CFP: Reimagining Asian Diasporas With/in the Francophone World (PAMLA 2025 Special Session) Due May 15, 2025 We invite submissions for our panel “Reimagining Asian Diasporas With/in the Francophone World” to be held at the Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Association (PAMLA) Annual Conference in San Francisco, November 20-23, 2025. Please see call below: Reimagining Asian Diasporas With/in the Francophone World In response to French universalist politics and ideals, French writers of Asian descent (Doan Bui, Grace Ly, Linh-Lan Dao, etc.) have more recently brought to light and challenged diasporic Asians’ complicity in the erasure of racial difference in France, especially in comparison to Asian American formations. Bui, in Le silence de mon père, notably likens Asians’ self-erasure in assimilating to French identity (“faire semblant d’être Français”) while rebuking “le communautarisme à l’américaine et [leurs] cousins californiens tout simplement fiers d’être Asian-American” to chasing after a shadow (Bui 176). Yet, even as these erasures and silences may be attributed to racial politics that set France up as a colorblind countermodel to the US, Viet Thanh Nguyen has argued that Asian American memory is similarly shaped through active acts of remembering and forgetting through “willful recollection” (Nguyen, “Memory,” Keywords for Asian American Studies 153). Given these resonances, what insights might we uncover about the dynamics of diasporic memory if we consider French Asian and Asian American racial formations as contrapuntal, dialogic, or intertwined rather than antithetical? This is particularly poignant given this year’s PAMLA Conference theme, “Palimpsests: Memory and Oblivion,” and location in San Francisco—a city where histories of Asian labor migration have given way to assimilationist narratives in Asian American literature and scholarship in its reification as a central lieu de mémoire (Achille et al., Postcolonial Realms of Memory; Jung, Coolies and Canes). This panel invites us to decenter US-focused perspectives on Asian diasporas and diasporic memory, with special attention to Francophone narratives. How do histories and narratives across or beyond national/imperial formations speak to, with, and/or against each other? How do literature, art, film, music, and other forms of diasporic Asian expression address these entanglements or contribute to their obfuscations? Papers (in French or English) may potentially explore the following topics… Comparative, transnational, and/or transimperial racial formations Contestations of the “model minority” myth, such as “bad Asians” (Oishi, Jung, Man) or “bad subjects” (Nguyen) Anti-Asian hate; #AsiatiquesDeFrance and anti-racist movements, especially via new media Mass displacement due to war and genocide; refugitude Concurrent and intersecting labor migrations; coolitude Decolonial movements and solidarities Literature, language, and non-belonging (Linda Lê, Shumona Sinha, Anna Moï, etc.) Queer (Asian) diasporas (Eng, Gopinath, Hoang, Bao) Asian settler colonialism, Transpacific Studies, the French-occupied Pacific, oceanitude Diasporic Asian authors outside of France or the US (Kim Thúy, Ook Chung, André Dao, Nam Le, etc.) Interested candidates may submit their abstracts (50 words), proposals (250-500 words), and bios (40-100 words) via our session page in the PAMLA Conference portal until May 15, 2025: https://pamla.ballastacademic.com/Home/S/19512. For any inquiries, please contact Chloé Luu at [email protected] and Alan Yeh at [email protected]. Learn more about this opportunity here. See More Opportunities