This month, we are working to prioritize the inclusion of topics related to genres of memory and Asian/American women’s activism. We aim to work together to address inequities on Wikipedia as we create and contribute to these articles.
Start by signing in or creating an account and clicking the button below to sign in to the event page. This will allow us to track your progress, offer specific tips and tricks, and acknowledge your accomplishments!
Below are lists of Wikipedia articles in need of edits and creation. Scholars and key topics linked in 'red' are articles that have yet to be created on Wikipedia. For additional scholarship, please reference the selected bibliography curated by Dr. Katie Bramlett on Genres of Memory and Asian/American Activism.
Alongside each scholar, we've suggested one field-specific article and one general interest, high impact article to incorporate relevant scholarship into. In addition, there is a section for establishing notability. The sources listed there are important to include to signal to other Wikipedia editors that the scholar is notable enough to have an article written on them.
Hoang, Haivan V. Writing Against Racial Injury: The Politics of Asian American Student Rhetoric. University of Pittsburgh Press, 2015.
Hoang, Haivan V. "Campus Racial Politics and a" Rhetoric of Injury"." College Composition and Communication 61.1 (2009): W385.
Hoang, Haivan V. "Asian American Rhetorical Memory and a Memory that Is Only Sometimes Our Own." Representations: Doing Asian American Rhetoric (2008): 62-82.
Hoang, Haivan Viet. “To come together and create a movement”: Solidarity rhetoric in the Vietnamese American Coalition (VAC). The Ohio State University, 2004.
Bernardo, Shane, and Terese Guinsatao Monberg. “Resituating Reciprocity within Longer Legacies of Colonization: A Conversation.” Community Literacy Journal vol. 14, no. 1, 2019, pp. 83–93.
Monberg, Terese Guinsatao. “Ownership, Access, and Authority: Publishing and Circulating Histories to (Re)Member Community.” Community Literacy Journal, vol. 12, no. 1, 2017, pp. 30–47.
Hope, Jeanelle K. "This Tree Needs Water!: A Case Study on the Radical Potential of Afro-Asian Solidarity in the Era of Black Lives Matter." Amerasia Journal, vol. 45, no. 2, 2019, pp. 222-237.
Santos, Aida F. "Do Women Really Hold up Half the Sky?: Notes on the Women's Movement in the Philippines." Gender, Culture & Society: Selected Readings in Women's Studies in the Philippines, ed. C. Sobritchea, 2004, pp. 23-41.
Kim, Phyllis. "Looking Back at 10 Years of the “Comfort Women” Movement in the US." The Transnational Redress Movement for the Victims of Japanese Military Sexual Slavery. De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 2020. Pp. 179-200.
Pham, Vincent N. “The Exiled Speak Back: Citizenship and Belonging in the White House ‘What’s Your Story?’ Video Challenge.” Enculturation: A Journal of Rhetoric, Writing and Culture, vol. 27, 2018.
Kimoto, Tamsin. “Becoming Restive: Orientations in Asian American Feminist Theory and Praxis.” Asian American Feminisms and Women of Color Politics. Lynn Fujiwara and Shireen Roshanravan, eds. University of Washington Press, 2018.
Prieto, Laura R. “A Delicate Subject: Clemencia López, Civilized Womanhood, and the Politics of Anti-Imperialism.” The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, vol. 12, no. 2, 2013, pp. 199–233.
Roshanravan, Shireen. “Weaponizing our (In)Visibility: Asian American Feminist Ruptures of the Model-Minority Optic.” Asian American Feminisms and Women of Color Politics. Lynn Fujiwara and Shireen Roshanravan, eds. University of Washington Press, 2018.
Roshanravan, Shireen. “Weaponizing our (In)Visibility: Asian American Feminist Ruptures of the Model-Minority Optic.” Asian American Feminisms and Women of Color Politics. Lynn Fujiwara and Shireen Roshanravan, eds. University of Washington Press, 2018.
The CCCC Wikipedia Initiative hosts monthly workshops, office hours, and coffeehouses. If you need some help getting started, have specific questions, or would like to find space to work on your article alongside your collaborators, these are great spaces to do so.
Curious about how different people navigate editing Wikipedia? Drop-in whenever you'd like from 1:00pm-2:00pm ET on Twitch where CCCC scholars and/or the CCCC Wikipedian-in-residence will live edit Wikipedia on a different topic focus.
This month, join us in discussing genres of memory and Asian/American women's activism and improving knowledge equity on Wikipedia. Dr. Katie Bramlett — an Assistant Professor of English and Director of the Writing Across the Curriculum Program at California State University, East Bay and 2021-22 CCCC Wikipedia Graduate Fellow — will present her research on "Genres of Memory and Asian/American Women's Activism."
After the talk, participants will be trained on how to edit Wikipedia. There will be opportunities to improve and create Wikipedia articles related to pivotal scholars and scholarship about genres of memory and Asian/Asian American Women's Activism.
If you would like to discuss something Wikipedia-related one-on-one or get help with a Wikipedia article you’re working on, please feel free to sign up for my office hours or email me to suggest another time (savannahcragin@berkeley.edu).