics renaissance.

Jeff Yang was the founder of the pioneering Asian American periodical aMagazine. The author of three books and the biweekly column “Asian Pop” for the San Francisco Chronicle, he lives in Brooklyn, New York. Parry Shen, best known for his lead role in the movie Better Luck Tomorrow, lives in Southern California. Keith Chow, an educator and comics journalist, lives in Maryland. Jerry Ma, the founder of the indie comics studio Epic Proportions, lives in New York City.

It sounds totally fun and interesting.

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