Reporter and essayist Tammy Kim is 2021 Ottaway Visiting Professor

Posted 1/20/21

The Department of Digital Media & Journalism at SUNY New Paltz is pleased to welcome Tammy Kim to the campus community as the 2021 James H. Ottaway Sr. Visiting Professor of Journalism.Kim is a …

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Reporter and essayist Tammy Kim is 2021 Ottaway Visiting Professor

Posted

The Department of Digital Media & Journalism at SUNY New Paltz is pleased to welcome Tammy Kim to the campus community as the 2021 James H. Ottaway Sr. Visiting Professor of Journalism.
Kim is a freelance magazine reporter, contributing opinion writer at The New York Times, and a co-host of the Time to Say Goodbye podcast, which focuses on Asia and Asian America.
As Ottaway Visiting Professor, Kim will teach an upper-level journalism seminar titled “Writing Globalized Labor,” a subject about which Kim has written extensively for outlets including Al Jazeera America, The New Yorker, The New York Review of Books, Columbia Journalism Review and The Nation.
Kim will also share insights and experiences with the broader community at two public events, both of which are planned to take place virtually.
The first, an introductory Q&A with President Donald P. Christian, is scheduled for Tuesday, Feb. 2, at 6 p.m., and the second, a public lecture, is scheduled for Tuesday, April 6, at 7 p.m. More details about those events will be shared at a later date.

A former legal-services attorney based in New York, Kim has written on topics ranging from housing and labor to Korean literature and politics since transitioning to a career in journalism.
Some examples of her recent work as an essayist and opinion writer provide insight into her ideas about labor, race, nationality and media:
In “When You Are Paid 13 Hours for a 24-Hour Shift,” an opinion piece published on June 30, 2020, in The New York Times, Kim considers the experiences of long-term care workers in the coronavirus era
In “The Perils of ‘People of Color,’” published in The New Yorker in July, Kim, who is Korean American, explores ways in which the terms and phrases we use to describe racial difference can be exclusionary or inadequate representations of our social and political realities
And in “Transnationally Asian,” also published in July in the Columbia Journalism Review, Kim expresses dissatisfaction with mainstream U.S. media coverage of Asia, especially during the pandemic, and looks instead to publications that explore similarities between working people across borders.
In 2016, Kim co-edited the book “Punk Ethnography,” a case study about contemporary world music produced at the Seattle-based record label Sublime Frequencies. Her previous teaching experience includes undergraduate courses at the Cooper Union, Yale University, the City University of New York and the University of Montana School of Journalism. Follow Tammy Kim on Twitter @etammykim.