Curriculum vitae MARTIN F. MANALANSAN IV Department of Anthropology University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign 109 Davenport Hall 607 South Mathews Avenue Urbana, IL 61801 Phone: (217) 244-3500 Fax: (217) 244-3490 Email: manalans@uiuc.edu PRESENT POSITION: Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Core faculty: Asian American Studies Program Affiliate Appointments: Gender and Women’s Studies Program Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory Center for East Asian and Pacific Studies Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies International Studies Program and Global Studies Initiative EDUCATION: 1981 A.B. Philosophy magna cum laude, University of the Philippines 1987 M.A. Anthropology, Syracuse University 1989 M.A. Social Anthropology, University of Rochester 1997 Ph.D. Social Anthropology, University of Rochester Dissertation: Remapping Frontiers: The Lives of Filipino Gay Men in New York City Thomas Gibson, Chair PUBLICATIONS: Books: 2003 Global Divas: Filipino Gay Men in the Diaspora. Durham: Duke University Press (Philippine edition published 2006. Manila: Ateneo de Manila University Press). Ruth Benedict Prize, Society of Lesbian and Gay Anthropologists, 2003. Honorable Mention, Association for Asian American Studies Book Award for Cultural Studies, 2005 1 Books and Journal Special Issue Edited: 2006 (co-edited with Katharine Donato , Donna Gabbacia, Jennifer Holdaway, and Patricia Pessar) “Gender and Migration Revisited” Special issue of International Migration Review 40(1) 2002 (co-edited with Arnaldo Cruz-Malave) Queer Globalizations: Citizenship and the Afterlife of Colonialism. New York: New York University Press 2000 Cultural Compass: Ethnographic Explorations of Asian America. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. Association for Asian American Studies Book Award for Cultural Studies, 2001 Essays, Articles, and Chapters: Under Review “Empire of Food: Queens and the Majesty of Ethnic Cuisine.” Tastes of New York. In J. Deutch and A. Lawson (eds.). Columbia University Press. “Homophobia at Gay Central.” In Homophobias: Lust and Loathing across time and space. David Murray (ed.) Durham: Duke University Press. “Queer Love in the Time of War and Shopping.” The LGBT Studies Reader. G. Haggerty and M. McGarry (eds.) New York: Blackwell Publishing. In press “Wayward Erotics: Mediating Queer Diasporic Return” in Media, Transnationalism, and Asian Erotics. Purnima Mankekar and Louisa Schein (eds.). Durham: Duke University Press. 2007 “Cooking up the Senses: A Critical Embodied Approach to the Study of Food and Asian American Television Audiences.” In Alien Encounters: Asian Americans in Popular Culture. Thuy Linh Thu and Mimi Nguyen (eds.) Durham: Duke University Press. 179-193. “Colonizing Time and Space: Race and Romance in Brokeback Mountain.” GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies.13(1): 97-100. 2006 “Immigrant Domesticity and the Politics of Olfaction in the Global City.” In The Smell Reader. Jim Drobnick (ed.) New York: Berg. 41-52 “A Glass Half Full? Gender in Migration Studies: Introduction.” (co-authored with Katharine Donato , Donna Gabbacia, Jennifer Holdaway, and Patricia Pessar) International Migration Review. 40(1): 3-26. “Queer Intersections: Sexuality and Gender in Migration Studies.” International Migration Review 40(1): 224-249 2 Commentary on Michael Peletz “Transgenderism and Gender Pluralism in Southeast Asia since early modern times.” Current Anthropology 47 (20) 329-330 2005 “Race, Violence and Neoliberal Spatial Politics in the Global City” Social Text. 84-85:141-156. “Migrancy, Modernity, Mobility” In Queer Migrations: Sexuality, U.S. Citizenship and Border Crossings.. Eithne Luibheid and Lionel Cantu (eds.) Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. 146-160. “Relocating Cultural Expressions: Ethnography and the Aesthetics of Everyday Life in the Work of Edward Bruner.” Anthropology and Humanism. 30(2): 179-186 “A Gay World Make-Over? Towards an Asian American Queer Critique.” In Beyond a Critical Mass: New Directions in Asian American Studies. Kent Ono (ed.). New York: Blackwell Publishing. 