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The Re-âInvasianâ
The recent firestorm over Larry Summersâ remarks regarding gender and science has caused me to recall a free speech issue from my days as a Harvard undergraduate.
One of the most controversial incidents I remember had to do, of course, with âoffensiveâ speechâin particular, an article published by The Harvard Crimson in its weekend magazine, Fifteen Minutes, during spring of 2001. Called â,â the article was a satirical commentary on racial self-segregation written by my classmate Juice (a.k.a. Justin Fong). The article sparked so much outrage so quickly that I actually learned about the article when friends attending other universities forwarded it to me. Within a few days, âThe Invasianâ had invaded campuses across the country, provoking thousands of Asian-American students.
Fortunately, unlike too many other universities, Harvard did not charge Juice (himself Asian American) with âdiscriminatory harassmentâ and try to punish him for his speech, although, unfortunately, that they should have cut the âoffending phrasesâ from the article.
Maybe it was because I have an appreciation for satire, knew Juice, and recognized âthe milligram of truthâ in his article, but I didnât find the article very offensive. If I was offended by anything, though, it was by how many Asian-American Harvard students were so deeply offended by âThe Invasianâ and adamantly attempted to recruit me in their protest efforts. While I doubt âThe Invasianâ actually oppressed any Asian-American Harvard students, it did create a collective memory for the national Asian-American community: even years later, Asian Americans who were students in 2001 clearly recall how they felt when this article made it to their inboxes.
Understanding that the best response to speech is more speech, , âIf you donât agree with my article, write back and say what you think.â He rightly refused to apologize for his piece and defended it against any efforts to require the The Crimson to censor it.
Over this past weekend, not knowing what I would find, I finally got a chance to follow up on what came out of all of the hype, and here it isâclear proof that provocative (a.k.a. âoffensiveâ) speech like that in âThe Invasianâ can be the catalyst to more speech from more perspectives: (2004), a book as âa collection of essays from young Asian Americans coming âto terms with who they are in an American contextââ that resulted from self-reflection sparked by Juiceâs expression, is now being used as part of Asian Studies curricula; at talks, conferences, and workshops at high schools and colleges; and, in general, as a positive example of Asian-American activism.
Who knew that something so âoffensiveâ could cause such an interesting dialogue?
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