{"id":297,"date":"2022-12-12T09:00:00","date_gmt":"2022-12-12T09:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/krieger.jhu.edu\/chloe\/?p=297"},"modified":"2025-01-21T15:07:53","modified_gmt":"2025-01-21T15:07:53","slug":"the-asian-diaspora-in-baltimore-documented-and-described","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/krieger.jhu.edu\/chloe\/2022\/12\/12\/the-asian-diaspora-in-baltimore-documented-and-described\/","title":{"rendered":"The Asian Diaspora in Baltimore, Documented and Described"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
[This is an archival post to highlight past work that helped to build the Chloe Center.]<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n The 300 block of Park Avenue in Downtown Baltimore was at the center of several presentations by undergraduate students on Tuesday, December 6th<\/sup>. This block today is home to several businesses run by Ethiopian merchants, offering hair styling, meals, and other essentials. Yet this block historically has been the locus of the Chinese community in the city of Baltimore, which peaked in the 1960s.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Students examined this unique block and its changes, amid the broader vicissitudes of economic and racial transformations in Baltimore, as part of their fall course History Research Lab: Asian Diaspora in Baltimore, taught by assistant professor of history H. Yumi Kim.<\/p>\n\n\n\n In March 2021, as a response to the pain and outrage among Asian and Asian-American students and others after the shootings in Atlanta, Kim, along with RIC\u2019s Clara Han<\/strong> and Erin Chung<\/strong>, founded Critical Responses to Anti-Asian Violence<\/a> (CRAAV), which has supported programming on political and cultural questions of the Asian diaspora in the United States and elsewhere. This project also helped germinate an ongoing student-led initiative<\/a> to create a new major within RIC called Critical Diasporic Studies<\/a> that would emphasize AAPI experiences and politics, as well as investigate global indigeneities, comparative colonialisms, and other large social questions that have been the core of the work RIC has been hosting among PhD students.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Kim\u2019s History Research Lab course represents the meeting of CRAAV\u2019s critical political inquiries and the student energy behind the push for new curricular offerings on the Homewood campus that better address the complex and intersecting identities of the increasingly diverse student body.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The nine students in Kim\u2019s course faced a basic challenge: although we do know that Asian people have lived in Baltimore for over a hundred years, almost no scholarly literature documents their history. And, moreover, as the contemporary streetscape of the 300 block of Park Avenue demonstrates, this history is in danger of disappearing. The possibility of losing this history made the students\u2019 research feel urgent.<\/p>\n\n\n\n To a crowd of around thirty other students (graduate and undergraduate), faculty, librarians and archivists, and community members, the students presented their early research findings on topics including relations between Korean and Black populations in Baltimore (Vanessa Han<\/strong>), local Cantonese- and Toisanese-language schools (Dylan Tran<\/strong>), the Baltimore Chinese merchants\u2019 association On Leong Tong (Kobi Khong<\/strong>), and others. Cal Lee<\/strong> and Ishika Kaushik<\/strong> presented a draft version of a public website that will help document the Asian Diaspora in Baltimore, including the research of the students in the class.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
<\/figure>\n\n\n\nUrgent Questions<\/h2>\n\n\n\n