98-110 2004 “Prairiescapes: Mapping Food, Loss and Longing” Massachusetts Review. 45(3): 361-365 “Anthropology.” Encyclopedia of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender History in America. New York: Scribner Thomson Gale. 63-67 2002 “A Queer Itinerary: Deviant Excursions into Modernities.” In Out in Theory: The Emergence of Lesbian and Gay Anthropology. William Leap and Ellen Lewin (eds) Urbana: University of Illinois Press.246-263. 2001 “Biyuti in Everyday Life: Performance, Citizenship and Survival among Filipinos in the U.S.” In Orientations: Mapping Studies in the Asian Diaspora. Karen Shimakawa and Kandice Chuh (eds.) Durham: Duke University Press. 153-171. 2000 “Introduction. The Ethnography of Asian America: Notes Towards A Thick Description.” In M. Manalansan (ed.). Cultural Compass: Ethnographic Explorations of Asian America. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. 1-13. “Diasporic Deviants/Divas: How Filipino Gay Transmigrants ‘Play with the world.” In Queer Diasporas. Cindy Patton and Benigno Sanchez Eppler (eds.) Durham: Duke University Press. 183-203. 1999 “Land of the Mourning: AIDS, Memory and Community in the Filipino Diaspora.” In Fil-Am: Filipino American Experience. Alfredo Yuson (ed.) Manila: Publico, Inc. 217218. 1997 “In the Frontiers of Narrative: Mapping Filipino Gay Men’s Lives in the U.S.” In Filipino Americans. Maria P.P. Root (ed.) Thousand Oaks: Sage. 247-256. 1996 “Performing Filipino Gay Experiences in America: Linguistic Strategies in a Transnational Context.” In Beyond the Lavender Lexicon: Authenticity, Imagination and Appropriation in Lesbian and Gay Language. William Leap (ed.) New York: Gordon and Breach. 249-266. 3 “Dissecting Desire: Symbolic Domination and Strategies of Resistance Among Filipino Gay Men.” In Privileging Positions: The Sites of Asian American Studies. G. Okihiro et.al (eds.) Pullman, WA: Washington State University Press. 291-300. “Double Minorities: Latino, Black, and Asian Men who have sex with Men.” In Ritch Savin Williams and Kenneth Cohen (eds.). The Lives of Lesbians, Gays, and Bisexuals: Developmental, Clinical and Cultural Issues. Fort Worth: Harcourt, Brace & Co. 393415. “Speaking of AIDS: Language and the Filipino Gay Experience in America.” In Discrepant Histories: Translocal Essays in Philippine Cultures. Vicente Rafael (ed.). Philadelphia: Temple University Press. (published simultaneously in Manila: Anvil Press). 193-220. 1995 “In the Shadows of Stonewall: Examining Gay Transnational Politics and the Diasporic Dilemma.” GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies. 2-4 :425-38 (Revised version in 1997. The Politics of Culture in the Shadow of Capital. L. Lowe and D. Lloyd (eds.) Durham: Duke University Press. Republished in 2003. Theorizing Diaspora. A. Mannur and J. Braziel (eds.). Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing 207-227)) 1994 “Disorienting the Body: Locating Symbolic Resistance among Filipino Gay Men.” Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique. 2(1): 73-90. “Searching for Community: Filipino Gay Men in New York.” Amerasia 20(1):59-73. (Republished in 1996. Asian American Sexualities: Dimensions of Gay and Lesbian Experience. Russell Leong (ed.) New York: Routledge. Republished in 2000. Contemporary Asian America: A Multidisciplinary Reader. Min Zhou and James V. Gatewood (eds.) New York: New York University Press) 1993 “(Re)locating the Gay Filipino: Resistance, Postcolonialism and Identity.” Journal of Homosexuality. 26 (2/3): 53-73. (published simultaneously in Critical Essays: Gay and Lesbian Writers of Color. Emmanuel Nelson (ed.) Binghamton, NY: Haworth Press.) Book Reviews: Submitted Review of Amy Besa and Romy Dorotan. Memories of Philippine Kitchens. Gastronomica. 2004 Review of Allen Weiss. Feast and Folly: Cuisine, Intoxication, and the Poetics of the Sublime. Contemporary French Civilizations. XXVIII(1): 152-154. 2002 Review of Eric Wat. The Making of a Gay Asian Community and Quang Bao and Hanya Yanagihara. Take Out Journal of Asian American Studies. 