1st Edition

Asian American Places of Heritage Honoring Place, Culture, and Identity

Edited By Ashima Krishna, Nathan Swanson Copyright 2027
266 Pages 68 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Asian American Places of Heritage: Honoring Place, Culture, and Identity broadens the understanding of Asian American built heritage and its vital role in shaping the US cultural landscape. This groundbreaking volume explores how places significant to diverse Asian American cultures and communities fit within broader historical narratives of immigration, identity, and cultural expression. By... Read more

List of figures

List of Contributors

Foreword

Preface

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Part 1: Planning, Policy, and Placemaking

1.1       Resistance Opens the Door for the Rebirth of Japantown: Salt Lake City, UT

Ivis García

1.2       The Roles of Place and Place-Making in the Development of a Southeast Asian Enclave: A Case Study of Argyle Street, Chicago

Julia Crowley

1.3       Seattle’s Single-Room-Occupancy Residential Hotels and their Chinese Roots

Wei Zhao

1.4       Community Stabilization and Historic Preservation in Boston’s Chinatown

Lily Song, Lydia Lowe, Jenny Lau, Martin Gao

Part 2: Places of Religious Heritage

2.1       Heritage, Identity, and Place: Sacred Placemaking at the Malibu Temple

Shampa Mazumdar and Sanjoy Mazumdar

2.2       Palimpsest, Mask, or Scrim? Three Adaptive Reuse Approaches to Hindu Temples in the US

Sagarika Ninad Kulkarni, Anupika Babar, and Joshua D. Lee

2.3       Hindu Temples in the US: A Transplanted Sacred Geography           

Ashima Krishna

2.4       Becoming Cultural Heritage: Media Framings of the Mother Mosque of America

Nathan W. Swanson

2.5       Spatial Clustering in Diaspora: South Asian American (SAA) Muslim Religious Spaces in Greater Houston

Humayra Alam

2.6       Adaptive Reuse and the Conversion of Churches to Mosques in Western New York

Shyam K. Sriram, Thomas Larsen, Olivia Schmidt, Analee DeGlopper

Part 3: Identity, Memory, and Memorialization

3.1       The Oldest Cambodian Temple in Washington State: Cultural Sustainability through Historic Preservation

Rosa Woolsey

3.2       Gardens of Manzanar: Exploring New Methods in the Historic Preservation of Cultural Landscapes at World War II Confinement Sites

Keiji Uesugi and Lauren Bricker

3.3       The Iranian American Diaspora in Los Angeles: Cultural Heritage, Identity, and Placemaking in Tehrangeles

Hossein Mousazadeh

3.4       From Punjab to the Pacific: Honoring and Preserving South Asian Heritage in the U.S. West

Manish Chalana

Conclusion

Index

Biography

Ashima Krishna, PhD, is Associate Director of Engineering Projects in Community Service (EPICS) and Associate Professor of Engineering Practice in the School of Sustainability and Environmental Engineering in the College of Engineering at Purdue University. She also serves as Director of Urban Matters Lab. She is an architect, urban planner, and historic preservation planner whose research spans the management of historic urban landscapes and adaptive reuse of religious historic structures and landscapes, with a particular focus on intersection with community development and equity issues and resulting policy challenges. Dr. Krishna’s published work has been featured in Journal of Urbanism, Preservation Education and Research, Change Over Time, and Journal of American Planning Association among others. Her co-edited book Heritage Conservation in Postcolonial India: Approaches and Challenges was published by Routledge in 2020.

Nathan W. Swanson, JD, PhD, is Clinical Assistant Professor and Director of Study Away in the John Martinson Honors College at Purdue University. As a political, feminist, and cultural geographer, his research is focused in three areas: (1) geopolitics of everyday life, (2) public space and power, and (3) critical cartography and counter-mapping (as a member of 3Cs: the Counter-Cartographies Collective). Dr. Swanson has previously conducted research in the Middle East on the geopolitics of home, and his current research focuses on the geographies of Middle Eastern migrant communities in Scandinavia. Dr. Swanson regularly leads domestic and international study away programs for interdisciplinary groups of students and disseminates work on honors education and intercultural learning through publications and conference presentations.