Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Program
    Home : News : Events : About Us : Exhibitions : Sponsors : Visitor Information : Resources : Sitemap
 About the Asian Pacific American Program

Franklin Odo, APAP Director

 Franklin Odo
Franklin Odo
 

Franklin Odo's academic background was in traditional Asian Studies, but in the late 1960s and early 1970s, he became part of the movement that created Asian American and other ethnic studies in California.

 The Columbia Documentary History 
 of the Asian American Experience
Odo's latest book

 

Since then he has taught at the University of Hawaii and at many other campuses, including a college in Japan and at the University of Pennsylvania, Hunter College, Princeton, and Columbia University.

Aside from his work as a curator and APAP director at the Smithsonian, Odo currently teaches a course in the Asian American Studies Program at the University of Maryland.

Franklin Odo is the editor of The Columbia Documentary History of the Asian American Experience, published this year by Columbia University Press. His previous books include A Pictorial History of the Japanese in Hawai‘i and Roots: An Asian American Reader, co-edited with Amy Tachiki, Eddie Wong, and Buck Wong.

 

Through My Father's Eyes:

The Filipino American Photographs of Ricardo Ocreto Alvarado

This stunning collection of rare post-World War II photographs capture the life of San Francisco's Filipino American community. See the exhibition at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History through March 31, 2003.

Our online exhibition provides an intimate view of some of these extraordinary photos.

read more

       see it now   
   
  Home : Sitemap : Search : Contacts : Donate : Volunteer : Section 508 : Credits
Smithsonian Home