summer 2025

Reading the Asian American West

Surabhi Balachander and Nina McConigley

Thu 7:30 PM - 9:30 PM ET (local time loading)

Jul 10 - Aug 14, 2025
6 sessions, 2 hours each

Live

All with an interest in the Asian American West are welcome!

This course samples literature in a variety of genres (short story, children's literature, poetry, memoir, graphic novel) that explores Asian American experiences across the American West. We'll consider ways Asian American authors have engaged with the rich histories and diverse geographies of the region, as well as dominant imaginaries of it (the Wild West or the rugged frontier). Authors may include Hisaye Yamamoto, Paisley Rekdal, Oliver de la Paz, Mira Jacob, and Linda Sue Park. Expect a small amount of reading in preparation for each session. During class, we'll discuss our chosen texts and the larger contexts they bring up, as well as engage in a related creative writing experiment together.

  • Participants receive readings via Google Drive. All class sessions will be held on Zoom. Vimeo: Recordings of the sessions over Zoom will also be found through password-protected Vimeo links and will be available for up to one month after the last session.
  • Surabhi Balachander

    Surabhi Balachander grew up in Indiana, was a longtime staff member at Stanford University's Bill Lane Center for the American West, and now teaches at Oregon State University. Surabhi’s research and teaching interests bridge comparative ethnic studies and the environmental humanities in 20th and 21st century American literature. Her current book project seeks to define rural identity in American literature from 1920-2020, the U.S.'s first century as a majority-urban nation, and shows that rural America, in contrast to popular stereotypes, is best understood as multiethnic and cosmopolitan.

  • Nina McConigley

    Nina McConigley was born in Singapore and raised in Wyoming. Her short-story collection Cowboys and East Indians won the PEN Open Book Award and a High Plains Book Award. She was the Walter Jackson Bate fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University and a recipient of the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Creative Writing Fellowship. The Denver Center for Performing Arts commissioned her play based on Cowboys and East Indians, which will have its world premiere in 2026. She teaches at Colorado State University, and her novel and essay collection are forthcoming in 2026.