Arts Research Abroad funding is available for this program. 70%-100% of program fees and flight costs will be covered for qualifying Arts students from the Vancouver campus.
About the Program
This course is led by Henry Yu, Faculty of Arts
- Dates: May 15, 2023 – June 30, 2023
- Travel dates: Approx May 29 – June 19, 2023
- Format: In person (Hybrid in Vancouver)
- Locations visited: Vancouver, Vancouver Island, international locations to be determined according to most updated travel and health situations (may include: Taiwan, Malaysia, and Singapore)
- Approximate program fees: $4750.00 - $5000.00 (plus tuition and flights)
- Funding: 70%-100% of program fees and flight costs will be covered for qualifying Arts students (Vancouver). Other qualifying students will receive a $1,000 Go Global Award We encourage students who are not eligible for the ARA funding to apply for the Global Pathfinder Award. See Program Fees and Costs for more details
About the Course
This year’s ACAM 390A program allows students to conduct interdisciplinary academic research while exploring the histories, cultures, foodways, heritage, and geographies of Asian migration around the Pacific. With field trips to sites across Vancouver Island, the Lower Mainland, and in Asia, students will explore themes including race, Asian migrants and Indigeneity, foodscapes, and cultural heritage in colonial islands. Students will learn in traditional and non traditional classroom settings locally and abroad to explore best practices in ethical community‐based research and knowledge sharing to rethink the history of BC and the Pacific, and learn about the intertwined histories of Asian migrants in the making of islands. Students will be asked to present a project at a community showcase in June 2023.
Experience in the Field
The course will begin with two weeks of lectures, field trips, and group activities Vancouver. The teaching team will invite community leaders from Chinatown, Punjabi Market, local museums and heritage organizations and other spaces to provide guest lectures to the class. After three weeks on Vancouver Island and in Asia, UBC students will travel back to Vancouver to complete their research projects. Students will have time to produce their thesis media project and paper for a community showing at the end of June.
Please note that the course schedule and itinerary are subject to change.