While I have known her
since high school (we went to an enrichment camp together), today Sunny Yang is
an Assistant Professor of English at Louisiana State University. She received her B.A. from Swarthmore College and
her Ph.D from the University of Pennsylvania. Sunny’s research and teaching
interests include ethnic and African American literatures, critical race
theory, law and literature, and U.S. empire. Her current book project, “Fictions
of Territoriality,” examines the competing narratives of race, rights, and
governance that arose from U.S. imperial and territorial expansion in the long
nineteenth century.
Sunny Yang: What
happens if I'm incredibly boring and there is nothing to post? Then
we'll just have a nice catchup?
David Schraub: Well I'll throw in a few swear words and see if I can get you
fired. I hear that's a thing now at LSU.
Sunny Yang: I
had two people send me that article! Right before I went to LSU, I mean. I'm pretty sure I'm allowed to swear outside of
the classroom. Malign Mike the Tiger or the football team though and then I
could have some problems…
David Schraub: Okay, first thing's first -- let's get the quick biographical sketch.
Where were you born and raised?
Sunny Yang: I
was born in Guangzhou, China, moved to the U.S. (specifically Memphis, TN) when
I was two years old, then moved to Carmel, Indiana in sixth grade. So I don't know which counts as the
place I was "raised": the South or the Midwest. Both gave me
politeness and passive/aggressiveness though.
David Schraub: I
considered myself pretty nice for the DC area, but once I moved to the Midwest
I realized people were playing on a whole different level.
Sunny Yang: Like
the way of saying "I'll let you go now" when I'm on the phone. When
really I mean: PLEASE STOP TALKING NOW. The Midwest and South are definitely next level -- and next level for throwing shade
David Schraub: Well, you think that, but you have to realize nobody on the
outside is picking it up. It was several years into my relationship
before I could reliably tell when Jill was angry or annoyed with me.
Sunny Yang: My
partner is British so I'm running into the same issues; only it's also trying
to convince him that every time I slightly raise my voice, I am not in fact
having a rage meltdown.
David Schraub: One thing I've discovered about having a partner with a cute
accent is that, unfortunately they often sound more adorable when they're
upset.
Sunny Yang: You
strike me as someone who would try to exploit that.
David Schraub: "Exploit" is such a harsh word. I just take joy where I
find it.
Sunny Yang: Does
she have the stereotypical Minnesota accent?
David Schraub: Not usually. It comes out more if she's talking to her family;
especially her grandmother.
Periodically those "o" sounds do
stretch a bit.
Sunny Yang: I
love that too! Malleable accents (I mean, less lovable obviously when it's a
class thing and a shaming code-switch-y thing).
David Schraub: For sure. Though I do not apologize for teaching her the proper
way to pronounce "bagel" (first syllable is like "bay", not
like the sound a sheep makes).
Sunny Yang: BAH-GUHL?
But think about how much joy you would have had every time you rolled up to a
coffeeshop. The funny thing I've discovered with an English accent:
urinal is pronounced yur-eye-nuhl
David Schraub: I hadn't heard that one I knew about
"al-loo-MINium" of course.
Sunny Yang: It's totally unacceptable and hilarious. Speaking of weird
accent quirks
During my faculty orientation day they had a
powerpoint slide of "common Louisiana names and how to pronounce
them." They had your typical french last names, things with
"eaux" at the end (as everything here does), and then, in the middle,
"Martinez." Which is pronounced "martin-ez" here. I was so
horrified
David Schraub: Is that because there is a clan of "Martin-ez"s who have
lived in Louisiana for a long time and the pronunciation has just changed? Or
is it simply that people here really don't know how to pronounce
"Martinez"?
Sunny Yang: My
guess is it's a local deviation (though I still assume that choosing not to
pronounce it a particular way is at the root of that shift). I'm still
learning about the different ethnic groups of Louisiana. It's a super rich
history
David Schraub: It seems like it. It has a really unique history both with regard
to America generally and the American South specifically. I do want to get the chance to turn to some of your work
though before we pivot back to the bayou.
