AAAS
By Tamika Whitenack
What was I doing this past weekend? Frolicking in the snow in Madison, WI? Why? I was at the Association for Asian American Studies conference and it was an incredible learning experience!! Very grateful that we got to go, as it was v intellectually stimulating and exciting. In an effort to process my thoughts I have gone through my notes and written some stuff...still a bit rough but I thought I'd share!
What was I doing this past weekend? Frolicking in the snow in Madison, WI? Why? I was at the Association for Asian American Studies conference and it was an incredible learning experience!! Very grateful that we got to go, as it was v intellectually stimulating and exciting. In an effort to process my thoughts I have gone through my notes and written some stuff...still a bit rough but I thought I'd share!
AAAS Reflections
The three days of the Association for Asian American Studies
conference were an incredible learning experience. The extensive conference
program enlightened me to the wide range of topics in the field of Asian
American Studies, including issues that I had never considered in an AAS
context before, such as disability studies, environmental studies, and refugee
studies. Asian American Studies is truly interdisciplinary, while at the same
time being anti-disciplinary: Asian American Studies challenges us to consider
learning outside of the traditional institutional context, exploring ideas that
break preconceived definitions and using research methods that benefit
communities, not just academia. Through the conference, I have come to see AAS
not just necessary as an important curriculum of knowledge, but as a practice
that strives for community empowerment. This was particularly evident to me in
a panel of AAS educators who spoke about AAS as a high-impact practice. AAS,
along with other fields of Ethnic Studies, answers these three questions: Who
am I? What is the story of my family and community? What can I do to make
positive change and bring about social justice for my community and the world?
These three questions are central to representational belonging and building a
sense of agency to create transformative leaders. As a community that strives
to be inclusive and situate our studies in the broader context of the world, I
believe that these goals align with the goals of Vassar.
It was intellectually stimulating to hear the work presented
by scholars in the various panels I attended. Much of their research was in
areas I had no previous academic experience in, and I welcomed these new
perspectives. However, some of the most exciting panels were about how AAS
connects to Environmental Studies, which is my field of concentration at
Vassar. In a panel on the Pacific, scholars discussed how the creation of the
ocean as an alien space and the domination of the ocean through settler
colonialism (ie island plantations) and capitalism (ie trade routes) has
created conditions that depleted the environment and continue to affect the
resilience of these spaces and communities to climate change. The idea of
environmental degradation as gentrification of the sea, as green solutions/industries
are proposed to address environmental issues, was particularly striking to me.
I was also moved by the idea of slow resistance as a counterpoint to the
environmental harm often characterized by Rob Nixon’s concept of slow violence.
The panelists suggested that slow resistance is a process of reclaiming
community systems, such as indigenous food and government pathways, as a way to
counteract the environmental harm that has been caused from colonialism. As
someone who approaches environmental studies and climate change with hope, I
found this idea especially exciting. Another thought-provoking concept to me
was the relation of disability studies to climate change: the panelists posited
the idea that we need to accept that since we likely cannot restore a “pristine
Earth,” we need to learn how to value and live with a debilitated land.
Another panel that felt directly related to my ENST major
and particular interest in food systems was a presentation on community gardens
(specifically the Danny Woo Community Garden in Seattle’s Chinatown
International District). The research presented discussed how the garden is a
form of socio-ecological resistance and biocultural diversity that protects
transnational knowledge systems and agroecological methods. Community gardens
can offer an essential space for the nutritional, emotional, and social
well-being of immigrant communities, as well as serving as resistance to
gentrification and development. It was inspiring for me to hear this research
work, as it is similar to the type of work I hope to do for my ENST thesis and
potentially my career after Vassar.
Other interesting thoughts from these panels:
·
Is the opposite of pessimism nihilism?
·
Ocean food chains/residence time: how do things
in ocean (ie bodies from middle passage) get recycled and consumed?
·
Typhoons are echoes of dispossession, storms as
actors and archives in history
·
Role of military in island environmental
depletion
·
What does climate change mean for AAS? How to
imagine a world without humans
Other important ideas from panels:
On sanctuary, refuge, and resilience
·
Liberalism is limited as an anti-racial; liberal
practices such as sanctuary are given because justice has not been given
·
Abolition movements should not just be about
breaking down systems, but about building new worlds that reject the state
·
Settler colonialism takes away the multiplicity
of sovereign states (ie indigenous nations, territories) and privileges
citizenship, how can we consider a right to space based on humanity?
·
Research of AAS must build partnerships with
communities that are useful for the community, not just researchers
Adoption
·
Adoption as containing absence (no connection to
homeland) vs. loss (prior connection that is left)
·
How to understand that pasts may be incomprehensible
Speculation/Embodiment
·
Toxicity is present in racialized bodies already
·
Asian bodies are seen as healthy which ties into
model minority myth and neoliberalism, health is seen as a personal attribute
not related to structural
o
Access to healthcare in neoliberal system
prioritizes some bodies over others, ties to access to healthcare profession: Asians
are viewed as being healthcare providers not receivers, how does this privilege
Asian bodies as healthy?
·
Biotechnology is promoting the idealized healthy
body, how does this relate to disability studies?
Critique of Racial Capitalism
·
Disability as the antithesis of productivity:
could anti-work disability politics go against capitalist productivity and
promote the right to not work and be proud? Or expand definition of work beyond
wage work, is survival a form of work?
