southern exposure
August 1, 2005 -
This article originally appeared in Southern Exposure Vol. 33 No. 1/2, "East Meets South." Find more from that issue here.
August 1, 2005 -
Some immigrant women face difficult times when relationships turn abusive. Do social services in the South have what it takes to help them?
August 1, 2005 -
For these Japanese women, marrying American soldiers meant leaving everything they knew. So they created their own, unique community in the shadow of Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
August 1, 2005 -
When Japanese Americans were interned during World War II, the government brought some of them from the West Coast to distant Arkansas. They found themselves surrounded by barbed wire—and the Jim Crow South.
August 1, 2005 -
From the Mississippi Delta in the late 19th century to the Research Triangle today, the history of Asians in the American South reveal unexpected twists in many familiar themes of Southern history: race, labor, religion, and war.
August 1, 2005 -
A North Carolina activist talks about Ward Connerly, spy planes, organizing Asians in the South, Real ID, and figuring out you’re not white.
July 26, 2005 -
In case you missed it: in this time of shared sacrifice for war, Halliburton announced last Friday (pdf) that subsidiary KBR's quarterly revenues from Government and Infrastructure work increased 284 percent from 2004 to 2005.