Members of the Asian-American community converged on campus yesterday to participate in the sixth annual Harvard Asian American Association Intercollegiate Conference.
The two-day conference, which ends this afternoon, is called "Generation A: Constructions of Asian-American Identity." The event is expected to draw 100 students and professors, Co-Director Mynette A. Louie '97 said.
Conference attendees will explore conceptions of the Asian-American identity, according to Jaehyuk Choi '98, vice-president of the Asian American Association (AAA). "[The conference] gives people a chance to think about what it means to be an Asian-American now in contrast to a few years ago," he said.
Keynote speakers at the conference include contemporary Asian-American writers David Mura and Meena Alexander.
Eric Liu, a first-year Law School student who wrote speeches for President Clinton, is expected to host a workshop on Asian-American politics today.
Speakers will also address Asian-American art, sexuality and identity, Louie said.
"We're aiming to explore rather than educate," she said.
Mura, a third generation Japanese-American, described how racism and the Japanese internment. In the '40s and '50s, following the internment,Japanese-Americans were forced to abandon theircultural identity, Mura said. In the '90s, youngAsian-Americans live in a period of "fluctuationand change" which makes them more aware of theiridentities, he said. "As I go around the country, I see a renewedenergy among young Asian-Americans to look atissues of identity and their place in Americansociety," Mura said. "Asian-American perceptionsof selves are changing, there's been a hugeoutpouring of cultural production, works thatreach a white mainstream audience." The conference title is a "tongue-in-cheek"play on the term Generation X, said Louie. "Asian-Americans are marginalized by thegeneral public," Louie said. "Generation A, wefeel, is a neglected side of the postmodern youthculture." By displaying the efforts of cutting-edgeartists, AAA hopes to demonstrate the continuingdevelopment of Asian-American identities. "[We're] trying to explore the different waysin which we manifest being on the margin ofsociety through creative mediums," Louie said. Perceptions of Asian-Americans by mainstreamculture have changed dramatically, Choi said."[Asian-Americans used to be] presented in themedia as foreigners who didn't know [English]," hesaid. While increased exposure draws attention to a"marginalized" group of young people, it mayreinforce negative stereotypes, Louie said. "[Asian-Americans] have come more into thepublic's eye and that has been both beneficial anddetrimental," she said. "At least people knowwe're there, yet it is detrimental becausestereotypes are reinforced and the Asian-Americanculture has been objectified and commodified," sheadded
Read more in News
Memorial Hall Project Delayed Until Jan. 1996Recommended Articles
-
The `Model Minority' MythS OMEDAY the press will understand. Then everyone can understand that not all Asian-Americans are academic superstars. Then they will
-
Actor Speaks at AAA ConferenceActor Steve Park urged Asian-Americans to be more visible Saturday morning as he spoke to an audience of about 20
-
Staying Away From the Political FrayAsians and Asian-Americans at Harvard have had much to be concerned about over the past year. Last spring, hundreds of
-
Asian Students Gather for ConferenceAbout 120 students from universities all over the East Coast gathered in the Science Center this weekend for the Fifth
-
Speak No Evil"Well-timed silence hath more eloquence than speech," the 19th century writer Martin Farquhar Tupper once said. His words ring true