Sponsors: Cornell University, the American Indian and Indigenous Studies Program
Lecture Series: Gatty Lecture Series
Description:
What does it mean to think of Southeast Asia archipelagically? What points of connection and convergence does an archipelagic method enable? In this talk, Dr. Evyn Lê Espiritu Gandhi offers notes on an archipelagic praxis for Southeast Asian studies. Putting the Vietnamese concept of nước, which means water/country/homeland, in conversation with Pacific Islander and Palestinian understandings of the archipelago, Dr. Gandhi traces the postwar migration of Vietnamese refugees to Guam and Israel-Palestine in order to unpack what she calls the "refugee settler condition"the fraught positionality of refugee subjects whose resettlement in a settler colonial state is predicated on the unjust dispossession of an Indigenous population. This talk probes the decolonial politics of nước as routed through archipelagic epistemologies, theorizing emergent forms of refugee-Indigenous solidarity.
Speaker:
Evyn Lê Espiritu Gandhi is an assistant professor of Asian American Studies at UCLA (Tovaangar). Her work engages critical refugee studies, settler colonial and Indigenous studies, and transpacific studies. She is the author of Archipelago of Resettlement: Vietnamese Refugee Settlers and Decolonization across Guam and Israel-Palestine, which was published open access by the University of California Press in April 2022. In summer 2022, Dr. Gandhi organized a public history exhibit based on this book's research entitled Remembering Saigon: From Vietnam to Guam. She is currently co-editing an anthology, Routledge Handbook of Refugee Narratives, with Vinh Nguyen, as well as working on a second book project, tentatively entitled Revisiting the Southern Question: South Korea, South Vietnam, and the US South. Dr. Gandhi hosts a podcast, Distorted Footprints, through her Critical Refugee Studies class.
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