New Books Network

Kong Pheng Pha, "Queering the Hmong Diaspora: Racial Subjectivity and the Myth of Hyperheterosexuality" (U Washington Press, 2025)

Jan 25, 2026
Kong Pheng Pha, interdisciplinary scholar and UW–Madison professor studying Hmong and Southeast Asian gender and sexuality. He dismantles the myth of Hmong hyperheterosexuality. He links legal cases, marriage bills, and media to racialized sexual narratives. He explores queer Hmong spiritualities, youth interviews, vernacular activism, and arts-based freedom dreaming.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
ANECDOTE

Personal Roots Of The Project

  • Kong Pheng Pha describes growing up poor, queer, and refugee in the Midwest and searching online for queer Hmong stories as a youth.
  • Those searches returned mostly tragic coming-out narratives and fueled his drive to write and historicize Hmong queer experiences.
INSIGHT

Hyperheterosexuality As A Racial Frame

  • Hyperheterosexuality frames Hmong (and other racialized groups) as deviant extremes of heterosexuality rather than as variants of normal sexuality.
  • This racialized framing distorts legal and cultural responses to gender, sexuality, and violence in Hmong communities.
INSIGHT

Courtrooms Turn Culture Into Caricature

  • Minnesota court cases used cultural evidence to racialize Hmong defendants and survivors, producing mutual stigmatization rather than justice.
  • The legal focus on culture amplified Hmong men's danger and women's powerlessness within dominant judicial narratives.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app