Sunny Yang: Ok,
sure.
David Schraub: You went to Swarthmore for undergrad, which is a decent enough
liberal arts college for folks who don't attend Carleton (Sunny: HAH!), and then UPenn for graduate school in English. Why
English? What grabbed you?
Sunny Yang: So
my undergrad degree was actually in sociology/anthropology; and really, more
focused on anthropology. After I decided I wasn't going to law school
(in fact, I got tattoos to shame myself if I ever sold out), I realized I
wasn't comfortable with navigating the power dynamics involved with field work.
I realized that the kinds of issues of race and equality that I wanted to
do with anthropology, I could do with English. Only these people had
already written their narratives and shaped them how they wanted them
David Schraub: That makes a lot of sense. It's interesting you mention law
school, though, since a lot of your research interests (Law & Literature,
Critical Race Theory) are legal or come out of legal academia. Do you ever feel
like formal legal training could be of use in those areas? I'll admit,
as a lawyer, I get very nervous when I see non-lawyers do law-related work.
Sunny Yang: Oh
absolutely! And I still wonder if that's something I ought to do I think
part of the problem si that I did attempt to take a law class in grad school.
It was an upper level seminar on property theory
And i absolutely hated it. I think it's in part
because Penn's law school is...lets just say more practice-based? But I
remember an entire semester of talking about property and even reading Locke
And no one wanted to talk about race besides me!
David Schraub: Well, also Property Law is horrifically boring.
Sunny Yang: To be fair to law schools, I do think that part of the disconnect
is the kind of training Penn specifically aims to provide. I mean, I look at
that UCLA Critical Race Theory program and drool. I think the problem is that
Cheryl Harris' “Whiteness as Property” is one of those foundational texts for me, and for some
reason I didn't realize that a property law course would not be discussing issues like that. But again, we were
assigned Locke! And still no one wanted to talk about the fact that his whole
model for property was the "New World". I mean, I get that the dispossession of Native Americans
is kind of a downer, but come
on!
David Schraub: You should have enrolled in my anti-discrimination seminar.
"Whiteness as Property" was absolutely on my syllabus.Though I have
to say, for whatever reason it did not resonate with my students at all. I was
really surprised.
Sunny Yang: Why
do you think your students didn't enjoy it? Did they think it was
"old hat" or...?
David Schraub: I don't know. They were very interested in other CRT texts I
assigned. That class just seemed to be a whiff. Have you read Patricia
Williams' story on renting apartments and the importance of formal contracts?
but that passage was actually assigned in my
first-year Contracts Class. (I very quickly discovered that nothing makes
U.Chicago Law Professors happier than arguing that strict adherence to hard
formal rules operates to the advantage of the marginalized).
In many ways, I still consider myself more of a
"Chicago" guy than a "Berkeley" guy, even now; not because
I necessarily adopt the a Chicago approach to solving problems, but because I
deeply value the different vantage points Chicago gave me for considering them.
Sunny Yang: I
totally respect that. I think going to Swarthmore (famously dubbed
"Kremlin on the Crum"; a place that didn't have a young republicans
club until my senior year--and it was run by libertarians) insulated me in a
way that I think has still made it difficult for me to debate certain
topics/ideas
David Schraub: Yeah. I worry about that tendency in academia generally, and I
particularly worry about it in the humanities.
Sunny Yang: I
think it's a valid concern because we should be prepared to have those
conversations with our students
David Schraub: So you get your Ph.D. in English and then a tenure-track position
at LSU--which, congratulations, since I kind of thought tenure-track English
jobs didn't exist anymore.
Sunny Yang: They
barely do, it's totally depressing. My first year on the market I was
the only person in my cohort who got a tenure-track job. The model seems
now to go through one or two postdocs, or adjunct for x number of years.
David Schraub: It's awful throughout academia, but English is sort of the poster
child for where it has gotten really dire.
