Spa Night: Living on the Margins

Spa Night: Living on the Margins

Spa Night explores the lives and inner turmoil of a Korean American family struggling to fit into the expectations of the community around them. The individuals in the family learn how to navigate the parts of themselves that are seen as taboo— from economic struggle to being queer— in order to exist in this community while being authentic to themselves and their hidden experiences. By telling the stories of individuals so often excluded from narratives on “Asian America”, Spa Night contributes to the important work of dismantling the notion that Asian Americans are a monolith.

Within our exhibit, we seek to further break Asian Americans out of this box and show that the experiences of individuals on the margins are paramount to understanding the complex reality of Asian America. This exhibit will walk through the historical discriminations against Asian Americans that keep them from the American Dream, but are hidden by mainstream stereotypes like the Model Minority Myth. This historical lens of discrimination will provide background for understanding the hardships and experiences of people who do not fit into these stereotypes and narrow understandings of “acceptable” Asian Americans— especially Queer Asian Americans. Finally, we will look at how Queer Asian Americans and other Asian American “outsiders” are reacting to and resisting these stereotypes to build authentic futures through the reclamation of tools of oppression, like Silence. 

Through the use and analysis of videos, images, and statistics, we will shed light on the hidden challenges Asian Americans have faced throughout time both from outside and inside their communities, and how they are making active change for their own prosperity. Ultimately, this exhibit seeks to fill gaps in the Sociology of Asian America created by the concealment and overlooking of minorities within the Asian American community. 

Ally Schwarz, Alyxis Smith, and Ryan Xong

Spa Night (2016) Official Trailer

Glossary

Citations

  • The stereotypic view that Asian-Americans are a monolithic group of hard-working, submissive, and “well-behaved” immigrants that is associated with widespread economic prosperity and an absence of social problems. This positions Asian Americans above and against other racial minorities and erases Asian Americans’ real-life struggles.

  • The belief that anyone, regardless of their ethnicity, race, or social class, can achieve upward mobility in the United States if they are hardworking and conscientious. Asian American immigrants hope to achieve this, but due to discriminatory social structures, it is impossible.

  • A deviation or rejection of the normative heterosexuality, “proper” genders, and naturalized sexes. Queer people are in the LGBTQ+ community that represents people with minority sexual and gender identities. Queer identities intersect with Asian American identity to create a uniquely marginalized position for Queer Asian Americans.

  • The refusal to participate in discourse used by those in power to dictate what is allowed to be known and said and by marginalized people to exist under and resist this power. Not antithetical to speech: both strategies are tools of assimilation, resistance, empowerment, and change.

Spa Night: Living on the Margins

Individual Exhibits

Notes

  1. Ahn, Andrew. 2016. “Still: David looking at himself through a foggy mirror.” Spa Night.

  2. Ahn, Andrew. 2016. Spa Night Trailer. Youtube. Retreived December 7, 2022 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tWKCEXd0plA&ab_channel=StrandReleasing)

  3. Ahn, Andrew. 2016. “Still: Family talking over bingsu.” Spa Night.

  4. Sakamoto, Arthur, Isao Takei, and Hyeyoung Woo. 2012. “The Myth of the Model Minority Myth.” Sociological Spectrum, 32(4): 309-321.

  5. Kim, Michelle MiJung. 2021. “On Anti-Asian Hate Crimes: Who Is Our Real Enemy?” Retreived December 1, 2022. https://medium.com/awaken-blog/on-anti-asian-hate-crimes-who-is-our-real-enemy-207ee7354926.

  6. Hochchild, Jennifer. 1996. Facing Up to the American Dream: Race, Class, and the Soul of the Nation. NJ: Princeton University. 

  7. Kumashiro, K. 1999. “Supplementing normalcy and otherness: Queer Asian American men reflect on stereotypes, identity, and oppression.” International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education. 12(5): 491-508.

  8. Duncan, Patti. 2004. “Preface.” Pp. vii - xiii in Tell This Silence: Asian American Women Writers and the Politics of Speech. IA: University of Iowa Press.