Your browser is unsupported

We recommend using the latest version of IE11, Edge, Chrome, Firefox or Safari.

Mar 5 2020

“Refugee Stories: A Conversation with Bao Phi and Kao Kalia Yang”

UIC Global Asian Studies & Institute for the Humanities

March 5, 2020

4:00 PM - 5:30 PM

Location

UIC Daley Library, 1-470

Address

801 S. Morgan St., Chicago, IL 60607

“Refugee Stories: A Conversation with Bao Phi and Kao Kalia Yang”

A part of the GLAS Spring 2020 series on refugee issues, two award-winning writers, Bao Phi and Kao Kalia Yang, discuss their work on the history and experience of Asian refugees in American society.

Bao Phi has been a spoken word poet for over two decades. He has two collections of poems, both published by Coffeehouse Press, Sông I Sing and Thousand Star Hotel, the latter of which was nominated for the Minnesota Book Award and was chosen as 2017’s best poetry book of the year by San Francisco State’s Poetry Center. He is also the author of two children’s books. A Different Pond received multiple awards including a Caldecott Honor, an Ezra Jack Keats Honor, Asian/Pacific American Librarians Association award for best picture book, the Minnesota Book Award for picture books, and the Charlotte Zolotow Award for excellence in children’s book writing. My Footprints was named a Best Fiction Book for Young Readers by the Chicago Public Library.

Kao Kalia Yang is a Hmong-American writer. Born in the refugee camps of Thailand to a family that escaped the genocide of the Secret War in Laos, she came to America at the age of six. She is the author of The Latehomecomer: A Hmong Family Memoir, winner of the 2009 Minnesota Book Awards in Creative Nonfiction/Memoir and Readers’ Choice, a finalist for the PEN USA Award in Creative Nonfiction and the Asian Literary Award in Nonfiction. Her second book, The Song Poet won the 2016 Minnesota Book Award in Creative Nonfiction Memoir, was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Chautauqua Prize, a PEN USA Award in Nonfiction and the Dayton’s Literary Peace Prize. The book is the first Hmong story adapted into an opera by the Minnesota Opera (it will premiere in the spring of 2021). She also writes children’s books and co-edited a collection of essays, What God is Honored Here?: Writings on Miscarriage and Infant Loss By and For Indigenous Women and Women of Color (University of MN Press). Kao Kalia Yang is also a teacher and a public speaker.

Funded by AANAPISI Initiative
Other cosponsors: UIC AANAPISI Initiative; Chancellor’s Committee on the Status of Asian Americans (CCSAA), Institute for the Humanities
Additional details here: https://glas.uic.edu/events/refugee-stories-a-conversation-with-bao-phi-and-kao-kalia-yang/

Contact

Linda Vavra

Date posted

Feb 14, 2020

Date updated

Feb 14, 2020