Justin Phan Publishes “Sonic Infidelities: Performing Time, Space, and Nonalignment in Hýõng Ngô’s In the Shadow of the Future
Justin Phan published an article entitled “Sonic Infidelities: Performing Time, Space, and Nonalignment in Hýõng Ngô’s In the Shadow of the Future in a Special Issue: “Imagining an Interval: towards a Potential Asian and Diasporic American Art History(ies),” edited by Grace Yasumura and Z. Serena Qiu for the Asian Diasporic Visual Cultures and the Americas journal.
The article is here: https://brill.com/view/journals/adva/8/1-2/article-p113_006.xml
Justin Quang Nguyên Phan is a tenure-track assistant professor in the Global Asian Studies Program at UIC. As a McNair Scholar, he majored in Women’s and Gender Studies, Asian American Studies, and Sociology at the University of California, Davis. He then received a dual-master’s degree at the University of California, Riverside in Ethnic Studies and Southeast Asian Studies, before completing his doctoral work in the Department of Ethnic Studies at the University of California, Riverside.
His research and teaching interests focus on Southeast Asian diasporic cultural texts, refugee studies, feminist theories and epistemologies, decolonization, colonial and empire formations, critical race and ethnic studies, aesthetics, embodiment, queer diaspora, Afro-Asia, militarism, transnational feminisms, and visual culture.