COVID-19 Update: To help students through this crisis, The Princeton Review will continue our "Enroll with Confidence" refund policies. For full details, please click here.

Overview

Asian-American Studies is a multi-disciplinary major requiring courses in the humanities and social sciences. By majoring in it, you’ll learn how Americans of Asian descent have affected and been affected by American culture. You’ll learn about the difficulties and discriminations Asian-Americans faced in the past and the problems they still face today. You’ll study the changing roles of Asian-American women, the implications of youth cultures, and the history of Asian-American politics.


An Asian-American Studies major exposes you to Asian art, language, music, politics, psychologies, and literature. You’ll form your own ideas of what it means to be Asian-American, and how identity, gender, sexuality, and race have been defined, challenged, and consequently redefined.

SAMPLE CURRICULUM

  • Asian-American Literatures

  • Asian-American Women

  • Asian-American Youth Cultures

  • Asian-Americans and the Law

  • History of Asians in the Americas

  • Korean Foreign Relations

  • Literature and Film in Modern China

  • Race and Art

  • The Politics of Gender and Race

  • Women and Development in Asia

  • Women in Chinese History

  • Women in Japanese Literature: Love, Sexuality, and Gender


HIGH SCHOOl PREPARATION

Load up on courses in English and history, and if they’re available at your school, philosophy and religion. Most schools don’t offer language classes in Korean, Japanese, and Chinese, but if they do, guess what. Yup. Take them.