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book (4)


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Book
Grace after genocide : Cambodians in the United States
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ISBN: 1785334719 1785334700 Year: 2017 Publisher: New York ; Oxford, [England] : Berghahn Books,

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Abstract

"Grace after Genocide is the first comprehensive ethnography of Cambodian refugees, charting their struggle to transition from life in agrarian Cambodia to survival in post-industrial America, while maintaining their identities as Cambodians. The ethnography contrasts the lives of refugees who arrived in America after 1975, with their focus on Khmer traditions, values, and relations, with those of their children who, as descendants of the Khmer Rouge catastrophe, have struggled to become Americans in a society that defines them as different. The ethnography explores America's mid-twentieth century involvement in Southeast Asia and its enormous consequences on multiple generations of Khmer refugees"--


Book
Cambodian Buddhism in the United States
Author:
ISBN: 9781438466651 143846665X 9781438466637 Year: 2017 Publisher: Albany

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Book
Grace after genocide
Author:
ISBN: 9781785334719 1785334719 9781785334702 Year: 2019 Publisher: New York

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Keywords

Cambodian culture since 1975
Authors: --- ---
ISBN: 1501723855 9781501723858 9780801429675 0801429676 9780801481734 0801481732 Year: 1994 Publisher: Ithaca Cornell University Press

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Abstract

Since the civil war of the 1970s, Cambodia has suffered devastating upheavals that killed a million ' people and exiled hundreds of thousands. This book is the first to examine Cambodian culture after the ravages of the Pol Pot regime-and to bear witness to the transformation and persistence of tradition among contemporary Cambodians at home and abroad. Bringing together essays by Khmer and Western scholars in anthropology, linguistics, literature, and ethnomusicology, the volume documents the survival of a culture that many had believed lost. Individual chapters explore such topics as Buddhist belief and practice among refugees in the United States, distinctive features of modern Cambodian novels, the lessons taught by Khmer proverbs, some uses of metaphor by the Khmer Rouge regime, the state of traditional music, the recent revival of a form of traditional theater, the concept of pain in Khmer culture, changing conceptions of gender, and refugees' interpretation of American television. Together the essays map a contemporary Cambodian culture, which, for over two hundred thousand Khmers, is now firmly entwined in the social fabric of the urban West.

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