5(2): 182-185 2002 Review of E. San Juan. From Exile to Diaspora” Versions of the Filipino Experience in the U.S. Journal of American Ethnic History. 21(3): 2001 Review of Gordon Mathews. Global Culture/Individual Identity .Journal of Asian Studies. 60(4): 1134-1136. 4 2001 Review of William Leap (ed.). Public Sex, Gay Space. American Ethnologist. 28(2): 476477 1999 Review of D. Eng and A. Hom (ed.) Q & A: Queer in Asian American Journal of Asian American Studies. 2 (2): 215-217. HONORS, FELLOWSHIPS AND GRANTS: Center for East Asian and Pacific Studies, UIUC Curriculum Enhancement Grant ($5000) Center for Advanced Study Grant for Judith Halberstam visiting lecture ($2000) Honorable Mention, Association for Asian American Studies Book Award for Cultural Studies 2005 for Global Divas: Filipino Gay Men in the Diaspora. Faculty Fellowship, Center for Democracy in a Multiracial Society, UIUC, 2004 (semester leave) Amy Ling Memorial Research Grant, Asian American Studies Program, UIUC, 2004 ($5000) Mellon Grants for the “State of the Art” Conference Grant “Future of Food Studies” and Senior Visiting Scholar (Sidney Mintz) UIUC, 2004 ($31,000) Ruth Benedict Prize, Society of Lesbian and Gay Anthropologists, 2003 for Global Divas: Filipino Gay Men in the Diaspora. Association for Asian American Studies Book Award for Cultural Studies, 2000 for Cultural Compass: Ethnographic Explorations of Asian America. Course Development Grant, Center for East Asian and Pacific Studies, UIUC, 2003 (summer salary) Center on Democracy in a Multiracial Society Faculty Research Grant, UIUC, 2002 (semester leave) Center for East Asian and Pacific Studies, UIUC Faculty Research Grant 2002 ($5000) Sally and James Hagan Teaching Fellowship, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Dean’s Teaching Fellowship Program, UIUC, LAS 2001-2002 Asian American Studies Program Faculty Research Grant, 2001($5000) College Research Board Grants UIUC, 1999-2000 (total: $21,000) Martin Duberman Fellowship. City University of New York Graduate Center, 1998 ($7000) Kenneth W. Payne Prize, Society of Lesbian and Gay Anthropologists, 1992 University of Rochester Graduate Travel Grant, 1990 University Fellowship, University of Rochester, 1987-1990 5 Lewis Henry Morgan Fellowship, University of Rochester, 1987-1990 Presidential Honors Pin, University of the Philippines, 1981 University Scholar, University of the Philippines, 1978-1981 RESEARCH/TEACHING INTERESTS: Sociocultural anthropology, performance, sexuality and gender, race and ethnicity, immigration and globalization, cities and modernity, senses and embodiment, food and culture, critical theory, Filipino diaspora, Asian Americans, Southeast Asia, Philippines. WORKS IN PROGRESS: Queer Love in the Time of War and Shopping This book project is a multi-disciplinary analysis of race and queer sexuality through social struggles around urban/rural space, immigration, neoliberal cultural politics, and coalitional activism. Utilizing love as a critical and political concept from feminist and queer studies, this project aims towards a nuanced articulation of the queer present and future(s). Altered Tastes: Asian America and Beyond a Palatable Multiculturalism This project focuses on culinary practices and politics of the senses among Asian immigrants in the U.S. particularly in the ways food intersect with nostalgic imaginings of home and the making of race through olfaction and taste. This research also examines Asian immigrants’ engagement with mass media representation of “Asian ethnic foods” and the current fad of “Asian fusion cuisine.” Engineered Scentiments: Smell Technologies and the Cultural Politics of Modern Urban Life. This project explores the connection between emergent technologies that market new aroma products and racially motivated city legislations such as the “quality of life” campaign in New York City that pivot around olfaction and non-visual sensory fuses. Smell indexes a specific form of urban civility, modern style, citizenship, and selfhood. This work argues that not only is smell a marker of modernity, it is also the discursive node for