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Past Conferences
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CALL OF PAPERS The Asian Pacific American Studies Program at Michigan State University is happy to announce their 3rd annual conference to be held on April 17-18, 2009 in East Lansing, Michigan. This conference is co-sponsored by the Committee on Institutional Cooperation (CIC) Asian American Studies Consortium and the Asian Studies Center at MSU. To encourage participation by CIC-AASC members, the CIC will cover a limited number of travel stipends for faculty, staff, and graduate students from CIC institutions who are presenting at the conference. Payment is conditional on acceptance of the paper proposal and will be provided in the form of reimbursement following participation in the conference. Please contact Andrea Louie at louie@msu.edu if you are interested in this opportunity. Global-is-Asian: Asian diaspora identities in the context of globalization Community and identity formation have never occurred in a vacuum. However, processes of globalization increasingly facilitate connections, both real and imagined, with other parts of the world. This conference focuses on Asian populations in diaspora—that is, living outside their ancestral homelands. Though the definition of diaspora and its application to various populations has long been debated, in using the term “diaspora” we assert the importance of understanding Asian communities within a global context; as sharing key similarities but as far from homogeneous. We aim to investigate how global forces, both historical and contemporary, have reshaped diasporic forms and analytical categories for examining collective memory, political alliances, transpacific migrations and movements, social spaces and global networks. We hope to explore what Jigna Desai (2004) has called the "heterogeneous connections to both the homeland and to other diasporic locations through such forms as political commitment, imagination, memory, travel, and cultural production." The forms of cultural production --transnational youth cultures, art, cinema, literature, internet communities, new social movements-- that emerge in the context of globalization hold exciting potential. We are interested in exploring the range of identities that are constructed by Asian diasporic communities, and how these forms are then re-shaped through interactions, on both local and global scales.
At the same time, we also hope to question the ways that an overemphasis on “global” or “diaspora” as academic buzzwords which, as Sau-ling Wong has noted, can result in the glossing over of local, regional and national levels of organization, and distract from nation-based identities (such as Asian American) that allow for coalition building and empowerment. These terms can become so broad and all encompassing as to lose their specificity of meaning, or merely become a means of expressing old concepts in new packaging. We cannot ignore the continued power of nation states to define both national and local contexts that shape the constraints under which actors explore and express identities.
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