Model Minority/Model Enemy: Anti-Asian/American Bias in the Age of COVID
Panel moderated by Professor Alexander Chee discussing the rise of racist and xenophobic incidents targeting Asians and Asian Americans during COVID-19.
Since the first days Asian immigrants came to the United States, as either international students or strikebreakers, Asian Americans have historically been used as either a model minority or a hated one depending on whether the American power structure needed a collaborator or an enemy in order to maintain the status quo. Now the COVID-19 pandemic has shown us new ways these old myths can be used against us. Join us for a moderated panel conversation on the reinvention of these racist stereotypes accompanying the rise of racist and xenophobic incidents targeting Asians and Asian Americans, and explore ways we can create the solidarities needed to advocate for justice in our communities.
Panelists:
- Yusaku Horiuchi, Professor of Government and Mitsui Professor of Japanese Studies, Dartmouth College
- Grace Kao, Chair and IBM Professor of Sociology, Yale University and Director, Center for Empirical Research on Stratification and Inequality (CERSI)
- Erika Lee, Regents Professor of History and Asian American Studies, University of Minnesota and Director, Immigration History Research Center
Moderated by Alexander Chee, Associate Professor of English and Creative Writing, Dartmouth College
Registration is required. http://dartgo.org/AntiAsianBias
Presented by the Office of Institutional Diversity & Equity (IDE), the Office of Pluralism and Leadership (OPAL), and the Asian & Pacific Islander Caucus (APIC)