It’s all GONE… a bit SAN TONG

the LIFE & TIMES in my universe.. .. centered and uncensored.. .. & into your life & web-consciousness..

Stuck between Geek and Gangster May 1, 2007

Filed under: Being Yellow, Mangotribe, Personal is Political, Tech Geek Out — sanster @ 8:21 pm

My friend Bao posted this in an
APIA listserve that we are on.  I find it to be very thought-provoking…

a New York Sun commentary

-A Bad Week for Asian Americans Gets Worse

By GRADY HENDRIX
April 24, 2007
It’s been a lousy 10 days for Asian Americans. Last Monday, 23-year-old Cho Seung-Hui killed 32 of his fellow students at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and the media were quick to try and link the shootings to Asian movies by directors Park Chan-Wook and John Woo. That same day, the Ed Lover radio show on Power 105 aired a comedy skit called “Are You Smarter than an Asian?” featuring questions like “How does an Asian pronounce ‘fried rice’?” On Sunday, “The Sopranos” featured a quiet Asian-American resident of Uncle Junior’s mental hospital who turned out to be a violent psychopath. And this coming Friday, you can watch “The Condemned,” a new action movie featuring a sadistic Japanese martial artist who burns a rival to death.At a time when a Stepin Fetchit descendant, Uncle Ben, is being remade as a corporate CEO, it seems incongruous that Christopher Walken will be donning “yellow face” to play a Fu Manchu clone named Feng in the forthcoming dire-looking comedy “Balls of Fury.” When Don Imus can get fired for saying “nappy headed hos,” how can Ed Lover stay on the air with “Are You Smarter than an Asian?”We’re a convenient minority,” said Greg Chang, the manager of operations at the ImaginAsian theater, a Manhattan cinema that screens exclusively Asian fare. “A comedian can make fun of Asian Americans and seem edgy without running much risk. Or a school can point to their Asian students and say that they have a lot of minority students even if they don’t have any African-Americans enrolled.Max Han, who runs the Korean news site NewYorkSeoul.com, points to the emphasis placed on Cho Seung-Hui’s nationality as an example of Asian Americans still being excluded from the mainstream. “Major media outlets labeled Cho as a Korean national. Even though he came to the U.S. at age eight, he was considered a foreigner. For the Virginia Tech shooting, we put an emphasis on his Asian ethnicity.”That may be because Asians are the bad guys again. Ken Leung, who played Carter, the psychopathic mental patient on “The Sopranos,” is a professional bad guy. He’s known for playing a sadistic mutant who grows quills in “X-Men: the Last Stand,” for playing the psycho killer, Sang, in “Rush Hour,” and for playing that most evil of all creatures, a high school guidance counselor, in “The Squid and the Whale.”Ever since women have been given the choice to be either virgins or whores, Asians have been given the choice: gangster or geek? On the one hand, in pop culture you have the lovable nerd Hiro on the NBC’s hit show “Heroes.” On the other, you have DC Comics‘ best-selling comic series of 2006, “52,” which features a sinister villain known as Chang Tsu, a revamped Wonder Woman Yellow Peril baddie from the 1960s previously known as Egg Fu, who assembled a cabal of evil scientists on the mysterious Oolong Island.“Four of
America’s last five wars have been fought on Asian soil against Asian armies and that’s become part of our collective unconscious,” Jeff Yang, an author and a consultant on Asian-American marketing for Iconoculture, said. “Four decades of hostility, on and off, have given us this image of a cunning, heartless, inhuman Asian invader.”
But it goes back earlier than that. In 1914, Jack London wrote a breathless fantasy about the extermination of all Chinese people called “An Unparalleled Invasion”; Buck Rogers made his debut fighting “Mongol hordes;” and the names Fu Manchu and Ming the Merciless have entered our vocabulary along with James Bond and Sherlock Holmes. And these stereotypes are getting rehabilitated fast.Americans are worried about their jobs being outsourced to India, magazine covers are proclaiming that China is the world’s next superpower, and North Korea’s Kim Jong-Il is not only ramping up his nation’s nuclear program, but he’s been named as part of the science-fiction sounding “Axis of Evil.” “There’s a sense of anxiety and it’s coming out in popular culture,” Mr. Yang said.“Any other ethnicity or race are very vigilant and vocal about this,” Mr. Yang said. “They know all too well that the first signs of cultural danger are when people embrace these media images because from there everything else flows.”But things are hardly looking better for the future. The Olympics are going to Beijing in 2008. America is bringing China up for trade violations in the WTO. India and America are at loggerheads over a nuclear deal. So it comes as no surprise that next summer’s big comic book movie is “Iron Man” starring Gwyneth Paltrow and Robert Downey Jr. Its villain? He’s called “The Mandarin.” 

