Online Exhibition
Artwork
An American Vocabulary: Words to Action consists of twenty-one multilingual flash cards that illustrate the four themes of ancestor, voice, persistence, and care through the portrayal of Asian American Native Hawaiian Pacific Islander (AANHPI) figures, events, actions, and values. A set of discussion questions invites people to consider their own relationships to language, identity, and community. The flash cards symbolize the way AANHPI communities translate their inimitable American histories across linguistic, cultural, and imaginative barriers.
We invite you to use these cards to expand and explore your own imagination of history and our present realities. View the card images below.
Flash card decks are available at the JANM Store. Buy Now
Artwork
Ongoing
Artwork
An American Vocabulary: Words to Action consists of twenty-one multilingual flash cards that illustrate the four themes of ancestor, voice, persistence, and care through the portrayal of Asian American Native Hawaiian Pacific Islander (AANHPI) figures, events, actions, and values. A set of discussion questions invites people to consider their own relationships to language, identity, and community. The flash cards symbolize the way AANHPI communities translate their inimitable American histories across linguistic, cultural, and imaginative barriers.
We invite you to use these cards to expand and explore your own imagination of history and our present realities. View the card images below.
Flash card decks are available at the JANM Store. Buy Now
Artwork
Ongoing
Artwork
An American Vocabulary: Words to Action consists of twenty-one multilingual flash cards that illustrate the four themes of ancestor, voice, persistence, and care through the portrayal of Asian American Native Hawaiian Pacific Islander (AANHPI) figures, events, actions, and values. A set of discussion questions invites people to consider their own relationships to language, identity, and community. The flash cards symbolize the way AANHPI communities translate their inimitable American histories across linguistic, cultural, and imaginative barriers.
We invite you to use these cards to expand and explore your own imagination of history and our present realities. View the card images below.
Flash card decks are available at the JANM Store. Buy Now
Ancestor
Who’s a community ancestor that has inspired you?
What in their life and legacy resonates with you?
Who walked where we walk?
Who spoke what we heard?
Who lived the lives that led to ours?
Those who went before,
Where we will one day go.
Voice
How do you communicate your values to the world around you?
What forms of creativity and activism speak most strongly to you?
shout, scream, sing, pray
dance, draw, dream, whisper
move, march, make, laugh
Pour yourself into the world
Fierce and kind and brilliant
Persistence
What’s a part of your community’s history that you want remembered and recognized?
What do you see that’s at risk of being erased from public memory?
When you hear nothing, listen.
When you see nothing, look.
No canvas is blank,
No room is silent.
Behind eraser marks and echoes
are Everything.
Thai Garment Workers
On August 2, 1995, seventy-two Thai garment workers were rescued from slavery in El Monte, California. They had been trafficked from Thailand with false promises of legal work and held under threats of violence.
After being freed by government agencies and the Thai Community Development Center, the workers were detained by US Immigration. Immigrants’ rights organizations lobbied for nine days before they were finally released into the care of the Thai CDC. They were later granted US residency, reunited with their families, and won a settlement from the corporations that profited from their enslavement.
Care
What are some ways you’ve offered and received care?
Imagine a society rooted in care—what would it look, sound, and feel like?
When the winds come
We kindle warmth where we can
Build fires and homes and friends
We plant on land we do not own.
Giving care, taking care,
Feeding each other.
Support the understanding and appreciation of the Japanese American experience.