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In Minor Feelings, Cathy Park Hong asks whether Asian-Americans will become ‘stooges to a white ideology’

  • The poet and author explores ‘racialised’ emotions of shame, doubt and gloominess in her latest book
  • ‘Not white enough nor black enough, distrusted by African-Americans, ignored by whites’

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In her book Minor Feelings: An Asian-American Reckoning, Cathy Park Hong combines anecdotes and insights with scholarly knowledge to highlight the destructive effects of racial prejudice. Illustration: Mario Riviera

Minor Feelings: An Asian-American Reckoning

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by Cathy Park Hong

One World

4.5/5 stars

Just before the publication of her fourth and latest book, Minor Feelings: An Asian-American Reckoning, Cathy Park Hong read from it at a small gallery in Brooklyn, New York. Later, the gallery manager, “a white man with a beard and tattoos”, ambled up to her and announced he was taking a racial awareness seminar, a requirement for his other job.

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His instructor, the manager said, told him how minor­ities in the United States “can’t be racist against each other”. Hong, who is a professor in Rutgers University – Newark’s master of fine arts (MFA) poetry programme as well as poetry editor of The New Republic magazine, respon­d­ed that he was either talking nonsense or was badly misinformed. To which the manager quipped: “He also said Asians are next in line to be white. What do you think about that?”

When she hears that phrase, Hong writes in her book, she replaces the word “white” with “disappear”. That’s because Asians are popularly perceived to be so accomplished and law-abiding that “we will disappear into this country’s amnesiac fog”, writes Hong: “We will not be the power but become absorbed by power, not share the power of whites but be stooges to a white ideology that exploited our ancestors.”

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