Click here for more frightening news of an Asian-American Straight-A High School Student who got racially profiled for work he did for a creative writing class: http://www.tripmastermonkey.com/archives/news_views/april_26_2007_another_case_of_asian_profilin.php 

As a self-proclaimed creative “writer” I find this atrociously disturbing.

~san

 

Mangotribe Show March 12, 2007

Filed under: Bio, Girl Thangs, Mangotribe, Theater — sanster @ 3:15 am

mangotribe.gif

Re:Telling

A 5 year anniversary of mangotribe herstories…

HI-5, HER-5

Re:Verse

Re:Vive

Re:Establish

Re:Member

Re:Peat

Re: Iterate

Re:SIStance

SAVE THE DATE: APRIL 1, 2007 at Galapagos Art Space.  We might take a dip in the pool.

AND, i think we’re on myspace now….

San

 

vona benefit.. January 18, 2007

Filed under: Bio, Fiction, Floetry, Theater, Tigers — sanster @ 7:19 pm

Here’s the vona event and the excerpts i read:

Sanvona
San Tong lives in Los Angeles. She works at an advertising agency, while pursuing various writing projects. She was the Visual Director for Theater Group called Mango Tribe, an APIA women’s theatre production group founded on the belief that collective creation is often the most powerful form of art. She was also a literary manager for the 5th Night Screenplay and Short Film Series at the Nuyorican Poets Cafe.

1.18.07 (VONA fundraiser)

Distillation Poem:
History kept getting confused.
She was put on this earth to excavate the truths that transcended
territorial borders,
bayonets,
and good foreign policy.

She transcended the bond between

mother
and
child

and for that her sacrifice was great

Neurosis and madness can birth greatness,
but not everyone makes it thru to the other side.

And what she bore changed how a generation regarded the word
“rape” and the phrase
“occupation.”

“I do the work I do so that my grandfather’s death in the hands of the
soldiers was not in vain,
I ask for an apology.
I ask for reparations.

I have not forgotten and neither have a generation still scarred by
Nanking atrocities.”

Some called her a liar, a rabble-rouser.

But she believed that there is fairness in love and war.

She sought truth, but madness drove her to make the ultimate sacrifice.

Excerpt from Longer Fiction Piece:

From then on, she always believed the moon to be heaven. The river was a mirror to show off her beauty and grace. Heaven was a place that teased earth with her beauty and calm. And mortals like her had only to look up at it to see its splendor. So every night, she said a little prayer that soon she’d be there to hug the moon when it was full and to cradle and spoon it when it was a crescent. It was a place where there was no pain. It was now her third full moon cycle at the house of comfort. Marukumoto, the soldier who had taken ownership of her had either been killed or transferred to another part of China. She didn’t know what happened to him. She did not love him, but understood that in war she would be a fool not to take any special treatment she could get. But now, things were miserable.
When Marukumoto was still around, she thought that he was slowly falling in love with her. She’d never felt anything like it before, but she couldn’t release herself to love him completely simply because he was the one she lost her virginity to. He was her first and it was not by choice. It was him and 2 other soldiers that had forced their way into her family’s home. Her mother was in the kitchen washing rice. The loud sound of the rice clinking against the metal bowl they used each night must have drowned out the sound of the soldier’s footsteps against the dirt road leading up to their hut. They must have stabbed her in the back from behind. She barely heard her scream, but heard the bowl crash to the ground, the round metal circling on the ground a few times before settling on the floor frozen in time. The rice was thrown into the air like confetti before landing. By the time Yishun was forced to discover her mother, she was a curled up ball, hunched over on the floor, in a pool of blood, rice scattered on the ground beside her. This was the first snapshot of Yishun’s hell on earth. Reincarnation might have graced her with an easier fate.

San