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AAWWTV: Pachinko with Min Jin Lee & Ken Chen 

Asian American Writers' Workshop
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AAWW is a national literary nonprofit dedicated to the belief that Asian American stories deserve to be told. We host events in NYC and broadcast them here! Please support us by donating at aaww.org/donate so we can continue this work. You can also become a fanclub member and receive custom designed pins & stickers at aaww.org/fanclub/.
5:20 Min Jin Lee reading
18:59 Conversation with Ken Chen
56:58 Q & A with the audience
Award-winning author Min Jin Lee stopped by the Tenement Museum for a reading and Q&A about her new book, Pachinko. Pachinko (Grand Central Publishing 2017) follows one Korean family through the generations, beginning in early 1900s Korea, and moving to Japan. The family endures harsh discrimination, catastrophes, and poverty, yet they also encounter great joy as they pursue their passions and rise to meet the challenges this new home presents. Through desperate struggles and hard-won triumphs, they are bound together by deep roots as their family faces enduring questions of faith, family, and identity. After her reading, Min Jin sat down for a discussion with Ken Chen, executive director of the Asian American Writers Workshop.
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AAWW is a national not-for-profit arts organization devoted to the creating, publishing, developing and disseminating of creative writing by Asian Americans-in other words, we’re the preeminent organization dedicated to the belief that Asian American stories deserve to be told.
We’re building the Asian literary culture of tomorrow through our curatorial platform, which includes our New York events series and our online editorial initiatives. In a time when China and India are on the rise, when immigration is a vital electoral issue, when the detention of Muslim Americans is a matter of common practice, we believe Asian American literature is vital to interpret our post-multicultural but not post-racial age. Our curatorial take is intellectual and alternative, pop cultural and highbrow, warm and artistically innovative, and vested in New York City communities.
Our curatorial platform is premised on the idea of a big-tent Asian American cultural pluralism. We’re interested in both the New York publishing industry and ethnic studies, the South Asian diasporic novel and the Asian American story of assimilation, high culture and pop culture, Lisa Lowe and Amar Chitra Katha, avant-garde poetry and spoken word, journalism and critical race theory, Midnight’s Children and Dictee. We are against both an exclusive literary culture that believes that race does not exist and Asian American narratives that lead to self-stereotyping and limit the menu of our identity. We are for inventing the future of Asian American literary culture. Named one of the top five Asian American groups nationally, covered by the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal and Poets & Writers, we are a safe community space and an anti-racist counterculture, incubating new ideas and interpretations of what it means to be both an American and a global citizen.

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12 июл 2017

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Комментарии : 24   
@malspowage8896
@malspowage8896 3 года назад
이민진 작가님 존경합니다 그리고 가슴아프게 사랑합니다 건강하세요.
@Trisonss
@Trisonss 3 года назад
I wonder what Japanese people would think of Masayoshi Son the 2nd richest man in Japan who is 4th generation Korean Japanese who before getting a BS degree from Uc Berkeley had a Japanese last name, a choice his family made to 'survive' in JapN but upon returnig to Japan he changed it back to his Korean last name Son (손). He decided to 'come out'.
@preppiekorean
@preppiekorean 2 года назад
ㄱㅅ
@muetmuet5588
@muetmuet5588 3 года назад
이민진 작가님 책읽어주실 때 모든 세상이 사라지고 제가 그 전당포에 앉아있는 기분이었어요. 제 손바닥에 땀이 나는 기분... 존경합니다!
@user-jw2ud7iv1e
@user-jw2ud7iv1e 3 года назад
what an energy! I was impressed by vividness of Min Jin's sister and her pride toward her sister. She deserves.
@staceywi2288
@staceywi2288 2 года назад
I learn a lot by reading her book, pachinko and listening her lecture at amherst univ. I am honored to learn from her how to criticize social problem in a noble way and a way caring individuals inside the society
@user-IllIIl
@user-IllIIl 3 года назад
I'm so glad that the Koreans in Japan issue is gaining some recognition in the US and around the world. I'm Korean who has lived in the UK for a long time and my experience has been overall positive. I have been treated equally and thanks to that I've also learnt to do the same to others, no matter what their background is. The Korean community in the UK is still very young. British people don't really know about us and maybe we just don't get enough attention let alone discrimination. The life of Koreans in Japan breaks my heart. And I hope that won't be the story for the Koreans here in the UK in the future. I've seen many documentaries, movies and books, hear on the news about the "Chosen" kids being bullied and schools targeted/threatened, the politicians manipulating the North Korean issue to demonise the Koreans in Japan for decades, the rise of the far right, the comments on Yahoo Japan about Korean news, the internet forums.. the list goes on. It's so deep rooted - most of the time cruelly subtle, sometimes shamelessly open. I'm not surprised that Min faced those "you're Korean" experiences because it's become so integrated to the Japanese people's subconscious and it just slips out. I feel a chilling sensation just thinking about what my life would be like if I was disadvantaged like that by the UK law and its people. And even worse if I was 4th/5th generation but still a 2nd class citizen, bottom of the hierarchy, labelled as the "Korean who is always complaining".
@user-bd6dr6nb8p
@user-bd6dr6nb8p 2 года назад
Don't be depressed. I'm 1975 Myongdong PA(19 years old clerk with Korea Exchange Bank 🏦 by that time with London Branch also) I was a Foreign Student who worked in COLDWELL BANKER Commercial during the period of 1986ㅡ1989 I take control of Civilized portion first but eventually deal with rest of barbarians in the end. So. just take it easy n Enjoy your life in UK brilliantly.
@frankl.5676
@frankl.5676 2 года назад
Love when Ken presides over the Q&A part of this talk with his solitliciting statement: "other thoughts..."
@stephaniecarleton3117
@stephaniecarleton3117 3 года назад
What a wonderful sister's and a lovely introduction.
@user-mw5dv7lb9v
@user-mw5dv7lb9v 3 года назад
경희와선자가 한수가 준 시계를 팔려고 전당포주인과 대화하는 장면은 어찌나 조마 조마하든지 긴장하면서 읽은 부분 이 장면이 있은 후 후일에 한수가
@frankh.5378
@frankh.5378 Год назад
이민진 선생님, I am a Korean American like yourself. I heard of this racism in Japan. But, I follow an Australian who married a Japanese who lives there who describes his frustration of Japanese insistence of not changing ways, even if there is a better way. For simple thing as manually moving bricks with hands instead of using a cart, he gets similar comments - like 'you think you are smarter than our tradition'.. what I am getting at is that it could be Japanese culture to follow orders without any question. That with our western eyes, it looks like racism. And then with lots of these cultural misunderstandings, ppl create their own groups and in the end create real racism towards one another bc there is no dialog and everyone lives in their echochambers.
@LK-yk2uz
@LK-yk2uz 3 года назад
1:00:20 That's very sad and ignorant on Japanese part. If we treat Japanese descendant here in US exactly the same way how Japanese people & Gov in Japan treat other races or country origin, would they like it?
@bboykee
@bboykee 2 года назад
Reasoning with them won't work. Even tho they are the ones who dropped bombs at Perl Harbor first, Japanese think they are the victim of the war. Their history textbook won't mention anything bad about what they did, that's why most of them don't know the true history unless they come out of Japan and study history.
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