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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:Do You Love Me? A Transnational Memoir
PRODID:-//Harvard events data//EN
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SUMMARY:Do You Love Me? A Transnational Memoir
DESCRIPTION:<h2>	<drupal-media data-entity-type="media" data-entity-uuid="f0b87231-799a-406a-8956-fa0c770b533c" data-view-mode="hwp_large"></drupal-media><a href="internal:/new-directions-in-women-gender-sexuality" title="">NEW DIRECTIONS IN STUDIES OF WOMEN, GENDER, AND SEXUALITY</a></h2><h2>	<em>AY 2023–2024: Art and Politics in the Asian Diaspora</em></h2><h2>	SPEAKER: Rani Neutill, Tufts University and Emerson College</h2><p>	<span>When Rani Neutill receives a disturbing message from her cousin, urging her to travel to India to save her estranged, elderly mother from physical decline and bring her to the US, Rani’s hard-won, stable life in Boston, MA is upended. For decades, Rani and her mother have been playing a painful game of emotional tug-of-war. Before it’s too late, Rani must reckon with centuries of inherited trauma if she is to understand the trajectory of her own life (and her mother’s) and decide whether she wishes to summon the power of forgiveness. Spanning more than three decades and two generations of mother/daughter dynamics, <em>Do You</em> <em>Love Me</em><strong> </strong>travels between Pasadena, California and Kolkata, India, charting Rani’s journey to build a cultural map for herself and to answer questions that have cast a long shadow over her coming of age.</span></p><p style="margin-bottom:7.5pt">	<span>What does it mean to be a biracial woman straddling the border between two seemingly incompatible identities? Will she ever truly understand her ancestors and their trauma, or will she always be kept at a remove? What—and where—is “home?”</span></p><h3>	About the Speaker</h3><p>	<strong>Rani Neutill</strong> is a recipient of a 2022 artist fellowship from the Massachusetts Cultural Council and has taught ethnic American and postcolonial literature at Harvard, Yale, Johns Hopkins University and other institutions. She currently teaches classes in creative writing and Asian American literature at MIT, Tufts University, and Emerson College. Her work has appeared in <em>The New York Times Book Review</em>, <em>Al Jazeera English</em>, <em>CNN</em>, <em>The Los Angeles Review of Books</em>, <em>The Washington Post</em> and <em>The Rumpus</em> amongst other publications. Neutill co-edited an anthology about the Kpop group BTS titled <em>Bangtan Remixed: A Critical BTS Reader,</em> forthcoming from Duke University Press.</p>
LOCATION:Barker Center, Room 133
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20240404T210000Z
DTEND:20240404T210000Z
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