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CSDE Seminar – Displacing Kinship: an Affective and Aesthetic Study of the Vietnamese Refugee Family

Posted: 3/28/2024 (CSDE Seminar Series)

CSDE invites you to attend a seminar with CSDE Affiliate Linh Thuỷ Nguyễn (American Ethnic Studies, UW) on Friday, April 5th from 12:30-1:30 PM in 360 PAR and on Zoom (register here). This event is co-sponsored by the Population Health Initiative. Besides being a CSDE Affiliate, Linh Thuỷ Nguyễn, Ph.D. is Assistant Professor in American Ethnic Studies, Adjunct Assistant Professor in Gender, Women’s and Sexuality Studies, faculty associate in the Center for Southeast Asia and its Diasporas, and the Harry Bridges Labor Center at the University of Washington. See the full story to learn more about Dr. Nguyễn and her talk.

Abstract: How does the way we study refugee inclusion shape family and national history? This research examines how second-generation Vietnamese American texts situate themselves in relation to the past and their family history, and squarely in the war. Policy makers and scientists made quick work of predicting the successful assimilation of Vietnamese refugees into the US, speculating that their ties with the US government, projected model minority status, and proximity to white values would spare them the “downward assimilation” faced by their Black and brown neighbors. Through close readings of sociological studies of refugee resettlement and Vietnamese American art, music, and writing, I show how a racialized ideal of the national family became the site for projecting desires and disappointments of American life. Second-generation works reveal that narratives of familial loss are situated not only in displacement and war, but rather, in present experiences of economic insecurity and racism. Through ethnic studies and feminist and queer-of-color critique, Displacing Kinship offers a critical approach for reading family tensions and interpersonal conflict as affective investments informed by the material, structural conditions of white supremacy and racial capitalism.

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Date: 04/05/2024

Time: 12:30-1:30 PM

Location: 360 PAR and on Zoom (register here)