Laughing Back at Empire
The Grassroots Activism of The Asianadian Magazine, 1978–1985
- Publisher
- University of Manitoba Press
- Initial publish date
- Sep 2023
- Category
- Media Studies, Post-Confederation (1867-), Race & Ethnic Relations
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9781772840322
- Publish Date
- Sep 2023
- List Price
- $25.00
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
Asian Canadian activism, resistance, and art of the 1970s and 80s
Laughing Back at Empire is a ground-breaking examination of The Asianadian, one of Canada’s first anti-racist, anti- sexist, and anti-homophobic magazines. Over the course of its seven-year run, the small but mighty magazine led a nation-wide dialogue for all Canadians on the struggles and social issues that concerned Asians in Canada.
The Asianadian established a national platform for then-emerging Asian Canadian writers, artists, musicians, activists, and scholars like Sky Lee, Jim Wong-Chu, Joy Kogawa, Himani Bannerji, and Paul Yee. Columns like “On the Firing Line” and the “Dubious Achievement Awards” provided space to laugh back at the embarrassing concoction of Orientalist stereotypes in the media and to critique inconsistencies and superficialities within Canada’s newfound multicultural image.
Situating the story of The Asianadian within the history of Canada, Angie Wong celebrates and builds on the work of its creators from the Asianadian Resource Workshop. Extensive interview material with the co-founding members, editors, volunteers, readers, and contributors captures their dedication and spirit of anti-racist collectivism.
Wong’s analysis helps to dismantle cultural assumptions that have relegated Asian Canadian history, contributions, and injustices to the periphery of Canadian experience and identity. On the heels of the COVID-19 pandemic and a resurgence of anti-Asian racism, Laughing Back at Empire amplifies the voices that speak, shout, and laugh together at empire’s self-congratulatory and exclusionary narratives.
About the author
Angie Wong is a Senior Consultant with Alberta Health Services and a lecturer at Mount Royal University.
Editorial Reviews
"Angie Wong focuses on one of Canada’s most groundbreaking publications you have probably never heard of, The Asianadian, that took up an avowedly anti-racist, anti-sexist, and anti-homophobic cause at a crucial moment in Canadian history. As well as an engagement with the existing scholarship on the Asian-Canadian experience, and the contents of the magazine itself, Wong has conducted interviews with contributors, readers, and many others with an Asianadian association. The prose and poetical content, as well as the imagery and advertisements of The Asianadian are given new life throughout, and the result is a really excellent window into a micro-movement that expanded as it spoke to, and inspired, much broader conversations about nation, race, gender, and empire."
JACANZS
"[Wong] blends provocative academic critiques of colonialism with a compelling account of solidarity among young people from diverse backgrounds who worked together to foster greater tolerance and acceptance of cultural differences in Canada and in other settler-colonial societies."
Canada's History
“Laughing Back at Empire honours The Asianadian magazine and collective as important and innovative in their time, and as inspirational in the present and future. This is a powerful history, a moving celebration, and a call to action for us now.”
Laura Ishiguro
“Laughing Back at Empire is a tremendous contribution to an as-yet understudied area: the history and forms of inter-ethnic, Asian Canadian solidarity and the roots of Asian Canadian coalitional politics that continue today. Wong illuminates a history of Asian Canadian identity that combats contemporary claims that Asian diasporic communities in North America are merely apolitical and assimilationist.”
Michelle Cho