marginalizing, policing and criminalizing racialized communities that creates archives of feelings and sentiments that reinforce the status quo while at the same time providing avenues for its resistance. It locates these disciplinary practices within the class and race inflected ideologies of neoliberal political and cultural institutions. Elusive Homecomings: Filipino Return Migration in the Twenty-First Century. This is an ethnographic study of Filipinos who have gone back to the Philippines after various periods of migrancy in various parts of the world. It focuses on the experiences of various groups who have returned for various reasons including retirement, new business ventures or the search for ethnic roots. This project also examines various discursive formations that produce discrepant articulations of diasporic return as mediated by television, the internet, cinema, fiction, drama and journalism. TEACHING: Associate Professor of Anthropology (with tenure) Department of Anthropology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2005-Present 6 Assistant Professor of Anthropology Department of Anthropology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1999-2005 Assistant Professor of Asian American Studies & Fellow of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Asian/Pacific/American Studies Program, New York University, New York, NY, 1998-1999. Instructor of Asian American Studies Hunter College, City University of New York, 1999 Instructor Freshman Seminars, Eugene Lang College, New School University, 1998-1999 Visiting Instructor of American Studies American Studies Program, Wesleyan University, 1997 Teaching Assistant Department of Anthropology, University of Rochester, 1989-1990 Instructor Department of Anthropology, University of Rochester, Summer, 1989 Teaching Assistant Department of Anthropology, Syracuse University, 1984-1986 Instructor Department of Anthropology, University of the Philippines, 1983-1984. Instructor Department of Philosophy, St’s Scholastica’s College, Manila, Philippines, 1982 PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYMENT: Coordinator of Program Evaluation/Research, Gay Men’s Health Crisis, Inc. 129 West 20th St., New York, NY 10011. 1990-1995 Director of Education, Asian Pacific Islander Coalition on HIV/AIDS 275 Seventh Avenue, 12th floor, New York, NY 10001. 1996-1998 COURSES TAUGHT: Lower division courses: Introduction to Asian American Studies; Food and Asian American Cultures; Culture and Society; Ethnography of Contemporary Asian America; Food, Culture and Society; Introduction to Cultural Anthropology; Asians in the United States; Introduction to Social Anthropology Upper division and graduate courses: 7 Medical Anthropology; Race, Immigration, Cities; Asian/Pacific American Community Studies: Theories and Practices; Filipino Americans: Cultural and Historical Locations; Multiethnic New York City: A Study of an Asian-Latino Neighborhood; Human Sexuality: An Anthropological Perspective; Filipino Americans – Beyond Empire and Diaspora; Peoples of Southeast Asia and Oceania; Sex and Culture; Queer Globalizations: Race, Sex and Nation; Sex, Love and Globalization; Globalization and Asian Diasporas; Eating The Other: Food, Bodies and Difference. INVITED LECTURES AND PRESENTATIONS 2007 Invited Presentation. “Escape from Domesticity: Queering the Chain of Care Paradigm.” Scholars and Feminist Conference XXXII: Fashioning Citizenship: Gender and Migration. Barnard College. March 23. Invited Lecture. “Elusive Homecomings: Embodying Return Migration to the Philippines.” Center University of Texas at Austin. March 19. Invited Presentation. “Elusive Homecomings: Embodying Return Migration to the Philippines.” Refracting Pacific Canada Conference. University of British Columbia. March 16. Invited Lecture. “Queer Love in the Time of War and Shopping.” Department of Women and Gender Studies. Macalester College. February 23. Invited Lecture “Queer Love in the Time of War and Shopping.” Departments of Anthropology and Women’s Studies. Carleton College, February 22. 