The Reframing Global Asias Conversation Series invites speakers from universities, museums, digital archives, non-profit organizations, and sites of activism to present research and discuss key issues, possibilities, and challenges in relationship to “Global Asias” and the fields of Asian, Asian American & American diaspora studies.
Fall 2025 Events
Wednesday, October 22, 2025
10:30a-11:45am
AOK Library Gallery
Coffee, tea & light breakfast provided
House of Mirrors: How Mis- and Disinformation Amplify Imperialist Histories to Shape Asian American Political Participation in California’s 45th Congressional District
Presented by invited speaker Shengxiao “Sole” Yu, facilitator, writer, and social justice educator; Creator, Nectar
In many Asian American spaces, we are witnessing narrative trends that contribute to tensions within, across, and about our communities. This research project seeks to more deeply understand these tensions through a case study of the California 45th congressional district where two Asian American candidates ran in 2024 in a race set against the backdrop of imperialism, war, trauma, displacement, grief, healing, identity-building, identity politics, electoral power, and most of all, our shared desire to be seen as who we are.
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Language as personal and communal expression: an interactive zine-making workshop with Dr. Joyhanna Jung Yoo & Shengxiao “Sole” Yu
Thursday, October 23, 2025
2-4pm
CADVC Gallery, Fine Arts 105
Dr. Joyhanna Jung Yoo and Shengxiao “Sole” Yu will lead participants through an exploration of their personal relationship to their heritage language(s). The workshop will ask participants to reflect on the relationship of language in their lives as it pertains to identity, family, thought, and more. The workshop aims to bring together students and broader community members to think about the connections between issues of language to broader community and social concerns.
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The Semiotics of Skin: The Discursive Construction of Desirable Figures of Personhood in Korean Beauty’s Global Circulation
Friday, October 24, 2025
12-1pm
Performing Arts & Humanities Building 216
Dr. Joyhanna Jung Yoo will discuss how Korean American entrepreneurs in the global K-beauty industry establish their expertise by sharing personal memories of Korean skincare traditions, positioning these practices as age-old beauty philosophies rather than mere trends. Through discourse analysis that focuses on the sensory and gendered aspects of these shared memories, the study reveals how K-beauty discourse creates aspirational identities for consumers while transforming traditional Korean skincare rituals into marketable expertise that circulates globally.
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About the speakers:
Joyhanna “Joy” Yoo (she/they) is a linguistic anthropologist whose work examines the circulation of Korean popular cultural genres with fieldwork based in Seoul, Mexico City, and Los Angeles. Their research examines the meanings generated by language as it pertains to race and gender when cultural genres circulate. Joy has also published on Asian American racialization and linguistic appropriation in mediatized contexts. Her newer work examines the relationship between language loss, grief, and Korean diasporic belonging. They are especially passionate about student-centered teaching, mentorship, and student advocacy.
Shengxiao Yu, known by her nickname Sole, is a speaker, facilitator, writer, and social justice educator. She is the creator of Nectar, a space where she provides political education for the community through giving keynote speeches, facilitating workshops, and providing thought leadership. In 2024, Sole served as the activist-in-residence at the Asian American Studies Center at the University of California, Los Angeles. In this capacity, Sole conducted research to more deeply understand the AAPI electoral landscape and the role of mis- and disinformation. Sole is a writer for the Xin Sheng Project, a platform combating misinformation in the Chinese diaspora community by publishing in-language, progressive articles that shift perspectives and build intergenerational power. As a generation 1.5 Asian American, Sole is also working to build community among her fellow Asian Americans in order to build socio-political power and to lift up her lineage. Sole is inspired by BIPOC activists, grassroots community leaders, and all the intersectional movement ancestors who have paved the way.