澳门六合彩

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A family of five people stand in a wooded area.
(L-R) Steven Yeun, Alan S. Kim, Yuh-Jung Youn, Yeri Han, Noel Cho. Photo by Josh Ethan Johnson, Courtesy of A24.

This year鈥檚 pandemic edition of the Academy Awards, with only the nominees and none of the crowds angling for a glimpse of Hollywood glamour, .

But thousands of us were transfixed. Because for the first time in Academy history,

In a year of 鈥 and as we question what it means to be American when we are perpetually treated as foreigners 鈥 we rejoiced at seeing Asian and Asian-American faces and names on the big screen. Steven Yeun. Yuh-Jung Youn, Yeri Han and the adorable Alan Kim.

We rejoiced at the industry鈥檚 recognition of Asian Americans鈥 contributions to the canon of American filmmaking with the sweeping and the historic nominations of director Lee Isaac Chung and producer Christina Oh for 鈥淢inari.鈥

A year ago, before the pandemic brought the world to a standstill, we celebrated director Bong Joon-ho鈥檚 masterpiece 鈥淧arasite,鈥 the first South Korean feature film to win Best Picture. The film was not just an achievement celebrating brilliant filmmaking. It also felt like proof that South Korea had truly evolved into a modern country gifted at innovating, not just emulating, and mature enough to turn a critical eye on its own jagged social development.

But in many ways, the success of 鈥淢inari鈥 strikes closer to home.

I am the child of South Koreans immigrants who hold dual citizenship, and I have worked and studied in Seoul off and on for decades, as a student and as a foreign correspondent. And yet, I suspect I will never truly be accepted by South Koreans, who tend to be unforgiving in their assessment of overseas Koreans and have not yet truly embraced their own diaspora.

That can be a hard truth for us when we travel to South Korea, seeking a sense of belonging. And it can crystallize our identities as Americans, even as we often feel we don鈥檛 belong here in the United States.

While we appreciate and celebrate 鈥淧arasite,鈥 what we crave is to see our own stories on the big screen. And I鈥檓 not sure I realized that so completely until 鈥淢inari.鈥

鈥淢inari鈥 is a semi-autobiographical story based on Chung鈥檚 own family tale of moving to Arkansas in the 1980s. There are two stories here: the story of the South Korean-born Jacob Yi (Yeun) and his wife, Monica (Han), seeking to build a new life in remote Arkansas. And then there is the story of their American-born children, Anne and the rascally David, played by the irrepressible 7-year-old Alan Kim.

With the parents at work, Monica brings her mother, Soonja, from South Korea to keep an eye on David. But she鈥檚 nothing like a typical American grandma, or at least the ones you see on TV. This one, played by the twinkle-eyed 鈥渟mells like Korea,鈥 smokes, has a penchant for gambling and is every bit as mischievous as her skeptical and resistant grandson.

Youn won a much-deserved historic Oscar for for her spirited portrayal (and gave a ).

The title of 鈥淢inari鈥 comes from the Korean name for a tart, peppery herb common in South Korea but not so familiar to Americans. It鈥檚 a bit like watercress. David鈥檚 grandmother pulls a bag of minari seeds from her suitcase (along with a number of other mysterious items that have David鈥檚 nose crinkling) and sprinkles them on a riverbed near their new Arkansas home.

I鈥檓 reminded of the children鈥檚 book 鈥,鈥 written by Andrea Wang and illustrated by Jason Chin, based on who pull over to gather watercress by the side of the road in Ohio.

In 鈥淢inari,鈥 this strange vegetable carried across oceans from Asia to Arkansas ends up feeding them. The also serves a bridge, a symbol of growth, a connection between two worlds: the old world, the new world.

And in many ways, that is how we children of immigrants live in America: between two worlds, navigating two cultures, feeling that we never quite fit into either. We鈥檙e expected to know and follow the social mores and rules of mainstream white America, at school and at work, though we weren鈥檛 taught them at home and are sometimes punished for behavior that we learned from our parents. And what we learn about Korean mores at home is a mishmash of kitchen talk and tidbits of cultural history that our busy and harried parents try to squeeze in while also trying to teach us the traditions of this new country, like Halloween and Thanksgiving.

鈥淢inari鈥 doesn't touch on the most painful aspects of being Asian in America in the 1980s. But that's OK. Every film doesn't have to be everything, and what this film does in making one family's story an American story is an achievement. It doesn't have to stand for every single Asian American or immigrant story. And it creates space for us to tell so many more diverse American stories.

And I suspect many more Americans from immigrant families, no matter what country or culture, will spot and sense the small, intimate details that illustrate the generational and cultural gaps that we are constantly navigating at home, from the stinky teas that cause consternation to the struggle to communicate in a common language. The joy of discovery 鈥 Mountain Dew! 鈥 and the pain of shame as we seek to fit in and assimilate.

But what I love best about 鈥淢inari鈥 is that there鈥檚 no need to explain these elements. There鈥檚 no need to provide any lessons about culture or race. By refusing to cater to the mainstream, Chung quietly and gracefully asks America to acknowledge that this story is as much a part of American storytelling as any other. Not foreign, not different, but American.

It is an important message to share at a time when we are struggling to feel safe and accepted in the country we were born and raised in.


Join us for events this May as part of Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month. .

is director of the and a former AP bureau chief in Seoul and Pyongyang. Follow her on and .

The views expressed are the author's alone, and do not represent the views of the U.S. Government or 澳门六合彩. Copyright 2020, Asia Program. All rights reserved.

About the Author

Jean Lee Image

Jean H. Lee

Former Public Policy Fellow;
Journalist and former Pyongyang Bureau Chief, Associated Press
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