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Terrell (Adsit) Neuage. The story of a traveler. Through the 1960s hippie movement, as a member of the cult organization, The Holy Order of MANS; as an adoptee with totally different values than the Christian family adopted into. Street artist selling picture poems in Jackson Square, New Orleans in the 1970s, street artist in New York City, Adelaide, South Australia, Honolulu, Maryland. Lots of sex and drugs and escape. A son signed by the LA Dodgers who committed suicide; the battle with hepatitis C and the death of a brother from AIDS. Marriages, children raised as a male single parent. 40 years an astrologer. Tofu manufacturer in Australia. Duel citizen. From high school drop-out in the 1960s to a college degree at age 44 and a PhD at age 58. A world traveler living a simple life with lots of interpretations of the way it is. A new-age atheist - or not.Terrell currently lives in Adelaide, South Australia with his wife of the past seventeen-years and their camper-van that is taken for short and long trips in Australia when they are not travelling the world.
Book 1 tells the story of adolescence in the 1960s and the journey beyond through the 1970s. Life of transformations through drugs, sex, religious cults in the United States told as an outsider to my own life. Book 2 tells the journey of being a male single parent in a foreign country. I tell the path that took one son all the way to being a pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers to his death and the path of my other son from a difficult adolescence to a well-integrated human. My own path took me from being a high school drop out to a PhD and teaching at universities and seven years as a tofu manufacturer amongst many other attempts at finding a place in life.
There is renewed interest in return migration among researchers of global movement patterns. Until recently, it was overlooked, regarded as the result of failure by emigrants, or related to the return of retired, elderly migrants. This important study looks at the one-and-a-half and second generation migrants, the youthful contract workers and the 'prolonged sojourners' and the consequences of their return to source communities.
The essays included in Out of Our Past Lives II share the stories culled from the disparate lives of aging grown-ups. Reflecting a wide range of experiences, this fourth book in the series is a new collection of tales from residents of Saratoga Retirement Community in Saratoga, California. The earlier three books of this series presently reside in the Saratoga Retirement Community library and are the librarys most frequently read books! The writers have recorded memorable aspects of their individual lives and found interest and companionship in the process of writing and sharing their experiences. Out of Our Past Lives II is the association of time, people, and activities, living life forward but trying to understand it and enjoy it backward.
In July 1940, the wives and children of British families in Hong Kong, military and civilian, were compulsorily evacuated, following a plan created by the Hong Kong government in 1939. That plan focused exclusively on the process of evacuation itself, but issues concerning how the women and children should settle in the new country, communication with abandoned husbands, and reuniting families after the war were not considered. In practice, few would ever be addressed. When evacuation came, 3,500 people would simply be dumped in Australia. The experience of the evacuees can be seen as a three-act drama: delivery to Australia creates tension, five years of war and uncertainty intensify it, and resolution comes as war ends. However, that drama, unlike the evacuation plan, did not develop in a vacuum but was embedded in a complex historical, political, and social environment. Based on archival research of official documents, letters and memoirs, and interviews and discussions with more than one hundred evacuees and their families, this book studies the evacuation within that entire context. ‘Reduced to a Symbolical Scale is an original and interesting addition to the evacuation literature. Tony Banham has done a masterly job of integrating archival documents with other forms of communication. The stories of individual evacuees and their families are very skilfully woven into the narrative.’ —John Welshman, Lancaster University; author of Churchill’s Children: The Evacuee Experience in Wartime Britain
Jonathan Langston is a "culture-hero" to many of the South Viet-namese people whom he has befriended. Under the guidance of Re-tired General Alexander Sloan and under the guise of Sloan and Langston's undercover organization called The Foundation, Jon and his Vietnamese friend, Quan, fight to destroy the drug cartels, set up during the Vietnam War, which are trying to control the banking industry in Vietnam and other countries, including America. Factored into the equation is Anh Phon, Quan's wife, and Tuyet, a woman he rescued from death when she was a young girl. During their escape to safety from the North Vietnamese, an old Vietnamese woman tells Tuyet and Jon that they are destined to be together. For both of them, after years of loneliness and unhappiness, Jon swears that this mission for the general and The Foundation will be the last, so that he and Tuyet can be together. What he and Quan, and his army of mountain soldiers, the Montagnards, don't count on is betrayal by top government officials and the kidnappings of Anh Phon, Tuyet, and the general. Only through Jon's shrewd thinking, and the help from his friends, is he able to save those who mean the most to him, so that he can strive to leave his former life behind and begin a new one with Tuyet.
This work presents an assessment of the migration from Hong Kong that has occurred since the second half of the 1980s. This pronounced outflow of highly educated people (a "brain drain") is having a profound impact on destination areas, as well as on Hong Kong itself.
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This innovative study of young Asian migrants’ lives in Australia sheds new light on the complex relationship between migration and time. With in-depth interviews and a new conceptual framework, Robertson reveals how migration influences the trajectories of migrants’ lives, from career pathways to intimate relationships.
This book analyzes the contemporary politics of immigration from the asylum crisis to Islamophobia, multiculturalism, and post-colonialism.