326 Sun Yung Shin
/My guest today is Sun Yung Shin, poet and author of the new book Heart Eater: A Memoir of Immigration, Belonging, and How We Find Ourselves in Language. Sun Yung’s work examines the complexities of transracial and transnational adoption, identity, and the limits of what some adoptees can ever truly know about their origins. We discuss some of the pressures adoptees carry to make sense of their stories, and why we need to move beyond the expected search-and-reunion narrative.
Show Notes
Full episode transcript here.
Recommended Resources
- Heart Eater: A Memoir of Immigration, Belonging, and How We Find Ourselves in Language by Sun Yung Shin
- The Starlings Collective
- BIPOC Adoptees
- When We Become Ours edited by Shannon Gibney and Nicole Chung
- Matthew Salesses
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- Sun Yung Shin: Substack | Instagram | Facebook | Website
- Haley Radke: X/Twitter | Instagram | Facebook | haleyradke.com
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This podcast is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing stated on it, either by its hosts or any guests, is to be construed as psychological, medical or legal advice. Please seek out professionals in those fields if you need those services. The views expressed by the hosts of Adoptees On or any guests are their own and do not represent the opinions of any organization or other person unless otherwise stated.
