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Sharon Luk

Associate Professor, Tier 2 Canada Research Chair of Geographies of Racialization
Geography

Background

I was born and raised in the San Francisco bay area. Before pursuing an academic career, I worked mainly in fields of independent media and youth and community development, with training in domestic violence counseling and non-discursive techniques in abuse recovery. Broadly, my fields of study include racism and racial capitalism, ethnic ontologies, modern thought, social movements, feminisms, and ephemeral archives. My teaching and research focus on “anthropologizing” Western Civilization and exploring the role of cultural production in communal survival and sustainability.

Prior to joining SFU, I held postdoctoral positions at Stanford University and at the University of California, Los Angeles, before becoming faculty in Indigenous, Race, and Ethnic Studies at the University of Oregon.

Research

My book, The Life of Paper: Letters and a Poetics of Living Beyond Captivity (University of California Press, 2018), explores the lifeworlds sustained through letter correspondence within the evolution of mass incarceration and its attendant racial regimes in California history. Spanning three different phases of development in the U.S. West, this investigation uncovers how people facing systematic social dismantling have engaged letter correspondence to remake themselves, from bodily integrity to subjectivity to collective and spiritual being.

As Tier 2 Canada Research Chair of Geographies of Racialization, I am currently returning to the history of knowledge production that defines Western civilization in contradistinction from “the Orient.” I aim to interrogate shifts in such “East-West” discourse and its transformative potential if we situate “the West” in the context of Afro-modernity—its epistemological foundations and world concept—rather than in assumptions of European dominance. I am developing two lines of study in this regard. First, I am working on a book manuscript tentatively titled “Sea of Fire: An Abolitionist Inquiry into the Making of Nonviolence.” This project examines the significance of the dialogue between social justice leaders Thich Nhat Hanh and Martin Luther King, Jr., from 1965–1968, looking both backward and forward from that moment to re-envision a longer-wave social history and geography of nonviolence. Whereas dominant narratives of nonviolence and its origins have revolved around ties to Christian faith, Brahminical and European philosophy, civil rights, and moral purity, my investigation calls attention instead to other ancient methods and movements that have emerged from the “global South” and inform the latter’s evolving meanings as a place, a knowledge formation, and an aspiration or symbol of freedom from modern oppressions.

Second, I am conducting research that addresses the work of transnational Chinese scholars such as Chenshan Tian. Building on the way he distinguishes between the epistemological assumptions of Chinese and European thought, as well as the implications of this difference for contemplating governance and political-economy in the twenty-first century, I aim to place these insights in dialogue with work in Black, Indigenous, and Ethnic Studies that more thoroughly considers the foundational violences of racism in the development of global capitalism and modern world systems. My long-term goal for this latter work is to help excavate the distinct processes of racialization attendant on Chinese, distinguishable from European, modes of dominance and, in this context, also to revisit enduring foundations for sustainable development and transformative social justice practices embedded in contending interpretations of Chinese social and philosophical traditions.

Selected Publications

Book:

The Life of Paper: Letters and a Poetics of Living Beyond Captivity (University of California Press, 2018).

  • 2018 Lora Romero First Book Prize, American Studies Association
  • 2018 Matei Calinescu Prize for Distinguished Scholarship in Twentieth or Twenty-First Century Literature and Thought (Geographically-Focused), Modern Language Association
     

Articles:

Luk, S. “To Extinguish: On Aaron Bushnell and the Casualties of Nonviolence.” Social Text Online (2024): n. pag. Web: https://socialtextjournal.org/periscope_article/to-extinguish-on-aaron-bushnell-and-the-casualties-of-nonviolence/

Luk, S. “The Asian Problem: Back Toward an Analysis of the Race Concept in the Era of Black Lives Matter.” Critical Ethnic Studies 8.1 (2023): n. pag. Web: https://manifold.umn.edu/read/ces0801-09/section/bfb08e7f-0167-4382-987b-5373023b7d65

Luk, S. “Modernity’s (Non-)Objective Character” (Forum: Settler Colonialism and Black Feminism). Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 39.1 (2021): 16-21. Print.

“‘Sea of Fire’: A Buddhist Pedagogy of Dying and Black Encounters Across Two Waves.” Souls: A Critical Journal of Black Politics, Culture, and Society 20.3 (2018): 267-288.

“Ourselves At Stake: Social Reproduction in the Age of Prisons.” CR: The New Centennial Review 18.3 (2018): 225-54.

“The Problem of Study: China in American Studies and the Materials of Knowledge,” American Quarterly special issue on “The Chinese Factor,” 69.3 (2017): 523-32.

“A Better Place” (Intervention Symposium: Reflections on the Events Surrounding Trayvon Martin). Antipode: A Radical Journal of Geography (2013): n. pag. Web: https://radicalantipode.files.wordpress.com/2013/11/3-luk.pdf

“Building People's Histories: Graduate Student Pedagogy, Undergraduate Education, and Collaboration with Community Partners” (co-authored with Genevieve Carpio [lead author] and Adam Bush). Journal of American History 99.4 (2013): 1176-88.

Graduate Teaching

Students who work with me generally seek a transdisciplinary or problem-posing path of study at the interstices of Geography, History, and Ethnic/Cultural Studies, with primary emphasis on social justice or collective struggles across various scales of analysis (from intimate to global). Many of my current and past students engage in historical materialist methods of archival and literary studies related to specific place-based social movements and everyday practices of communal life; some also conduct community-based research that involves methods such as interviews and participatory activism. If you are interested in studying at SFU and have a plan of research in my areas of emphasis, you are welcome to send me an email of introduction and brief description of your intellectual project and goals.

SFU Courses

GEOG 364: Cities and Crisis

GEOG 429: Racial Capitalism and Beyond