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"Immigrant Song" by Sun Yung Shin, Asian American, Fourth of July, Korean-American poet, Life in America
My Poetry Corner July 2017 features the poem “Immigrant Song” by Sun Yung Shin, a Korean-American poet, writer, and educator. Born in Seoul, South Korea, she was one year old when an American couple adopted her. Raised in Chicago, she later moved to Minneapolis where she earned a BA in English from Macalester College and a Master’s Degree in Education from the University of St. Thomas. She teaches at Macalester College and lives with her husband and their two children.
When asked about her relationship with the English language in an interview with Lightsey Darst for Minnesota Artists (January 2016), Sun Yung Shin said that strangers often question her ability to speak English without a “foreign” accent. Her fluency and sense of belonging as an Asian American offend them.
Shin’s opening verses in “Immigrant Song” from her poetry collection, Skirt Full of Black (winner of the 2007 Asian American Literary Award for Poetry), express the restraints she faces to achieve her full potential as a human being.
All birds—even those that do not fly
—have wings
A constant confession
Admission of omission
In the working class “village” in Chicago where she grew up, Shin mingled with Italian, Irish, and Slavic residents. Her adoptive father is Irish and German; her adoptive mother is Polish-American. This cultural diversity influenced her interest in class, ethnicity, and the “language of the invisible.”
This is our gene flow
How do you like our genetic drift
A riff, a rift, a raft…
Too rough for the second half
[…]
Crick & Watson
Evo-devo
This is your mother’s local phenomenon
If this is racial hygiene
Why do I feel so dirty?
In juxtaposing facts with the emotional response of exclusion and purging, Shin reminds us of the advances we have made in human genetics and the structure of our DNA—gene flow, genetic drift, Crick & Watson, Evo-devo (see Footnotes below). Yet, we still cling to outdated beliefs about race and being human.
4.6 billion years of biology
Can’t stop the ideology
Graduate from meet/mate
To fitness landscape of sexual selection
As a naturalized citizen of Asian descent and a woman, Sun Yung Shin views her writing as a means of contributing to the larger conversations about life in America that exclude or objectify her and others like her.
She closes her “Immigrant Song” with a pop and a sigh.
Keep camping
Plant the flag
Bury the burial mound
Put the pop in popular
And the sigh in science
This Fourth of July, I join Americans of all shades and origins in celebrating the courageous acts of kindness that hold our communities together, despite the growing narrative of exclusion and hate. For all Americans to share in the prosperity of our nation, we must turn the rift into a raft to take us across the stormy waters into a brighter future.
To read the complete featured poem and learn more about Sun Yung Shin and her work, go to my Poetry Corner July 2017.
FOOTNOTES
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Gene flow (1947): the passage and establishment of genes typical of one breeding population into the gene pool of another by hybridization and back-crossing
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Genetic drift (1945): random changes in gene frequency esp. in small populations when leading to preservation or extinction of particular genes
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Crick & Watson: James Watson and Francis Crick, together with Maurice Wilkins, won the 1962 Nobel Prize in Medicine for their discovery of the structure of DNA.
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Evo-devo: evolutionary developmental biology that compares the developmental processes of different organisms to determine the ancestral relationship between them, and to discover how developmental processes evolved.
An enlightening post with informative running commentary
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Thanks, Derrick. Her poetry is not very transparent.
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Reblogged this on Guyanese Online.
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Thanks for the boost, Cyril. Have a great week 🙂
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Pingback: “Immigrant Song” – Poem by Korean-American Poet Sun Yung Shin – By Rosaliene Bacchus
Thanks for sharing with your readers 🙂
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beautiful sentiments
for liberation day!
tear down all
the walls & borders 🙂
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I share your enthusiasm, David 🙂 Sadly, some walls are electrified. Those that are invisible are even harder to tear down.
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Perfectly said, “invisible walls” can be the most harmful and damaging to our hope for acceptance and unity.
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This is excellent – I like how she troubles the intersections of her existence. The difficulty with being Asian American is visibility – you can hide class (I have succesfully done so myself) and you can ‘pass’ but you can never hide your colour. She writes very well.
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Glad you like her work, Mary. What a monotonous world it would be without color!
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Yes. A dull old place indeed!
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Evocative poetry for the 4th – yes, thanks for sharing to remind us to celebrate the light and the good.
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Thanks, JoAnn 🙂
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Thanks Rosaliene, I enjoyed reading this!
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Happy to hear that, Diana 🙂 I was so impressed by the samples of her work available online that I bought her latest collection, Unbearable Splendor (Coffee House Press, 2016).
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rosaliene,
Another refreshing find. I’m a big believer in cross-breeding, plants, animals, people. It maintains variety in the gene pool. The disparities aren’t so great anymore.
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Glad you enjoyed her work, Katharine 🙂
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Enjoyable poetry! Thanks for sharing!
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Thanks for dropping by 🙂
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May we all see the unity rather than the divisions. Great poetry.
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Totally share your sentiments, Brenda. Unity should trump division.
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Thanks, Rosaliene! Have a great day!
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What a lovely poem. It does give voice to voiceless Americans’ experiences.
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Thanks, Kathy 🙂
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Would it be OK if I cross-posted this article to WriterBeat.com? I’ll be sure to give you complete credit as the aut5hor. There is no fee, I’m simply trying to add more content diversity for our community and I liked what you wrote. If “OK” please let me know via email.
Autumn
AutumnCote@WriterBeat.com
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Autumn, thanks for your interest in Shin’s work. It’s okay to share with your community at Writer Beat.
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Well said, both by you and Sun Yung Shin, Rosaliene. Perhaps we should also read the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Federalist Papers to understand the American project.
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Thanks, Dr. Stein. Recently, after learning about the furor over NPR’s tweet of the Declaration of Independence, I re-read it to understand what the problem was. If you haven’t already heard about it, check out the Washington Post article.
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Awesome! From rift to raft. ❤ ❤ ❤
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Isn’t Shin amazing?
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Yes indeed she is!
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A beautiful mix of arts and science, and full of hope! This was really powerful and I can feel the emotions behind it!
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Thanks for dropping by and reading 🙂
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Rosaliene, I must not have waited to have my comment posted (earlier in July)?
Anyway, thank you especially for your lovely interpretation of the meaning of freedom and open passageways into our country and out into our world. So beautiful!
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Thanks, Robin. Our poets have much to contribute towards bringing about positive change in our country.
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Yes, so much can be accomplished by using words and not weapons to change the world. Love may yet conquer over hatred. The only way we can keep going, Rosaliene. thank you xo 💖🕊
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Agree, Robin ❤
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Thanks for sharing my post with your readers. Much appreciated 🙂
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Pingback: Inspirational :) - Poetrypost
Lovely blog with a beautiful message 😊
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Thank you, and thanks for dropping by 🙂
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endearing blog with a beautiful message 😊 harmonise, Robin ❤
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Thanks, Robin ❤
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Look what I found in your back catalogue! Some fascinating extracts, Rosaliene. They seem very appropriate for the present moment, too.
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So true, Cath. Just shows how little progress we have made as a nation since then. Thanks for reading 🙂
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