Tze Ming Mok
Tze Ming Mok (Chinese: 莫志明; pinyin: Mò Zhìmíng; born 1978) is a fiction writer and sociopolitical commentator, and has been a prominent New Zealand Asian community advocate. She was born in Auckland, New Zealand, received her degrees at the University of Auckland, and works in human rights and development. She received her Doctor of Philosophy from the London School of Economics in 2019 with a thesis titled Inside the box: ethnic choice and ethnic change for mixed people in the United Kingdom.[1]
Mok's most prominent period of advocacy for New Zealand Asian, migrant, and New Zealand Chinese communities was the period 2005–2007, during which time her ethnopolitical blog Yellow Peril was featured on the popular New Zealand group blog Public Address, and she wrote an opinion column on race relations and Asia-Pacific issues in New Zealand's national Sunday newspaper, The Sunday Star-Times.
In 2004, she led an anti-racist march to Parliament, Wellington, in response to hate crimes. In 2007 she and other Asian community leaders organised a successful New Zealand Press Council challenge of a magazine article that had been published in the national monthly magazine of note, North & South. The article, 'Asian Angst' by former Member of Parliament Deborah Coddington, was found to be inaccurate and racially discriminatory.
Publication[]
Her poems, stories, reviews, opinions, and journalism have appeared in a range of publications including:
- The Kyoto Journal
- Landfall (including guest editorship of Autumn 2006 issue)
- The Sunday Star-Times (weekly column 2006)
- Sport
- Poetry NZ
- Meanjin
- JAAM
- The Listener
References[]
- ^ Mok, Tze Ming (2019). Inside the box: ethnic choice and ethnic change for mixed people in the United Kingdom (PhD). London School of Economics and Political Science. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
External links[]
- Tze Ming Mok's website
- Tze Ming Mok's blog Yellow Peril on publicaddress.net
- New Zealand Press Council ruling on 'Asian Angst' by Deborah Coddington in North & South magazine
- 1978 births
- New Zealand people of Chinese descent
- New Zealand human rights activists
- Women human rights activists
- Living people
- New Zealand essayists
- New Zealand women poets
- University of Auckland alumni
- People from Auckland
- New Zealand women essayists
- 21st-century New Zealand women writers
- 21st-century New Zealand writers
- New Zealand writer stubs