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Title
Stephanie Truong
What My Parents Saw
Contributor
Herrera, Andrew
Feng, Difan
Lopez, Iliana
Date Created and/or Issued
2014-04-01
Publication Information
http://anotherwarmemorial.com/stephanie-truong/
Contributing Institution
University of Southern California Digital Library
Collection
An Other War Memorial -- Memories of the American War in Viet Nam
Rights Information
Please contact the contributing institution for more information regarding the copyright status of this object.
Description
Andrew Herrera was born in East Los Angeles, CA. He went to East Los Angeles Community College, and transfer to USC in 2012. He currently majors in Architecture. Difan Feng was born in Beijing, China, where he continued to live until 2008. He came to the US afterward for college. He was an economics major and changed to architecture after his first year. Iliana Michelle Lopez was born in Santa Ana, El Salvador. She moved to California in 2003. She studied architecture in East Los Angeles Community College and transferred to USC in 2012. [Profiler bio]
Stephanie Truong is a junior student currently attending the USC School of Architecture. She is an American-Vietnamese second-generation daughter of two Vietnamese war refugees who found their way out of Vietnam in the early 70’s when they were in their teens. Her mother was born in the city while her dad was from a village, both of them from South Vietnam. Stephanie explained how her parents escaped from Vietnam. Her mother boarded a ship to Thailand and was in a camp there while her dad escaped in a fish boat in the middle of the night. He spent 2 weeks in the boat and struggled for food and water and saw people died. He ended up his journey in a refugee camp in Thailand as well. Both of her parents were sponsored by families who helped them come to America. They settled their new life in the United States and years later Stephanie was born. Stephanie is a great example because as a second-generation child she recognizes the sacrifice that her parents did to escape the war that could have cost their lives if they stayed in Vietnam. She feels proud of them and as an American-Vietnamese she wants to share her parents' experiences with future generations as well as her personal perspective towards the war and how it was taught to her in American schools. [Profile bio]
Type
image
Format
1 image
5 video files (00:17:43)
5 transcripts
Identifier
truongstephanie-profileimage
truongstephanie-vid1
truongstephanie-vid1_tr1
truongstephanie-vid2
truongstephanie-vid2_tr2
truongstephanie-vid3
truongstephanie-vid3_tr3
truongstephanie-vid4
truongstephanie-vid4_tr4
truongstephanie-vid5
truongstephanie-vid5_tr5
http://doi.org/10.25549/viet-c80-168
http://thumbnails.digitallibrary.usc.edu/truongstephanie-profileimage.jpg
Language
English
Subject
Refugee camp
Vietnam war
Sponsorship
Culture shock
Culture
2nd generation
Time Period
1970-1979
Place
Minnesota
USA
Vietnam
Thailand
Source
University of Southern California [Contributing entity]
Relation
An Other War Memorial--Memories of the American War in Viet Nam

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