2006 Keynote Address. “Queer Love in the Time of War and Shopping.” East of California Asian American Studies Conference. Ohio State University. November 2. Invited Presentation. “The Homecoming Body: Race and Sex in Filipino Return Migration.” Migrations Studies Colloquium, Michigan State University, November 1. Invited Lecture. “Queer Love in the Time of War and Shopping.” Department of Anthropology and Cross-Cultural Center. University of California, Irvine. October 20. Invited Lecture. “The Biyuti and Drama of Everyday Life.” Department of Asian and Asian American Studies. California State University, Long Beach. October 19 Invited Lecture. “Love as Politics: War Efforts in Queer Times.” Critical Constellations Lecture Series, Center for Feminist Research, University of Southern California. October 17 Invited Lecture. “On ‘Global Divas’” Center for the Study of Genders and Sexuality. California State University, Los Angeles. October 16. Invited Lecture. “Queer Love in the Time of War and Shopping.” Department of Asian American Studies, San Francisco State University. October 18. 8 Invited presentation. “Citizenship and Sexuality.” Fordham Law Centennial Conference “New Dimensions of Citizenship.” Fordham University School of Law. September 29-30. Keynote Address. “Southeast Asian Circuits: Remapping Area and Ethnic Studies in the 21st Century.” Center for Southeast Asian Studies Faculty Development Seminar. Northern Illinois University. June 2 Invited presentation. “On Queer Globalizations” CLAGS AT 15: Fifteen Years of Fostering LGBTQ Studies. Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies. City University of New York Graduate Center. May 12. Invited Lecture. “Homecoming Spectacles: The Politics of the Body in Filipino Return Migration.” Center for Southeast Asian Studies Brownbag Lecture Series. Northern Illinois University. April 21. Keynote Address. “Queer Love in the Time of War and Shopping.” American Studies Graduate Student Conference. Purdue University, March 30. Invited lecture. “Queer Love in the Time of War and Shopping.” Decolonizing Race, Gender and Sexuality Speakers Series. Department of Ethnic Studies, University of Colorado at Boulder. March 16. Invited presentation. “Philippine Migration to the U.S.: Routes and Reflections.” Conference on Immigrants and Southeast Asia: National Perspectives on the Transnational Flow of People.” University of Chicago. February 24. Invited lecture. “Queer Cultural Politics” Harpur College Dean’s Workshop on the Projects of Queer Studies, Race, Pedagogy and Social Theory and the Department of Anthropology, Binghamton University - State University of New York. February 16. Invited lecture. “Queer Love in the Time of War and Shopping.” Nelson A. Rockefeller Center for Public Policy and Civic Leadership. Dartmouth College, February 9. 2005 Invited presentation. “Asian American Identity and Fusion Cuisine.” Chicago Humanities Festival, November 13. Invited lecture, “Race, Space and the Neoliberal City.” Asian American Studies Center, University of Illinois – Chicago, November 7. Invited lecture. “Whose Queer Eye? LGBTQ Politics in the Age of War and Shopping.” LGBT Center and the Asian American Center, Tufts University. October 27. Invited lecture. “Race, Queer Space and the Neoliberal City.” Department of Anthropology. Northwestern University. October 6. Invited presentation. “Race and Sex in Filipino Return Migration.” Diasporic Homecomings: Ethnic Return Migrants in Comparative Perspective. Center for Comparative Immigration Studies, University of California, San Diego. May 21. Invited presentation, “On Speaking Straight: Queering Translation and Outsourcing English in the Filipino Diaspora.” Translating America to Itself Conference. University of California, Irvine, May 13. 