Louder Than the Lies: Asian American Identity, Solidarity, and Self-Love

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Educator Ellen Yang Camp’s Louder Than Lies delves into the complex issues of racism, white supremacy, and imperialism from the perspective of the ever-evolving Asian American identity. Yang, drawing from her Taiwanese heritage, a significant aspect of her East Asian positionality, shares her personal experiences of feeling alienated from the dominant Black and white racial discourse. Her narrative, a blend of history, sociology, psychology, and education, resonates with the truths about the stigmas and stereotypes about Asian Americans, citing recent events and the works of researchers and academicians from various disciplines.

I engaged with the book from my perspective as a Filipino American immigrant with more than thirty years of lived experiences in racialization in the United States. I have also been on a lifelong journey of decolonization, the arduous process of unpacking the harms of racism and my complicity in an imperialist system. As an educator, Yang’s approach invites people of Asian heritage to consider ideas about race that they had not considered before. This book makes an excellent read for Asian Americans who are just waking up to their identities as racialized beings in the American context. Any writer discussing the topic of race in the post-George Floyd era would be amiss not to confront whiteness and white supremacy. Yang breaks down these concepts in ways that people without grounding in social justice can understand.


Reviewed By:

Author Ellie Yang Camp
Star Count 3.5/5
Format Hard
Page Count 272 pages
Publisher Heyday
Publish Date 22-Oct-2024
ISBN 9781597146616
Bookshop.org Buy this Book
Issue October 2024
Category History
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Description

Educator Ellen Yang Camp’s Louder Than Lies delves into the complex issues of racism, white supremacy, and imperialism from the perspective of the ever-evolving Asian American identity. Yang, drawing from her Taiwanese heritage, a significant aspect of her East Asian positionality, shares her personal experiences of feeling alienated from the dominant Black and white racial discourse. Her narrative, a blend of history, sociology, psychology, and education, resonates with the truths about the stigmas and stereotypes about Asian Americans, citing recent events and the works of researchers and academicians from various disciplines.

I engaged with the book from my perspective as a Filipino American immigrant with more than thirty years of lived experiences in racialization in the United States. I have also been on a lifelong journey of decolonization, the arduous process of unpacking the harms of racism and my complicity in an imperialist system. As an educator, Yang’s approach invites people of Asian heritage to consider ideas about race that they had not considered before. This book makes an excellent read for Asian Americans who are just waking up to their identities as racialized beings in the American context. Any writer discussing the topic of race in the post-George Floyd era would be amiss not to confront whiteness and white supremacy. Yang breaks down these concepts in ways that people without grounding in social justice can understand.

Additional information

Author Ellie Yang Camp
Star Count 3.5/5
Format Hard
Page Count 272 pages
Publish Date Heyday
ISBN 9781597146616
Amazon Buy this Book
Issue October 2024
Category History
Share