Dartmouth Events

Work: An Asia/America Studies Symposium

Keynote by Neferti Tadiar (Barnard College) "The Vitality of Servitude: Reproductive Work in the Globopolis"

Thursday, May 20, 2021
4:00pm – 6:00pm
http://dartgo.org/work
Intended Audience(s): Public
Categories: Lectures & Seminars

What work is left to do in Asian American studies? What is the work that must be done not to define but to question and expand the imagined disciplinary bounds of Asian American studies? Taking up multiple feminist, queer, and transnational modes of Asian Americanist critique, we will turn to what has “fallen away” from the identities/regions, forms of labor/work/capital, objects of study, and methods that have been centered in the field. “Work” is linked closely with the recuperative criticism that Asian American Studies performs within the university, from the migrant worker of the 19th century to the flexible global citizens of finance capital today.

Register at http://dartgo.org/work.

  • May 20, 4-6 PM ET Keynote by Neferti Tadiar (Barnard College) The Vitality of Servitude: Reproductive Work in the Globopolis
  • May 21, 4-6 PM ET The Work of Asian American Studies, a panel with remarks from Neferti X. M. Tadiar
    • Ren-yo Hwang (Mount Holyoke College) Abolition, Hate Crimes and #StopAAPIHate: Carceral Accuracy and Possessive Investment in Data
    • Anna Storti (Dartmouth College) The Whiteness inside Asian America: A “Rapist Cop” and His Racial Form
    • Bobby Benedicto (McGill University) The Form of Non-meaning: Sex, Suicide, and the Art of Ren Hang
    • Carolyn Areum Choi (Dartmouth College) Invisible Citizens: Semi-Legibility of South Korean Student Migrants and Undocumented Work Lives in the United States

 

Sponsored by the Leslie Center for the Humanities.

For more information, contact:
Bevan Dunbar

Events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.