·
Antiwork politics in academia: how lack of admin
work to change structural issues leads to more work for faculty
·
How faculty of color do work that is not legible
as work: ie work related to diversity
o
Need to refuse this work to acknowledge exhaustion?
How to create space to refuse work?
·
Phenomenon of Asian (esp South Asian males) as
the authoritative of voice of medicine: how this perpetuates model minority
myth and ideas about healthy Asian body
Critical Refugee Studies and Storytelling
·
The catastrophe of settler colonialism is a
process, so the act of returning is a process
·
Use of foodways to tell stories: olive tree for
Palestinian refugees
·
Care in families for Hmong refugee stories: how trauma
becomes intertwined with care
o
How western medicine invalidates Hmong care
practices
·
Lost/found for refugee stories: what is lost is
not just what is left behind but what possibilities are not allowed due to
displacement, what is found can be new lifestyles and kinship-radical kinship
can be found in shared histories of colonial oppression—instead of absolute
loss, loss that is creative and makes social relations
·
There is also what remains: how things lost persist
as intergenerational memory
o
Storyteling is a way to keep remains
·
Moving beyond loss and towards healing requires
decolonization
·
Need to be wary of refugee success story bc it
can excuse the conditions that produce refugees
·
Need to complicate Asians as settlers, need to
challenge US “nation of immigrants” narrative
Challenges to Whiteness
·
How is Asian American relation to whiteness
based on proximity rather than distance? -proximity is defined by nearness but inability
to be white, there is still distance
·
How is whiteness being defined as current
cultural habits vs historical violence and hierarchy
·
In regards to media studies: how do conditions
created by whiteness affect representations
·
How some Asian Americans have surpassed whites
in educational/economic privilege complicates white privilege…model minority myth
·
Hyperselectivity explains model minority myth
for Asians and relates to structural immigration policies?
·
How current white anxiety crisis creates new
conditions for PoC and weakens aspirations to whiteness?
Tearing Down Narratives
·
Context of Japanese in WW2: 2 stories are camp
or 442nd
o
How do these narratives uphold patriotism and
appeal to emotion?
o
Can we replace narratives so that they don’t
support nationalist ideals?
o
Interesting to look at Issei experience vs Nisei
§
Shift the focus on belonging due to
citizenships, suggest ways of belonging outside of legal citizenship
·
How have narratives/archives been lost due to
empire? When is war invisible?
·
How does time frame effect narrative? Can
expansive time frame make larger movements more visible, implicate things such
as colonialism, capitalism etc
·
What is the origin of a narrative? What is the ending?
Can there be multiple and what does this mean?
Education outside of the classroom
·
Supplementary education for high-achieving east Asians
reflects desire for educational advantage, often supports white supremacy by
trying to make students more American?
o
Trying to use resources to maximize educational
advantage is a neoliberal practice
o
Neoliberalism for racialized people manifests as
self-governance?
·
Community spaces as healing/ability to learn
what is not given in schools
o
SE Asian community spaces provide critical
consciousness and care that is not given in school
o
Model minority myth is hiding state violence in
schools for refugees—need for data disaggregation
o
Hmong students: erasure from curriculum means
that classmates do not know how to read students so they have burden of
teaching about their identity
§
Invisibility is damaging and maybe schools
cannot be a place for healing?
Carceral State
·
How racism is at play in mail order brides: who
is considered to be taking advantage of the system (Asian women) vs taking
refuge in the system (eastern european)
·
Sexism of immigration fraud: women are exploited
bc expectations of husbands are harmful but only way to remain is US
·
How does advocacy for refugees end up falling
into neoliberal practices by advocating for refuges patriostims/economic
contributions as validation to stay?
·
The states increasing interest in private lives:
modern surveillance state and how family fits in arguments of deportation
·
How legitimization of love to the state affects
status
·
Questions of abolishing ICE—what message is this
sending? That we are criminalizing the wrong people vs. criminalization as a practice
is wrong
Settler Colonialism
·
Distinction between racialization and
colonization: indigeneity vs racialized subject
·
Developing and Asian American Critical Race
Theory needs to look at complicity with anti-blackness, make allyship with indigenous
goals, need to go beyond legal discourse bc law as knowledge creation does not
serve communities of color
·
Thinking about consciousness raising in the
context of Mao’s China and immigration to the US…
Okihiro: “Asians did not come to America, America came to
Asia”
·
How to take AAS outside of body, look at
interactions of Asia/America before migration of bodies—its about systems, not
people
·
Need to reconceptualize the geographic framework
as a way to challenge citizenship as final goal; need to look at AAS in terms
of empire not US geographical location
·
Ideology is the basis to destabilize oppression
and learning is a threat to positions of privilege
o
Need for comparative ethnic studies as “the
study of power” as opposed to multiculturalism and inclusion
| predeparture udon in new jersey |
| we love japanese markets |
| so many good books on display omg |
| home sweet home at the best western |
| also predeparture in NJ |
| the plane was small |
| dinner! we bought asian groceries and cooked stuff in our hotel |
| kitchenette |
| noodles and wonton soup and gailan |
| korean spicy ricecake |
This post brings me joy
ReplyDeletewow wow! So much learning! Excited for and proud of you :)
ReplyDeletehehehe it was a good time
ReplyDeleteAlways good to hear what's going on with my favorite Whitenack ladies.
ReplyDelete