#Wing Tek Lum
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The Nanjing Massacre
“The Nanjing Massacre is a striking volume of poetry. The poems, intelligent and at times brutal, provide both kaleidoscopic slices and a vast panorama of the tragedy. The magnitude of the poetic vision and effort is simply overwhelming.”—Ha Jin “History is not poetry and of course poetry is never history—and yet, Wing Tek Lum has fused the two with skill, sensitivity and fury. This brilliant…
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We the People: Voices of the Immigrant Experience
"America is also the nameless foreigner, the homeless refugee..." The beauty and power of these poetic voices reminds us of our common origins as strangers and sojourners in this land.
Artist: Shepard Fairey / Photographer: Ridwan Adhami
At the beginning of this century, the Episcopal Diocese of Chicago asked me to compile texts of the immigrant experience for a public reading in celebration of America’s rich diversity. In this shameful time of immigration bans and brutal deportations, may these voices remind us of our common origins as strangers and sojourners. In a country…
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#Benjamin Alire Saenz#Carlos Bulosan#Etheridge Knight#Gloria E. Anzaldúa#Gregory Djanikian#Joy Harjo#Lamont B. Steptoe#Lisa Kahaleole Chang Hall#Marilyn Chin#Names We Call Home#Nellie Wong#Sam Hamod#Sarah Willie#Unsettling America: An Anthology of Contemporary Multicultural Poetry#Victoria Lena Manyarrows#We the people are greater than fear#We the people poster#Wing Tek Lum
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Thursday, Feb. 13, 2020: "Bamboo Ridge Goes Digital: Locating Genealogical Futures." Founding editors Darrell Lum and Eric Chock, and noted writers such as Juliet Kono and Wing Tek Lum, will share their insights into the past, present, and future of Bamboo Ridge. @BambooRidge with @HIHumanities at @KCCLibrary #bambooridge #hawaiiliterature https://www.instagram.com/p/B764GxajPRh/?igshid=1umdwdoeqff06
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ZKz7gg57Tk
Chinaman's Chance (1972)
50 min 48 sec
(Alternate link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FBPOIZM6F2Q)
http://the-only-mainstream.tumblr.com/tagged/Frank-Chin
Published on Dec 25, 2016
CHINAMAN’S CHANCE (1972) Directed by Ene Riisna. Researched by Ene Riisna and writer Frank Chin. Riisna was a refugee, a “displaced person” from Estonia, which ceased to exist as a nation when Russia took over. She went from Canada to American news docs with CHINANAN’S CHANCE, and went on to a produce and direct at ABC 20/20. Chin a mag journalist went on to write plays, novels, and essays. An interveiw ith Roland Winters the last White Man to play Charlie Chan in the movies in a Chinatown movie theater. Chinatown, New York through - talks with Capt Gunderson and Lt. Freda at the Police at Catherine Street Station about Chinatown and gangs. Interviews with the Borough President, Chinatown politicians, two of whom, years after the doc, were charged and convicted of crimes in office. Interviews with China born, Labor Organizer Ben Fee, about opening White restaurants in San Francisco to Chinese customers before WWII, and the ladies garment workers union , in New York. An interview with Sociologist, Betty Lee Sung, a disciple of Rose Hum Lee, author of THE CHINESE IN AMERICA, Sociology parodying science for the U. of Chicago, using her family as the anonymus sample to illustrate her manual on kissing up to obviously superior assertive and competitive White religion and culture. Betty Lee Sung says, White society finds Yellow women are more likable than Yellow men. Women will rise. Yellow men have choice assimilate or you’re fucked. A conversation with a school principal about Tom Wolfe’s Esquire article. THE NEW YELLOW PERIL, likening Chinatown to temp towns constructed by ARAMCO, where Americans could smoke and drink and women walk in public without veils and everyone could eat pork. An interview where Chin listen’s and chews a toothpick, rather talk with two boys Henri Chang, and a young man between a shop in Harlem, and a home in Chinatown, listen to their mentor “Bird” talk of the street culuture. Henri Chang began writing his first novel whilst working as a director of security for the Trump Organization. The novel, CHINATOWN BEAT, was published in 2006. Henri Chang has been featured at the Asian American Literary Festival and has done readings in collaboration with the New Museum's Festival of Ideas for the New City and the Museum of Chinese in America. An interview with concerned White youth workers at a school playground. Wing Tek Lum, an award winning poet living in Chinatown reads from his work. He is today the publisher of Bamboo Ridge Books, of Hawaii. A visit to a family, parents China born, and their American born children. An interview with journalist Bill Wong , and his wife Joyce. He’s more comfortable with his White wife among White people. She’s more comfortable among Chinese. Bill Wong , from The Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism went on to the Wall Street Journal, and a career across newspapers and media to found the Asian American Journalists Association. He become a senior editor of his hometown paper, in the 1980’s , The Oakland Tribune. He was a commentator on McNeil/Lehrer on PBS. One day in the 90’s, he was fired, and to this day , no one knows why, and Yellow journalists did not have the chops or guts to ask.
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Artists and activists alike know that poetry is a force to be reckoned with, and our new Poetry & Politics events series is a testament to poetry's revolutionary potential. Get ready for our first installment, which features the powerful works of Wing Tek Lum and Vikas Menon, with Kundiman founder Sarah Gambito as MC. Monday July 27 at 7pm.
RESERVE A SEAT NOW: http://aaww.org/curation/poetry-politics-i/
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The Moment Before Tears Would Well Up
Selections from Wing Tek Lum's "The Nanjing Massacre: Poems."
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