9 Invited lecture. “Queers, Race and the Neoliberal City.” 3rd Annual Lecture Series in Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Studies. University of Maryland. April 14. Invited lecture: “Whose Queer Eye: The Search for Race and Queerness in the Neoliberal City” My Name is My Own lecture series on Queerness, Race and Identity. Comparative American Studies Program. Oberlin College, April 12. Invited lecture: “On Global Divas” University of New Hampshire. Women’s Studies Program. March 30. Invited lecture. “Race, Space and Queerness in the Neoliberal City” Department of Asian American Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara, March 8. Invited lecture. “The Normal Queer: Race and Space in the Neoliberal City.” Department of Filipino, Ateneo de Manila University Katipunan Lecture Series. February 11. Invited lecture. “Homonormativity: Queer Politics and Neoliberalism.” Department of Anthropology and the Center for International Studies, College of Social Sciences and Philosophy, University of the Philippines, February 7. Invited lecture. “Whose Queer Eye?” Queer Theory Confronts Neoliberalism.” University of the Philippines Film Institute, February 4 2004 Invited lecture. “Fenced-out Lives: Race, Violence and Neoliberal Politics” Freeman Initiative for Asian/Asian American Studies, Freeman Center, Wesleyan University, November 1 Invited lecture. “Spatial Politics, Violence and Homonormativity in New York City.” Obermann Center for Advanced Studies, Department of Anthropology and Department of Women’s Studies, University of Iowa. October 15 Invited lecture. “Queer Meccas and Plush Condos: Violence and Race in the Global City.” Center for the Study of Sexual Cultures and Department of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley. September 5 Invited presentation. “Queer Race and Class.” Queer Matters Conference, King’s College, London, May 28. Invited lecture, “Race, Violence and Neoliberal Spatial Politics in the Global City.” Race, Sexuality and the Transnational: A Summer Research Institute, Macalester College, St. Paul, MN, May 21-22 Invited Roundtable Presentation, “Between Activism and the Academy. A Night of Queeries: Practicing Theory and Theorizing Practice.” University of California, San Diego, April 30. Invited lecture, “Whose Queer Eye?: An Asian American Critique.” Asian American Studies Center, University of California, Los Angeles, April 29 Invited lecture, “On ‘Global Divas’” Multi-cultural Center, University of California, Irvine, April 28. Invited lecture, “Food and Fusion : Against a Palatable Multiculturalism.” Centre for the Study of the United States, University of Toronto, March 18-20 10 2003 Invited lecture, “A World Make-Over: An Asian American Queer Critique.” Asian American Studies Program, Cornell University. October 21. Invited lecture. “Everyday Life in the Filipino Queer Diaspora.” Institute of Asian and Asian American Studies. Duke University. October 9. Invited lecture, “Intimacy and Everyday life.” Recasting Asian/America Lecture Series, Simpson Humanities Center, University of Washington, May 19. Invited lecture, “Queer Asian America.” Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, Northwestern University, May 1. 2002 Invited lecture, “Locating Sexuality in Asian American Studies.” New Paradigms in Asian American Studies Colloquium Series, Asian Culture Center, Indiana University, October 18 Invited lecture. “Queer Theory and the Global” Cultural Studies and Critical Theory Lecture. Department of Literature. De La Salle University, Manila, Philippines. July 24. Invited presentation. “Beyond Intimacy: Unraveling Queer Diasporic Domesticity” Sexualities and Knowledges Conference. University of California, Riverside. February 23-25. Invited lecture. Provost Lecture, “Migrancy, Mobility and Modernity” Bowling Green State University. February 28. 2001 Invited Plenary Panel Speech. “Envisioning Southeast Asian Culinary Landscapes.” 7th Annual Asians in America Conference: Palates of Pleasure: Philosophy and Politics of Southeast Asian Food Conference. New York University. April 19 2000 Invited lecture. “Homecomings: Or the Tale of Two Viruses.” Transforming Public and Academic Cultures: American Ethnic Studies for the Next Millennium Conference. Chapin Simpson’s Center for the Humanities and the Department of American Ethnic Studies. University of Washington. May 19. Invited lecture, “Buried by Memory: Stories of Loss in the Global City.” Graduate Colloquium on Southeast Asian Studies, Northern Illinois University. April 7 Invited lecture. “Diasporic Intimacies: Quotidian Struggles of Filipino Queer Transmigrants.” Department of Women’s Studies. University of California, Davis. March 14. Invited lecture. “Queering Everyday Life.” Gay and Lesbian Studies Program, University of California, San Diego. March 10. 