What Does It Mean to be Asian in Today’s America? - part of "50 Years Since the Fall of Saigon" 2-Day Symposium
A Conversation: What Does It Mean to be Asian in Today’s America?
Event Details
Date
Saturday, April 12, 2025
Time
5:30-7 p.m.
Location
Wisconsin Historical Society Auditorium - on UW-Madison's Library Mall, Wisconsin Historical Society
Description
Panelists: Nam Kim, Evyn Le Espiritu Gandhi, Nhu Truong, Xiong Her, Sophea Kai
Welcome: Mary McCoy
Diasporic identities continuously emerge and unfold in the present and the future across generations, borders, and even vanished spaces. This panel brings to the fore critical questions on the multiplicity of identities, reconciliation within and across communities.
Part of “50 Years Since the Fall of Saigon” symposium (seasia.wisc.edu/vietnam-50th-anniversary-page/#full-program.
Welcome: Mary McCoy
Diasporic identities continuously emerge and unfold in the present and the future across generations, borders, and even vanished spaces. This panel brings to the fore critical questions on the multiplicity of identities, reconciliation within and across communities.
Part of “50 Years Since the Fall of Saigon” symposium (seasia.wisc.edu/vietnam-50th-anniversary-page/#full-program.
Cost
Free
Contact
Accessibility
We value inclusion and access for all participants and are pleased to provide reasonable accommodations for this event. Please call 608-263-1755 or email mccoy2@wisc.edu to make a disability-related accommodation request. Requests should be made by Saturday, March 29, 2025, though reasonable effort will be made to support late accommodation requests.