Sunny Yang: Yeah,
I mean out of the eleven women who initially entered with my cohort, two of us
have tenure-track jobs. The rest have either left academia, are adjuncting,
or are on fellowships. And Penn has one of the best placement records in
English.
David Schraub: Obviously you're incredibly smart and talented, but did you feel
like there were any specific elements of the academic package you presented that
helped you along?
Sunny Yang: Oh
absolutely. First of all, I'm a 19th century Americanist, but I do "long
19th century" which meant that I could apply for both 19th and 20th
century jobs. I also do multi-ethnic literature. I've taught Asian
American literature and I could do a general ethnic American literature course.
I have a certificate in Africana studies as well and can teach African
American literature. So I think part of my ability to get a job
definitely had to do with the fact that I can cover a huge range of courses.
David Schraub: That certainly is a perk! And what, in turn, attracted you to LSU?
Other than the football, of
course.
Sunny Yang: I
think there are a couple of things. I mean, first I like the fact that it's a
big flagship state university. I only have had experiences with small liberal
arts colleges and Ivies, so it's nice to have a big and super diverse student
body to engage with. This is going to sound ridiculously cheesy, but I also
like the vibe of the department. There are some amazing scholars there, but it's
a more relaxed place. It's not super cutthroat, there seems to be a genuine
community.
David Schraub: I don't think that's cheesy at all. I think finding a good
academic home is incredibly important
Sunny Yang: Plus,
I mean let's be real: New Orleans being an hour and 20 mins away did not hurt. Mardi Gras season is
actualy going down right now.
David Schraub: I'm sure Baton Rouge natives love
hearing that refrain.
Sunny Yang: HAH! I mean Baton Rouge is a pretty nice place to end up. The weather
is insane, I mean it's 70 degrees right now. And I was on fellowship in
Boston last year [with the American Academy of Arts & Sciences] and it just
wouldn't stop snowing (which is also the other thing I like about LSU.
Since it's an R1 they are super supportive on the research front. I got the
fellowship and the job at the same time and they let me go that first year
before coming back to LSU to teach).
David Schraub: I noticed that -- that was really cool. So I have to ask
this -- it's something I've been wondering for years and I finally have a live
English prof in front of me to do it…
Sunny Yang: Uh
oh...sinister drum roll.
David Schraub: The scholarship that comes out of English departments has a bit of
reputation in terms of how it is written: really dense, obscure, jargon-laden
-- what I would simply call terrible writing
(irrespective of the merit of the underlying ideas). Why is that? And why in English departments, of all
places, does awful writing seem to find a redoubt? (Or is this an unfair
stereotype?)
Sunny Yang: I
think this is a bit of an unfair stereotype now; I think there was definitely a
moment when critical theory was all the rage and you had all this awful, dense writing.
Obviously, this is program-specific; Penn tends to be very historicist and
Marxist, so you have--I think!--way clearer writers. And in more recent
years (perhaps with the tanking of the market?), you have more and more English PhDs trying to write for
popular forums—Los Angeles Review of Books or Public Books.
David Schraub: I think that's a heartening development, and it's possible this
stereotype is out of date.
Sunny Yang: Yeah, I think the newer generation is way more conscious about
needing to write more clearly, especially since many of them end up
writing for public venues.
David Schraub: I've dipped a toe into the freelancing life recently -- it's not
bad. Definitely recommend.
Sunny Yang: How
did you get started? I always wonder about this. Did you have connections?
David Schraub: Well, I've had the blog for over a decade now, so I've had a web
presence that at least a few people knew about. One of the editors of Tablet Magazine (a Jewish periodical) took a shining to my work
and has tossed me some gigs. Most
of my popular writing is trying to situate anti-Semitism inside progressive
understandings of oppression analysis. Which -- and given your research
interests I'm very interested to hear your thoughts on this -- is I think a
massively important and underserved area of discussion. There is, right
now, an extraordinarily deep sense of alienation felt by large swaths of the
Jewish community vis-a-vis this branch of academia, and it is just devastating.