1999 11 Invited lecture “Gender Traffic, Sexual Travels: Modernity and the Filipino Queer Diaspora.” Committee on Lesbian/Gay/Bisexual Studies. University of Arizona, Tucson. November 4. Invited lecture. “A Queer Itinerary: Deviant Travels to and Beyond the Filipino Nation.” Vestiges of War Conference, Philippine-American War Centennial 1899-1999. New York University. February 21. SERVICE TO THE PROFESSION: Co-Chair, Society of Lesbian and Gay Anthropologists, 2006-present Member, Executive Board, Association for Feminist Anthropology, 2006- Present Social Science Review Editor, GLQ: Journal of Gay and Lesbian Studies. 2005-Present Member, Advisory Board, Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies, City University of New York Graduate Center, 1999-Present. Book series co-editor: “Transnational Intimacies in Asia and its Diasporas,” University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002-Present Member, Program Committee, Association for Asian American Studies, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2006 Member: Social Science Research Council Working Group on Gender and Migration. 2002-Present Member, Editorial Boards: American Studies-Asia, 2001-Present, Journal of Asian American Studies, 1998- 2002 American Sexuality, 2003-Present Midwest Representative, Association for Asian American Studies, 2000-2001 Member, Board of Directors, Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies, City University of New York. 19951999 Member, American Anthropological Association Commission on Gay and Lesbian Issues in the Profession. 1995-2000 Book Manuscript Reviewer: University of California Press, University of Chicago Press, Columbia University Press, Duke University Press, University of Minnesota Press, New York University Press, Princeton University Press, Rutgers University Press. Journal Manuscript Reviewer: American Anthropologist, American Ethnologist, American Quarterly, Cultural Anthropology, Current Anthropology, Women and Performance, GLQ: A Journal of Gay and Lesbian Studies, positions: east asia cultures critique, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space. Grant Proposal Reviewer: American Foundation for AIDS Research, Wenner Gren Foundation, National Science Foundation, Wiener Wissenschafts-, Forschungs- und Technologiefonds (WWTF) - Vienna Science and Technology Fund, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, New York City Department of Health AIDS Prevention Program. 12 University/Campus Service: Co-coordinator, Philippine and Filipino American Studies Interest Group, 2005-Present Organizer, “Food Studies and its Futures Conference” UIUC, October 12, 2004. Co-coordinator, Campus Reading Group on Comparative Queer Studies: Race, Sex and Nation, 20022005 Member, Advisory Committee, Asian American Studies Program, UIUC, 2001-Present Presenter, “Sexuality in a Democratic Society.” Center for Democracy in a Multi-racial Society, UIUC November 2, 2005. Member, Asian Pacific American Resource Committee. Office of the Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs. 1999-2000 Member, Medical Scholars Steering Committee. College of Medicine and the Graduate College. 19992000 Organizer. “Pedagogy and Politics: Queer Studies and its Futures” Conference. UIUC, October 28, 1999. Member, Search Committees (Director of the Gender and Women’s Studies Program, Japan specialistwith a joint appointment in Anthropology and East Asian Languages and Literatures; and the Asian American Studies Program Director), UIUC, 2001-2006 PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATION: Member: American Anthropological Association Association for Asian American Studies Asian Studies Association Modern Language Association American Studies Association Association for the Study of Food and Society 13