About this lecture
This event is free and open to the public but PLEASE CLICK HERE TO REGISTER TO ACCESS THE ZOOM LINK AND ATTEND. Please reach out to [email protected] for accessibility accommodation requests, questions or concerns.
The Center for the Study of Women and Society and Women Writing Women's Lives present the Dorothy O. Helly Works-in-Progress Lecture "The Way to Mott Street" by Ava Chin.
Ava Chin will address the challenges faced in writing her forthcoming memoir, Mott Street: A Chinese American Family's Story of Exclusion and Homecoming challenges which included the impact of the Chinese Exclusion laws on
four generations of her family in NYC’s Chinatown, and the task of how
to thread a narrative together where the historical scope includes many
eras and generations. How does one write a nonfiction book when the
official record is a kind of fiction, heavily biased against one's
subjects, or simply nonexistent due to negligence, discrimination, or a
combination of both? How does the author weave nearly five decades of
research into a single narrative? What are the criteria for inclusions
and exclusions? She will also address how the changing political
climate in America, including the recent attacks on Asian Americans,
affected her writing.
About the Author:
Ava Chin is the author of the forthcoming memoir Mott Street: A Chinese American Family’s Story of Exclusion and Homecoming (Penguin Press, April 2023) and the award-winning Eating Wildly (Simon & Schuster, 2014), which won the 2015 M.F.K. Fisher Book Award. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times (“Urban Forager”), The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, the Village Voice, Marie Claire, and Saveur, among others. She has been the recipient of grants and fellowships from the NYPL’s Cullman Center for Scholars & Writers, the Fulbright U.S. Scholar Program, the New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA), the New York Institute for the Humanities at New York University, and the Asian American Writers’ Workshop. Chin holds a PhD from the University of Southern California, a MA from the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins University, an d a BA from Queens College. The Huffington Post named her one of "9 Contemporary Authors You Should Be Reading."
This event is organized and hosted by Center for the Study of Women and Society and is co-sponsored by The Center for the Humanities, The Feminist Press, The Leon Levy Center for Biography, the Graduate Center MA Programs in Biography and Memoir and Liberal Studies, and the PhD Programs in History and English