Asian Canada Is Burning

Theories, Methods, Pedagogies, and Praxes

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Asian Canada is Burning is an invitation to trouble the mobilization of “anti-Asian hate” in the aftermath of COVID-19 pandemic. Bringing together activists, organizers, academic, and artists, this book explores the historical and contemporary conditions that make theorizing “Asian Canadian” feasible. Grounded in a transnational queer and feminist lens, this book also aims to envision possible futures and solidarities. Ultimately, this collection is concerned with moments and places of tensions, confrontations, relations, and solidarity. We offer stories of insurgent encounters as people who identify as “Asian” navigate and implicate settler colonial nation-state to make new dreams, histories and intimacies.

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Rose Ann Torres, Ph.D. is the Director and Assistant Professor in the School of Social Work at Algoma University. Dr. Torres pioneered the creation of a Master of Social Work at Algoma University. She is the principal investigator of the SSHRC Insight Development Grants research project entitled “Examining Access to Mental Health Care Service: The Impact of COVID-19 on Filipino Health Care Workers in Northern Ontario” and co-principal investigator of the SSHRC Institutional Grants project titled “Effects of COVID-19 on Teaching and Learning: Stories of Indigenous and Black and Asian Faculty Members and Students at Algoma University”. She has published numerous co-edited books, peer reviewed articles and book chapters.

Ian Liujia Tian is an Assistant Professor of Global Equity Studies in the Department of Women's Studies at Mount Saint Vincent University. Their research focuses broadly on the political economy of gender and sexuality in transnational contexts. They situate their research in queer Marxism, queer/trans of color critique, transnational feminism, and Asian Canadian/Asian studies.
Coly Chau has a Master of Education in Social Justice Education from the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto. Her research interests include race, gender, sexuality, migration, anti-colonial thought and spirituality. They are interested in the unearthing and reclamation of knowledges for the purposes of imagining and working toward decolonial and liberatory futures. They are often working, organizing and learning in their communities.
"This compelling anthology gathers vital perspectives on why solidarity matters, and how it offers us ways to live ethically, placing love and respect at the heart of our lifeworlds. In sharing stories, perspectives, and values that challenge and resist unjust, oppressive structures, the contributors light a path for us to think and act towards the worlds we need, worlds joyfully and tearfully built together through struggle, study and stamina."
- Rita Wong, Associate Professor, Emily Carr University of Art + Design

"Burning with passion and intelligence, this anthology showcases a new generation of scholars and activists working in Asian Canadian Studies. Combining strong academic rigour with deeply personal perspectives, the book examines the complexity of colonial and diasporic histories, the intimate relationality amongst racial, sexual, and gendered embodiments, and the challenges and joy of building solidarity across identities. Asian Canada Is Burning shines both as an inspired reexamination of the field and a handbook of praxis in organizing for a more just future."
- Helen Hok-Sze Leung. Professor, Simon Fraser University

"Asian Canada is Burning is an intellectually incisive, politically committed and timely contribution! The artists, activists and academics whose stories and analyses populate the volume’s pages expand what and how we know, and beautifully showcase the ambitious and capacious praxis of Asian Canadian critique as a scholarly formation and social justice project. I am immensely thankful for this beautiful and necessary gift!" - John Paul Catungal, Assistant Professor, Institute for Gender, Race, Sexuality and Social Justice, University of British Columbia
Acknowledgements

Notes on Contributors

1 Introduction
  Ian Liujia Tian, Coly Chau and Rose Ann Torres

Part 1
Situating Asia(ns) beyond Settler Canadian Nationalism
2 Tearing Down Walls: Rethinking White Domesticity in the Context of Cultural Domicide
  Shelly Ikebuchi

3 Unpacking the Festival of Diwali in Canada: Where Have Rama, Sita, and Lakshman Gone?
  Rajni Mala Khelawan

4 Seeking Pappy’s Approval
  Krystal Jagoo

5 Vulnerable Resisters: Decolonizing Voices of Asian Migrants in a Settler Colonial and Religious Context
  Hyejung Jessie Yum

6 Unboxing Our Narrative of Space and Place: An Unsettling Dance of (Un)Belonging
  Jose Miguel Esteban

Part 2
Gender, Sexuality and Other Intimacies
7 The Bee
  Elisha Lim

8 Labour, Intimacy and Diaspora: Queer Asian Studies in Canada
  Ian Liujia Tian

9 The Past in the Present: An Encounter between Gay Asians of Toronto and New Ho Queen
  Sam Yoon

10 Love Intersections: Queer Sensibilities and Relationality in Art and Cultural Production
  David Ng and Jenn Sungshine

11 Emergent Asian-Canadian Feminisms: Insights from Young Filipina/x Feminist Scholar-Organizers
  Monica Batac, Julia Baladad, Psalmae Tesalona, Chloe Rodriguez and France Clare Stohner

Part 3
Building Solidarities
12 The Butterfly Effect: Asian Massage Parlour and Sex Workers and Historical Chinese Laundries Fighting By-Laws and Organizing Towards Justice
  Coly Chau and Elene Lam

13 Asian Canadian Workers Organizing: The Making of the Asian Canadian Labour Alliance
  Anna Liu

14 Love Letters to Asian Canadian Studies: On Ethical Solidarities and Decolonial Futures
  Janey Lew

15 Dumpster Fires, Burning Affects
  Malissa Phung

16 Internationalist Solidarity: Palestinian Liberation, bds, and the Struggle against Normalization
  Boycott, Divest and Sanction Toronto

17 Conclusion: Asian Futurism as Living Labour
  Ian Liujia Tian

Index

This book is for graduates, undergraduates, and post-graduates of social sciences and humanities studies, women and gender, history, ethnicity, race, transnational studies, social work, political science, sociology, education, government and non-profit organizations, and social services practitioners. This book is also for communities with disabilities, for those incarcerated by the state, for those unhoused, for migrant workers or those with precarious migration status and for frontline workers.
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