Sunny Yang: I
think that's definitely an interesting issue and I wonder how that alienation
can be reconciled. Unfortunately this issue is just way out of my area of
expertise, but obviously these issues won't be going away soon and there needs
to be more conversation about it.
David Schraub: I think that's a fair response. But it isn't it in some
ways reflective that one of your areas of expertise includes "ethnic
literature" generally, and yet the way academic lines are drawn
"Jewish" issues are seen as external rather than internal?
Sunny Yang: So
this is actually a generational thing; and broadly speaking "Jewish literature"
(along with early Irish and Italian American literature) is considered ethnic
literature. But my intuition is also that funding structures shape how
departments/programs are set up. So for example, Penn doesn't have an
ethnic studies program or department (in fact you mostly only see those on the
West Coast), but there is the Katz
Center for Advanced Judaic Studies at Penn. In other words, I take your
point about the general separation of Jewish literature and ethnic literature
as it's commonly understood today. But I wonder if part of that comes
from how universities and hiring lines have been set up.
David Schraub: It's possible, although I do have some familiarity with the
genealogy of these departments emerging and I know that Judaic Studies has
never really been viewed as part of the "ethnic studies" pantheon.
Now, there is a more prosaic point to be said here, which is that people
are allowed to be interested in what they're interested in, and I don't think
that everyone (or everyone doing "ethnic studies" or "ethnic
literature") has to be thinking about Jews all the itme or even a
significant part of the time.
Sunny Yang: No;
but I think you're right in pointing out the lack of theorization going on
between these experiences.
David Schraub: I think the alienation is less from the absence and more the sense
that it isn't even viewed as a regrettable absence; and sometimes is even
viewed as a feature. We are better off if Jews aren't heard from. I read an account the other day about someone at an MLA session who tried to
raise the issue of anti-Semitism on campuses and the audience broke out
laughing at him. I mean, that's truly chilling.
Sunny Yang: I
haven't heard about that instance so I don't know about the specific context,
but obviously that is terrible. That said, it's also interesting that this
supposedly happened given that so much of the MLA this year (or at least the
organizing committee, which I'm not part of) was devoted to discussing the
potential of supporting BDS.
But
going back to your earlier point, I don't think it's true that there's the
thought “we are better off if Jews aren't heard from.” But what it is, and what
i think is also a problem, is that "oh, Jewish issues are separate"
and there are specifically Jewish studies courses that explore those issues. But
I think you're absolutely right that that's a problematic way of thinking about
it (This is also the issue of not thinking about inter-ethnic or
comparative ethnic studies).
On the east coast at least, the tendency tends
to be oh, you do "ethnic studies" by having a class that does one
month of Asian American issues and then one month of Chicano, then Native, etc.,
without theorizing them together or thinking about how these histories are
interrelated (and it's not like African American literature ever gets brought
up in all of that either).
David Schraub: Interesting! That's really surprising to me actually.
Sunny Yang: Yeah.
It's why I actually organized an Afro-Asian American studies conference when I
was at Penn. I mean, one of the academics I met through ACLS [American
Council of Learned Societies]/Mellon is a woman working on Black and Jewish
studies. And I remember her talking about how she got strange looks when she
described her project. I think part of that is this rigid way of thinking about
disciplines and specializations that you have.
David Schraub: That kills me because I hear that and I'm like "that's such
an interesting project!"
Sunny Yang: RIGHT?
And this work is slowly coming out. You have more and more Afro-Asian books
and Afro-Native books. I do think that in
certain ways, the way the job market is structured makes it more difficult to
pursue these kinds of comparative projects. You can see how ads are framed -- they
are horrifically specific. (And, for example, oftentimes the "Ethnic
American" jobs will ask specifically for specializations in Chicano/Native
but not really Asian American. So if you're an Asian Americanist you generally
can't apply for many of the "Ethnic" positions).
Once you’re hired I think you can publish
whatever but you have to be legible
enough to be hired in the first place. Like if I suddenly decided to publish on
American modernism or whatever, I don't think LSU would care as long as I still
taught ethnic American literature courses occasionally. But the initial job ad
was specifically for that.
