Journalism

“‘Everything Everywhere‘ has changed Hollywood, but not yet America.” Nikkei Asia, March 26, 2023; print April 10-16, 2023

Who Has the RIght Face for America? Asian and Black Stereotypes, from the Nineteenth Century to Today.” Imprinted: Illustrating Race (exhibit catalog, Norman Rockwell Museum, June 2022)

A Bicultural Jesus Celebrates Asian American Identity.” Hyperallergic, May 2022.

Synaesthethic Response and Aesthetic Camaraderie.” Nameless Sound, July 2021.

I Hate Everything Equally”: Mu Pan’s Ironic Art.” Los Angeles Review of Books, February 2021.

“World of Wong Kar-Wai” Brings the Thrill of the Unexpected. Museum of Fine Arts, Houston blog, December 2020.

From Bambi to Bethlehem: How Tyrus Wong’s Christmas Cards Captivated the American Public. Smithsonian Magazine, December 2020.

Coded Bias Examines Inherent Biases in Artificial Intelligence. Museum of Fine Arts, Houston blog, November 2020.

Where are the Allies for Asian American Kids? Los Angeles Review of Books, October 2020.

Karen Fang’s Top 4 Streaming Hong Kong Cinema Picks. April 2020.

Politics in Post-1997 Hong Kong Independent Film (in Polish) . Five Flavours Film Festival, Fall 2019

[original English-language text]

Work, Life and Historical Fiction Pennsylvania Gazette.  August 2019.

“Absurdity of Life”: An Interview with Michael Hui Not Just a Laughing Matter: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Political Humor in China.  King-fai Tam and Sharon R. Wesoky, eds.  Springer, 2018.

John Woo Oxford Bibliographies, September 2017.

Review of Our Time Will Come Cha: An Asian American Journal, November 2017.

Ten Years: What happened to the filmmakers behind the dystopian Hong Kong indy film? Hong Kong Free Press, July 2017.

Grappling with Dystopia Stanford University Press Blog, February, 2017
[Longer Version] Cha: An Asian American Journal, March 2017.

The Wuxia Revival​ Fall 2016

Beyond the Bamboo Curtain Pennsylvania Gazette, February, 2016.

Learning to Love John Woo Five Flavours Film Festival, November 2015.
[Polish-language version]

Guest Contributions on Amy Tan, from the InPrint Blog
These posts are no longer available on the InPrint website, and so have been made available in PDF form.