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Genealogies of Anti-Asian/Asia Violences Symposium

Eggers Hall, 220

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The Cornell-Syracuse South Asia Consortium presents a symposium interrogating the histories and trajectories of anti-Asian violences.

The recent surge of racially motivated attacks on Asians in the United States brought renewed attention to the issue of anti-Asian violence. It is necessary to situate this rising tide of violence in the broader histories that have produced it. By taking up “Asia” as a fraught geopolitical category that is formed through imperialist projects, this symposium attends to the underlying logics of violence that are crucial to rendering these histories legible. Building connections that are enabled by transnational, relational, and critical lenses not only will deepen insights into the discourse of anti-Asian violence, but also will allow a meaningful consideration of the implications of this moment for solidarity and movement- building. This symposium will convene a cohort of scholars, students, and activists whose work can collectively help trace the genealogies and geographies of anti-Asian violence.

FRIDAY, MARCH 25TH • 9 AM-5 PM

220 EGGERS HALL (STRASSER LEGACY ROOM)

Roundtable: Queering Solidarities: Race, Caste, and Gender

Chris Eng (Assistant Professor, Department of English, University of Washington in St. Louis)
Gaurav Pathania (Center for Justice and Peacebuilding, Eastern Mennonite University)
William Mosley  (Assistant Professor, Program for Interdisciplinary Humanities, Wake Forest University)
Esther K.  (Red Canary Song Collective)
Discussant: Viranjini Munasinghe  (Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, Cornell University) 

Panel: Cripping Violence, Indigeneity and Pedagogy: Global Perspectives

Juliann Anesi (Assistant Professor, Gender Studies, University of California, Los Angeles)
Deepika Meena (Department of Anthropology, IIT Gandhinagar)
Edward Nadurata  (Graduate Student, Department of Global and International Studies, UC Irvine)
Discussant: Michael Gill (Associate Professor, Cultural Foundations of Education, Syracuse University)

Panel: Transnational Asia: Feminist & Decolonial Critiques

Juliana Hu Pegues (Associate Professor, Literatures in English, Cornell)
Danika Medak-Saltzman  (Assistant Professor, Women's and Gender Studies, Syracuse University)
Deepti Misri (Associate Professor, Women and Gender Studies, University of Colorado, Boulder)
Discussant: Mona Bhan (Associate Professor, Anthropology and Ford-Maxwell Professor of South Asian Studies, Syracuse University)

Closing Keynote

Iyko Day, Mount Holyoke College
“Nuclear Antipolitics and the Queer Art of Logistical Failure”

CO-SPONSORED BY:

South Asia Program, Cornell University, Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies, Cornell University; Syracuse University Graduate School; SU Humanities Center; Hendricks Chapel; Department of Cultural Foundations of Education; Department of English; Department of Religion; Department of Women’s and Gender Studies; East Asia Program, Syracuse University; East Asia Program, Cornell University; Southeast Asia Program, Cornell University; Asian/Asian American Studies Program, Syracuse University; Asian American Studies Program, Cornell University; Disability Studies; Disability Cultural Center; Intergroup Dialogue; Democratizing Knowledge Collective

With funding from the Department of Education Title VI Program.

FACULTY CO-ORGANIZERS:

Susan Thomas, Cultural Foundations of Education

Antonio Tiongson, Department of English


Category

Social Science and Public Policy

Type

Conferences

Region

Campus

Open to

Alumni

Faculty

Staff

Students, Graduate and Professional

Students, Prospective

Students, Undergraduate

Cost

Free

Organizers

MAX-Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs, MAX-South Asia Center

Contact

Emera Bridger Wilson
315-443-2553

elbridge@syr.edu

Accessibility

Communication Access Real-time Translation (CART)

Contact Emera Bridger Wilson to request additional accommodations

Exterior of Maxwell in black and white when there was no Eggers building

We’re Turning 100!


To mark our centennial in the fall of 2024, the Maxwell School will hold special events and engagement opportunities to celebrate the many ways—across disciplines and borders—our community ever strives to, as the Oath says, “transmit this city not only not less, but greater, better and more beautiful than it was transmitted to us.”

Throughout the year leading up to the centennial, engagement opportunities will be held for our diverse, highly accomplished community that now boasts more than 38,500 alumni across the globe.