Association for Asian American Studies 2025 Annual Conference
Schedule
Thu, 17 Apr, 2025 at 07:00 am to Sat, 19 Apr, 2025 at 06:00 pm
UTC-04:00Location
425 Summer St | Boston, MA
About this Event
Re-Orienting Asian American Studies in a time of resurgent ethnonationalism and fascism
The Association for Asian American Studies(AAAS) was the first such association to commit to the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement, in 2013, and it endorsed a statement of Solidarity with Palestine ten years later, in 2023. In line with this commitment, for our 2025 annual conference in Boston, MassachusettMassachusetts, we invite proposals that re-orient the field of Asian American Studies: in terms of the place of South West Asian North African (SWANA), Muslim and Arab Americans in the field, in relation to the violence of the U.S. settler state, and in consideration of the geographical, temporal, and cultural margins and mainstreams of the discipline.
As many scholars in Asian American studies have aptly pointed out in the past six months, the field of Asian American Studies stands on the shoulders of Palestinian scholar Edward Said’s pathbreaking work, Orientalism. Though early Asian American Studies scholars understood Orientalism through the geography of East Asia (and US imperialism) and defined themselves against the idea in order to build their cultural nationalist scholarship, Said's Orient was grounded in a different Asia (and European imperialism). We call for a return to Orientalism's original context – SWANA, and the Muslim and Arab world so often on the fringes of Asian American studies. This re-orienting is more urgent than ever, especially as we recognize the role that the US has and continues to play in shaping the "middle east" since well before the publication of Said's seminal work. Though we have never been without the threat of ethno-nationalism and fascism both at home and abroad, its accelerated resurgence in the past ten years should make us all question how we got here, and how decades of silence around Palestine have helped pave the way. How does centering Said’s Orient enable us to explore our own complicity in state violence and the violence of the settler colonial state? How does centering a free Palestine help us to confront the attacks on ethnic studies across the nation, gun violence on our campuses, and the precarity of students who dare to boycott, protest, and challenge local, state, and federal authority? As we re-orient, we must necessarily also reorient the field to include locations, temporalities and subjects that have heretofore been “Othered '' in Asian American studies. As we converge on Boston in April 2025, how might we, for example, think of the eastern seaboard, and indeed the Atlantic and Caribbean world as central to the field? How might a “yellow/brown atlantic” approach shift some of our long-standing narratives and broaden our engagement with the western hemisphere and the world? How can the consideration of Asian American “others” --particularly those East of California grow our understanding of Asian American history and who is a part of it?
Program Co-chairs,
Tessa Winkelmann, Ph.D.
Andrea Louis, Ph.D.
Please note that ticket prices will double on March 1, 2025 at 12 pm PST
Registration is nonrefundable as per our policy.
Where is it happening?
425 Summer St, 425 Summer Street, Boston, United StatesEvent Location & Nearby Stays: