Podcasts about julayne lee

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Best podcasts about julayne lee

Latest podcast episodes about julayne lee

K-Drama School
K-Drama School - Ep 22: Reply 1997 and Never-ending Learning with Julayne Lee

K-Drama School

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2021 111:08


[Spoiler Alert] Marisa Llamas (@llamedycentral on Instagram) makes a guest co-host appearance to answer some flashcard questions based on Reply 1997 (2012, tvN). Grace discusses Reply 1997, and how wrong it is that Netflix and Kocowa remove or replace music cues in certain Korean dramas they distribute. Grace then has a chat with Julyane Lee (@julayneelle on Twitter) who is the author of Not My White Savior. They talk about South Korea's adoption issue, racism from white adoptive parents, Mia Farrow, Soonyi Previn, diversity work, poetry, education, the act of "calling-in," and the importance of freeing Black bodies from injustice. Follow @KDramaSchool on Instagram, Twitter and TikTok. Visit kdramachool.com to learn more. Next week, we discuss Fated to Love You (2014, MBC). --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kdramaschool/support

K-Drama School
K-Drama School - Ep 22: Reply 1997 and Never-ending Learning with Julayne Lee

K-Drama School

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2021 111:09


[Spoiler Alert] Marisa Llamas (@llamedycentral on Instagram) makes a guest co-host appearance to answer some flashcard questions based on Reply 1997 (2012, tvN). Grace discusses Reply 1997, and how wrong it is that Netflix and Kocowa remove or replace music cues in certain Korean dramas they distribute. Grace then has a chat with Julyane Lee (@julayneelle on Twitter) who is the author of Not My White Savior. They talk about South Korea's adoption issue, racism from white adoptive parents, Mia Farrow, Soonyi Previn, diversity work, poetry, education, the act of "calling-in," and the importance of freeing Black bodies from injustice. Follow @KDramaSchool on Instagram, Twitter and TikTok. Visit kdramachool.com to learn more. Next week, we discuss Fated to Love You (2014, MBC).

Divided Families Podcast
Ep. 20 | Coming Out of the Fog: Transracial International Adoptees on Abolition

Divided Families Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2020 54:46


Our second episode commemorating National Adoption Month features three members of a collective of transracial adoptees advocating for abolition of the transracial international adoption system: Meghan Kelly, Chris Santizo-Malafronti, and Eleanor Vasquez-Kelly. Meghan and Eleanor share their radicalizing and transformative experiences of "coming out of the fog" as adoptees and their search for their birth families, followed by a group conversation about the dissonant duality of adoption and its sociopolitical implications today. To learn more or to collaborate with the collective, you can reach out via email to triabolitionists@gmail.com. Resources that our guests shared to learn more about transracial adoption: Outsiders Within: Writing on Transracial Adoption edited by Julia Chinyere Oparah, Sun Yung Shin, and Jane Jeong Trenka, 2006 https://www.amazon.com/Outsiders-Within-Writing-Transracial-Adoption/dp/0896087646 Declaration Calling for an Immediate End to the Industrial International Adoption System From South Korea, 2017 https://drive.google.com/file/d/1A0HW9Ip-r6gdHm9yxqj-VYw9pM-owxii/view “The New Abolition: Ending Adoption in Our Time” by Daniel Drennan ElAwar https://dissidentvoice.org/2012/08/the-new-abolition-ending-adoption-in-our-time/ Selling Transracial Adoption: Families, Markets and the Color Line by Elizabeth Raleigh https://www.amazon.com/Selling-Transracial-Adoption-Families-Markets/dp/1439914788 Not My White Savior: A Memoir in Poems by Julayne Lee https://bookshop.org/books/not-my-white-savior-a-memoir-in-poems/9781945572432?aid=846 Between European Colonial Trafficking, American EmpireBuilding and Nordic Social Engineering: Rethinking International Adoption From a Postcolonial and Feminist Perspective by Tobias Hübinette www.rethinking-nordic-colonialism.org/files/pdf/ACT3/MANUSCRIPTS/Huebinette.pdf Social media accounts that our guests mentioned to follow and learn more: @Nowhitesaviors @Adoptees4Justice For updates, follow us on Instagram at @DividedFamiliesPodcast, and contact us at dividedfamiliespodcast@gmail.com This episode was edited by Katherine Moncure. Chapter markers: 00:34 Katherine introduces this episode 01:13-22:26 Meghan and Eleanor share their lived experiences growing up as transracial adoptees and search for birth families 22:42 Paul and Chris discuss the significance of “coming out of the fog” for adoptees 27:18 Eleanor, Chris, and Meghan comment on the relationship between transracial adoption and systems of oppression such as colonialism and ethnocentrism 33:56 Eleanor and Chris share their thoughts and experiences on reuniting with their birth families and the complexities of birth-adoptive family dynamics 40:00 Meghan shares her thoughts and yearning for her heritage and culture 41:50 Discussion of the political implications of these experiences and advocacy of abolishing of the transracial system of adoption 45:55 What are things in the short-term that can be achieved? And what can listeners do to educate themselves and support this cause? 54:06 Katherine closes the episode

Adoptees On
148 Julayne Lee

Adoptees On

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2020 55:37


Today we welcome Julayne Lee, author of Not My White Savior. Julayne shares what drew her to visit Korea for the first time in her thirties and later how she spent three years there, working, traveling, and writing. We also discuss adoptee activism and the role anger can play in our work. Full Show Notes Here Subscribe Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | iHeart Radio | Spotify | Stitcher | YouTube Support Adoptees On One Time Donation | Monthly | Secret Facebook Group Connect Monthly Newsletter | Send a Note or Record a Voicemail

record korea voicemail julayne lee not my white savior
BookSwell Intersections
S01-E06 - Interview with Julayne Lee, a book chat between Cody Sisco and Dan Lopez, and Shannon Eagen's top picks for mid-May literary events

BookSwell Intersections

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2019 47:02


Cody Sisco and Dan Lopez debrief on the LA Times Festival of Books, Dan's new job in publishing, and theatrical literature featuring LGBTQ characters. Cody interviews poet, activist, and inter-country adoptee Julayne Lee. Her memoir in poems, Not Your White Savior, shares her journey as an adoptee from South Korean who is placed in a Midwestern Christian family. Shannon Eagen shares recommendations for the LitFest Pasadena.

You Had Me at YLW Podcast
Episode 5 - Adoptee Identity: Part 3

You Had Me at YLW Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2018 29:06


This is Part 3 of the Adoptee Identity series, featuring my guest Gia Sergovich. A fellow artist, it was cool to vibe with her and learn more about her journey as a transracial adoptee. Def catch up and listen to Parts 1 and 2 of this series, with Julayne Lee and Zoë Ryan. This episode, I close out with a self-love tip in regards to an extra zen mobile app (who would've thought?) Until next time, my lovely listeners! Don't forget to follow the show on Instagram and Twitter: @YouHadMeAtYLW and our host, @YLWRNGR

You Had Me at YLW Podcast
Episode 4 - Adoptee Identity: Part 2

You Had Me at YLW Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2018 22:05


This is Part 2 of the Adoptee Identity series, featuring my guest Zoë Ryan. She was so open to talking about her adoption story and exploring her Asian-American identity. Make sure to catch up and listen to Part 1 of the series, with Julayne Lee. Stay tuned for Part 3 with Gia Sergovich! As per usual I close out with a self-care tip advising you to please, please, please read those product ingredient labels! Until next time... Make sure to follow the podcast on Instagram & Twitter: @YLWRNGR

You Had Me at YLW Podcast
Episode 3 - Adoptee Identity: Part 1

You Had Me at YLW Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2018 41:20


November is National Adoption Awareness Month and we're kicking it off with a three-part series called "Adoptee Identity." I was able to interview three awesome adoptees: Julayne Lee, Zoe Ryan and Gia Sergovich. I learned so much about their adoption journeys and their path to discovering their Asian-American identity. Here is Part 1 featuring Julayne Lee, author of 'Not My White Savior: A Memoir in Poems,' available on Amazon and Barnes and Noble. For more info, check out her website: http://www.julaynelee.com/ Make sure to follow the show on Instagram & Twitter: @YouHadMeAtYLW and our host, @YLWRNGR

