Paul Tai Yip Ng Memorial Award

Paul Tai Yip Ng Memorial Award 2024: Judy Yae Young Kim

March 14, 2025
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Congratulations to Ms. Judy Yae Young Kim, winner of our 2024 Best Graduate Student Paper award.

Judy Yae Young Kim is a current MA student in the School of Communication at Simon Fraser University. Currently working under the supervision of Dr. Dal Yong Jin, Judy’s MA thesis focuses on how K-pop can act as a form of representation for gyopos (Korean diaspora), and how racialization plays a role in determining “proper” representation in mainstream media. As a gyopo and an avid K-pop fan herself, Judy has always been fascinated by the growth of Korean pop culture globally, and the implications behind this growth. The paper submitted for this award is titled “Melancholia and Inscrutability: Affects Surrounding Asian American History”. Using Sara Ahmed (2004)’s theory of “stickiness” – how feelings “stick” to objects (and slide off others), this paper examines how certain affects have “stuck” to Asian Americans, and by extension, Asian Canadians, due to racialization. Judy would like to thank Dr. Cait McKinney for their guidance in writing the winning paper, and Dr. Dal Yong Jin and Dr. Sarah Christina Ganzon for their support throughout her MA program.

Abstract

Feelings change how we interact and perceive the world around us. Asian American history has been permeated with affects and feelings that shaped how Asian Americans were perceived and continue to be perceived in a white supremacist America. This paper aims to examine affect’s relationship with Asian Americans and how certain cultural histories and memories have “stuck” to Asian Americans. Asian Americans have been branded as the “Other” due to white supremacy and cultural histories associated with it. The Yellow Peril ideology, a result of U.S nationalism and white supremacy, instilled fear into (white) citizens, portraying Asianness as a threat. The Model Minority Myth, on the other hand, pitted Asians against other people of colour in America by portraying Asians as the “good” minority that would not threaten white supremacy. These mythologies and discourses created a certain cultural history and memory of Asian Americans, manifesting specific emotions (socially moving) and affects. Melancholia and inscrutability can operate as forms of resistance against the existing affects about Asian Americans. Melancholia is defined as a death that is continuously mourned, and this paper looks at how assimilation causes melancholia. Inscrutability operates as a form of resistance by the refusal to be affected by previous affects and cultural memories for Asian Americans.