Asian Night Market: Food, Identity, and Cultural Traditions
December 14, 2018
Phoebe Pan 鈥20
Vietnamese Student Association at Asian Night Market
Photo credit: Pang Fei Chiang '19
At Asian Night Market, food serves not only as an opportunity to share a good meal, but as an entrypoint into broader discussions about culture and identity.
Photo by Pang Fei Chiang '19
Now in its eighth year, Asian Night Market is a crucial representation of how food is enmeshed with cultural traditions, personal identity, and a sense of community. This year鈥檚 event, which offered both a dining experience and a performance showcase, included a smorgasbord of dishes and culinary samplings from participating student organizations. Such groups included the Asian American Alliance (AAA), Chinese Student Association (CSA), Filipinx American Student Association (FASA), Japanese Student Association (JSA), 91直播 Korean Student Association (OKSA), Pan Asian Committee (PAC), Southeast Asian Student Association (SASA), and the Vietnamese Student Association (VSA).
Photo by Pang Fei Chiang 鈥19
Mackenzie Lew 鈥19, Indrani Kharbanda 鈥20, Marisa Kim 鈥22, and Ryo Adachi 鈥22 were among the main organizers of the event for this year. Lew, who was also involved in organizing Asian Night Market in 2016 and 2017, points out the importance of hosting an event like this annually.
鈥淭he original goal for ANM is to replicate the types of night markets that happen in Asia,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important for us because it is the only event on campus that brings all of these Asian and Asian American organizations together in one visible event.鈥 Lew also hopes that people acknowledge ANM as not just an event at which to eat Asian food, but also as a space to recognize people鈥檚 complicated and diverse connections to food.
Photo by Pang Fei Chiang 鈥19
For Kim, a first-year, her favorite part of Asian Night Market is the student performances, which feature groups such as OC Taiko and #AsiaBand. 鈥淚t's an opportunity for members of the small Asian community on campus to shine and celebrate their heritage,鈥 she says.
Photo by Pang Fei Chiang 鈥19
In addition to preparing for the actual event, the organizers hosted a panel during the 鈥渇ood for thought鈥 week leading up to Asian Night Market. The discussion was titled, 鈥淲hat鈥檚 in Your Lunchbox: Junk Food and Comfort Food Across Asia,鈥 and students covered topics ranging from their favorite comfort foods to their reactions toward people who lump Asian dishes under a single category. As one panelist pointed out, 鈥淜orean gimbap is not Japanese sushi.鈥
At this year鈥檚 event, Asian Night Market also began to engage more with issues outside of campus that affect underrepresented populations. 鈥淭his year, we tried to encourage people to submit comments against the , which would impact immigrant communities,鈥 says Lew. 鈥淏esides giving critical context to the food we eat, Night Market provides a space for folks to build community with one another, and we also share that space with people who don鈥檛 identify as Asian or Asian American.鈥
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