On Monday, March 14, 2016, the Chu Program hosted a special event in honour of Dr. David Chu Distinguished Visitor Yen Le Espiritu (Professor, Department of Ethnic Studies, UC San Diego).

Watch a full length webcast video of the event here.

Undergraduate student journal Synergy reported on Professor Yen Le Espiritu’s presentation. Read their article here.

CRITICAL REFUGEE STUDIES AND THE WARS IN SOUTHEAST ASIA

 

Body Counts by Maya Lê Espiritu

Artwork by Maya Lê Espiritu

The current Syrian crisis has alerted us once again to the plight of the tens of millions of displaced people who in recent times have been forced to seek refuge from political persecution, wars, and violence. Yet too often mainstream representations of generic “refugees” have figured them as merely objects of pity and benevolence, or in the worst cases into populations whose diasporic condition is in part a result of their own inability to survive in the modern and contemporary world. This symposium takes last year’s fortieth anniversary of the official end of the Vietnam War as an occasion to question mainstream memories and representations of the wars in Southeast Asia, while also calling attention to the resilience, alternative memories, and self-making of those who have relocated to the United States and Canada.

The Vietnam War and Militarized Refuge(es): The Production of Memories of the “Generation After”
Yen Le Espiritu, Professor, Department of Ethnic Studies, UC San Diego

Focusing on the multiple recollections of the US War in Vietnam, this talk examines the ways in which the mutually constituted processes of remembering and forgetting work in the production of official discourses about empire, war, and violence as well as in the construction of refugee subjectivities. Challenging conventional ideas about memory as recuperation, this talk analyzes the production of the “postmemories” of the post-1975 generation: the young Vietnamese who were born in Vietnam or in the United States after the official end of the Vietnam War.