I think it does lead to the problems we were
discussing of not branching much beyond your field. Though I think there are
attempts in the last couple of years to change this like the category of
"global anglophone" or hirings that don't specify a period (like Penn
this year is doing an open-field and time period "literature and
science" hire).
David Schraub: Hyper-specialization is definitely a problem and I'm not really
sure how to resolve it other than to be clearer that wide research interests
are okay. Incidentally, I also thinks this relates to the "bad
writing" problem -- if one is only writing for the 12 or so people who do
exactly what you do, it is perfectly okay to write in a manner only
intelligible to that dozen.
Sunny Yang: Oh
absolutely! I think in certain ways that's also why I
identify myself as someone who does American Studies Which is an
interdisciplinary field. And, you know, the articles in American Quarterly (the main journal) are usually very legibly
written.
David Schraub: Before we conclude -- we still haven't talked at all about your
projects! Give us the rundown of what you're working on nowadays
Sunny Yang: So
right now I'm in the midst of revising an article on the unexpected system of
racial labor management in the Panama Canal Zone during canal construction;
I've got another article I'm working on (out of my time period!) on the
cross-racial solidarities imagined in Yusef Komunyakaa's collection of poems,
Dien Cai Dau. And, as
always, still working on revising my book manuscript.
The book project is currently titled
"Fictions of Territoriality," and I'm looking at the legal and
popular debates that emerged over race and citizenship as a result of U.S.
expansion in the long 19th century. I examine four locations: extraterritorial
zones in China, the Mexican Cession, Indian Territory, and the Panama Canal
Zone. In each space, I analyze how legal and literary texts deployed certain
narratives to rationalize the refusal to extend rights to non-white subjects.
At the same time, I'm interested in seeing how these marginalized people drew
on alternate legal, cultural, and sometimes imperial systems in order to propose
alternate ways of thinking about race, rights, and governance.
David Schraub: That sounds like a really interesting project.
Sunny Yang: Each
chapter is interested in pursuing a slightly different issue (though the
California and Indian Territory chapters are about different ways of thinking
about sovereignty/governance)
David Schraub: That's really cool. I've all of the sudden found myself thinking a
ton about "sovereignty" as a political idea. So as far as I'm
concerned, you're on-trend.
Sunny Yang: I
love it! Only at MLA I found myself going to all these early modern panels, because
apparently sovereignty & empire are just too passe now for later periods!
David Schraub: I know you have to run, but look -- three hours of interesting material!
Sunny Yang: Are
you sure? Who's going to want to read this? Literature professor swears:
we're not all bad writers! The end.
This interview was conducted on gChat, and has been edited for length and clarity.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteA very enjoyable and informative read.
ReplyDeleteAlthough I will say that I've always been uncomfortable with the conflation between Jewish experiences and marginalization with the cultural hazing that Irish and Italian immigrants endured in the 19th century. The most glaring flaw with this comparison is that it has the effect of trivializing Jewish oppression as something that was "temporary" as opposed to being a structural, longstanding prejudice that is thoroughly ingrained in Western culture. This is best illustrated by the fact that Irish people and Italians have long since been accepted and incorporated into the dominant narratives here in North America, whereas Jews have not. Antisemitism is still as much of a reality now as it was back then, and in some ways, is arguably *worse*.
Additionally, I've always vehemently opposed categorizing Jews as white because, political concerns aside (e.g. if Jews = white and Middle Easterners = non-white, then obviously Jews = non-Middle Eastern and therefore Jews = not "really" Israelite/indigenous to the Middle East, and the modern state of Israel is an illegitimate settler colony), it isolates us from the broader academic conversation on race and the experience of ethnic minorities, thereby contributing to Jewish silencing in these fields. And since it positions Jews as "part of the white power structure", it encourages leftists and minorities to develop antisemitic feelings. After all, we're not "really" an outgroup, so it's totally ok to hate us and embrace antisemitic ways of thinking.
I'd love to hear your thoughts (and if possible, Sunny's) on this.