Escape From Plan A
Ep. 43: 'Searching' For Representation of Neglected Asian Americans

Escape From Plan A

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2018 58:05


In this grab bag of a Labor Day podcast, the trio of Oxford, Mark, and Sammi (a returning guest from Ep. 36: Difficulties in Asian Women-to-Women Dialogues About WMAF) go from lauding the new John Cho movie "Searching" to eventually getting fed up at how neglected poor Asian Americans are in our current social and political climate. Along the way, we diss the Racist OC Barbie Lawyer and #walkaway Youtube nano-celebrity, Zach Hing. Intro/Outro Song: "Think (ft. Jay Park)" by Reddy Intro Voice Track: John Cho on His Parents & New Movie "Searching" (Jimmy Kimmel Live!) TWITTER: Oxford (@oxford_kondo) Mark (@snbatman) REFERENCED RESOURCES: Amy Yu abduction in Allentown, Pennsylvania: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2018/03/18/a-mom-suspected-her-teen-daughter-was-dating-a-45-year-old-police-found-them-together-in-mexico/?utm_term=.81cfa90fbac2 Abduction and murder of Yingying Zhang at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-met-chinese-scholar-ui-kidnapping-20180116-story.html California Lawyer Makes Racially-Charged Comments Over ‘Crazy Rich Asians’: https://deadline.com/2018/09/crazy-rich-asians-searching-christina-ignatius-racist-orange-county-diversity-inclusion-asian-amerians-1202455928/ The Asian American Age (by Ross Douthat): https://www.nytimes.com/2018/09/01/opinion/asian-american-harvard-lawsuit.html The 9.9 Percent Is the New American Aristocracy: https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/06/the-birth-of-a-new-american-aristocracy/559130/ Zach Hing's #walkaway story: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CTq-hkR-yAc "Not My White Savior" by Julayne Lee: https://www.amazon.com/Not-My-White-Savior-Memoir/dp/1945572434 "The Hundred-Year Flood" by Matthew Salesses: https://www.amazon.com/Hundred-Year-Flood-Matthew-Salesses/dp/1477829547 "A Cruelty Special To Our Species: Poems" by Emily Yoon: https://www.amazon.com/Cruelty-Special-Our-Species-Poems/dp/0062843680 "My Year of Rest and Relaxation" by Ottessa Moshfegh: https://www.amazon.com/Year-Rest-Relaxation-Ottessa-Moshfegh/dp/0525522115

Adapted
Season 2, Episode 3: Julayne Lee

Adapted

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2018 38:06


Author and Korean-American adoptee Julayne Lee talks about her new collection of poems, "Not My White Savior," and of the importance of maintaining an authentic voice. Now in her 40s, she now lives in California and is active within the vibrant literary scene. Lee also discusses her thoughts on identity and of how she hopes the work will impact the larger adoptee community.  From Not My White Savior, by Julayne Lee, Copyright 2018. With the permission of the publisher, Rare Bird Lit.   

california copyright korean american julayne lee not my white savior
Rare Bird Radio
Jacqueline Suskin in conversation with Julayne Lee

Rare Bird Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2018 30:49


Jacqueline Suskin is the author of The Edge of the Continent, The Collected, a book of narrative poems paired with found photographs, and Go Ahead & Like It, a self-help book that explores the healing power and artistry of positive list making. Known for her multidisciplinary work with a project she calls Poem Store, Suskin composes improvisational poetry for patrons who choose both a topic and a price in exchange for a unique verse. She regularly brings poetry into classrooms around the country and was honored by Michelle Obama at the White House as a Turnaround Artist. Suskin is based in Los Angeles, but considers the entire state of California her home. Julayne Lee was given up for adoption in South Korea as a result of the Korean War. She was adopted by an all-white Christian family in Minnesota, where she grew up. She has spent over fifteen years working with Overseas Adopted Koreans (OAKs). She lived in Seoul and now resides in Los Angeles, where she is a member of the LA Futbolistas and Adoptee Solidarity Korea―Los Angeles (ASK-LA). She is also part of the Adoptee Rights Campaign working to pass the Adoptee Citizenship Act to ensure all inter-country adoptees have US citizenship. Not My White Savior is her first book.