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The Asian Studies Center has an extensive collection of fiction and non‑fiction films available to borrow. Visit the center or contact us for more information.

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Islam, Empire of Faith Country/Region of Focus: General Asia
Length: 160min
Type of Film: Documentary
Language: English

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Description: Islam: Empire of Faith is a documentary series, made in 2000, that details the history of Islam, from the birth of the Islamic Prophet, Muhammad to the Ottoman Empire.

Defining Moments Country/Region of Focus: General Asia
Length:
Type of Film: Documentary
Language: English

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Description: This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.This is the story of Fred Korematsu, a second generation Japanese American, who was working as a welder in the San Francisco shipyards when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and of Frank Murphy, from Michigan, who was a U.S. Supreme Court Justice at the same defining moment. Their lives crossed because of the involuntary internment of Japanese Americans in camps following the attack on Pearl Harbor and the resulting Supreme Court case that bears Korematsu's name. Korematsu v. U.S. Government is a case that demonstrates how the dry and sometimes nearly unintelligible language of the courts, and of our governemnt at work, can translate into profound effects on the people of this country.

Foreign Languages: Doors to Opportunities Country/Region of Focus: General Asia
Length:
Type of Film: Documentary
Language: English

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Description: This free downloadable video is designed in two parts of approximately twelve minutes each. The first part is intended for use with middle and high school students of foreign languages. The second part is designed for K-12 educators, including teachers, guidance counselors, administrators, and parents.

Islam: Empire of Faith Country/Region of Focus: General Asia
Length:
Type of Film: Documentary
Language: English

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Description: Islam: Empire of Faith is a documentary series, made in 2000, that details the history of Islam, from the birth of the Islamic Prophet, Muhammad to the Ottoman Empire.

Pacific Century, The: Part 01: The Two Coast of China Country/Region of Focus: General Asia
Length:
Type of Film: Documentary
Language: English

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Description: The past 150 years of economic and political development in the Pacific Basin are surveyed in this extraordinary series. The Pacific Century studies the interconnections between Pacific nations - and between those nations and the United States - within a geographical, cultural, and historical framework.

Pacific Century, The: Part 10: The Pacific Century: The Future of the Pacific Basin Country/Region of Focus: General Asia
Length:
Type of Film: Documentary
Language: English

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Description: The past 150 years of economic and political development in the Pacific Basin are surveyed in this extraordinary series. The Pacific Century studies the interconnections between Pacific nations - and between those nations and the United States - within a geographical, cultural, and historical framework.

Pacific Century, The: Part 02: Meiji: Asia's Response to the West Country/Region of Focus: General Asia
Length:
Type of Film: Documentary
Language: English

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Description: The past 150 years of economic and political development in the Pacific Basin are surveyed in this extraordinary series. The Pacific Century studies the interconnections between Pacific nations - and between those nations and the United States - within a geographical, cultural, and historical framework.

Pacific Century, The: Part 03: From the Barrel of a Gun Country/Region of Focus: General Asia
Length:
Type of Film: Documentary
Language: English

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Description: The past 150 years of economic and political development in the Pacific Basin are surveyed in this extraordinary series. The Pacific Century studies the interconnections between Pacific nations - and between those nations and the United States - within a geographical, cultural, and historical framework.

Pacific Century, The: Part 04: Writers and Revoluntionaries Country/Region of Focus: General Asia
Length:
Type of Film: Documentary
Language: English

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Description: The past 150 years of economic and political development in the Pacific Basin are surveyed in this extraordinary series. The Pacific Century studies the interconnections between Pacific nations - and between those nations and the United States - within a geographical, cultural, and historical framework.

Pacific Century, The: Part 05: Reinventing Japan Country/Region of Focus: General Asia
Length:
Type of Film: Documentary
Language: English

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Description: The past 150 years of economic and political development in the Pacific Basin are surveyed in this extraordinary series. The Pacific Century studies the interconnections between Pacific nations - and between those nations and the United States - within a geographical, cultural, and historical framework.

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