无忧视频

Huynh Wins Watson Fellowship

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One of this year鈥檚 prestigious Thomas J. Watson Fellowships has been awarded to 无忧视频 senior Lam Huynh. The engineering major will study the healing properties of dance in his project, 鈥淰ietnamese Diaspora: Counterspace Through Dance,鈥 which focuses on the culture of Vietnam War refugees鈥 descendants.

This year’s class of Watson Fellows represents eight countries and 17 U.S. states and 40 participating institutions. From the 152 finalists nominated to compete on the national level, 40 Fellows were selected. Fellows will receive $30,000 for 12 months of travel聽and college loan assistance as needed. They’ll travel to 67 countries exploring topics ranging from foster care聽to opera to human augmentation to聽spoken聽word.

鈥淚 will explore how intergenerational trauma has turned the second generation of overseas Vietnamese toward dance,鈥 Huynh says, 鈥渆specially the styles of hip-hop, street and urban dance. I hope to gain deeper insights on how these dance styles form communities that go beyond just emotional outlets to become 鈥榗ounterspaces鈥欌攕paces that are liberating and healing to the self and the community.鈥

Inspired by his lived experience as a second-generation Vi峄噒 Ki峄乽 (overseas Vietnamese, living outside of Vietnam), Huynh will study the Vietnamese diaspora鈥攚hich spans the world鈥攊n France, Germany, Netherlands, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam and Australia. Having come from a family of South Vietnamese refugees, Huynh was raised with this history and cultural heritage. He鈥檚 also a dancer.

鈥淚n being part of the dance community, I started to notice how a lot of Vietnamese Americans participated in the scene,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 felt that a lot of Vietnamese youth danced not just because it was fun, but because there was an emotional need that necessitated it. As I reflected on my own reasons to dance, I felt that this emotional need was unpacking the intergenerational trauma that was passed down to the second generation from the Vietnam War.鈥

Huynh has a seemingly endless list of questions he hopes to answer with his research, including examining how the Vietnamese experience in other countries compares to the Vietnamese-American experience. He also hopes to learn how the people of the Vietnamese diaspora are connected and suspects he may find answers in dance, specifically hip-hop, street and urban dance.

鈥淒ance isn鈥檛 just simply a performing art,鈥 Huynh says. 鈥淩ather, it is an artistic medium that actively builds bridges and forms relationships between people. I want to explore what other diasporic Vietnamese communities are like; I want to explore what other dance communities are like. I want to see if I can find myself in communities around the world.鈥澛