Family Amnesia: Chinese American Resilience
By (Author) Betty Yu
Daylight Books
Daylight Books
13th August 2025
United States
General
Non Fiction
History: specific events and topics
Relationships and families: advice and issues
Hardback
112
Width 177mm, Height 254mm
Family Amnesiais a visual tribute and love letter honoring the artist's Chinese American family roots in the U.S. The art book explores her family's multi-generational resilience and resistance through mixed media collages, my grandfather's photographs, my own captured images and archival material.
The book project honors the past and current lives of Asian Americans and immigrants in the U.S. by examining the incalculable and traumatic impact that historical events like the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act continue to have on the Asian American experience. This is a painful part of our American history. Betty Yu is reclaiming that narrative through her own personal family's story. The book will features her grandfather's role as a founding member of the Chinese Hand Laundry Alliance of NY, her mother's plight as a garment worker who became a labor organizer, as well as her sister's legacy as a community activist. Yu knows that her family's story is not unique. It is part of the larger collective Asian-American immigration experience.
This book project reminds us that the rise of COVID-related anti-Asian violence is part of a larger history of systemic racism. As the U.S. government and corporate-run media continue to vilify China as a global threat, Family Amnesiarecalls the anti-China and anti-Asian paranoia and hysteria that created the policies like the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act and the 1942 Executive Order that placed Japanese-Americans into internment camps. The book will also draw visually on geo-political history, recalling narratives that mocked China as the "sick man of Asia '' and that demonized Chinese as "Yellow Peril".
BettyYu
is an award-winning filmmaker, socially engaged multimedia artist, photographer and activist born and raised in NYC. Yu integrates documentary film, installation, new media platforms, and community-infused approaches into her practice.Betty's filmsand multimedia workhas focused on labor, immigration, gentrification, abolition,racism, militarism,transgender equality among other issues.She is a co-founder of Chinatown Art Brigade, a cultural collective using art to advance anti-displacement fights.Yu's documentary "Resilience" about her garment worker mother fighting sweatshop conditions screened at film festivals including the Margaret Mead Film Festival. Yu's multi-media installation,Her work has been exhibited and screened at the Brooklyn Museum, Queens Museum, NY Historical Society, Museum of the City of NY, Tenement Museum, Artists Space/ISP Whitney Museum, 2019 BRIC Biennial, Apexart, and many more.