Ivan Small | Comparative Cultural Studies Department | 色花堂 CLASS

Associate Professor
Anthropology
Ph.D., Cornell University
On Leave, 2024-2025
Email: ivsmall@central.uh.edu
Biography
Ivan V. Small is a sociocultural and economic anthropologist, and associate professor in the Department of Comparative Cultural Studies. His research considers mobility, circulation and capital transformations in a trans-Pacific context, with a focus on Southeast Asia and the United States. He has held a number of research fellowships, most recently as a visiting senior fellow with the Yusof Ishak Institute for Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore in 2021, and is currently on the Fulbright specialist roster. He has worked and consulted for nonprofits, foundations, and think tanks including the Smithsonian, Ford Foundation, and World Policy Institute. He completed graduate studies in International Affairs and Anthropology at Columbia and Cornell Universities. Dr. Small's work has been published in prominent disciplinary and area studies journals including the Journal of Cultural Economy, TRaNS: Trans -Regional and -National Studies of Southeast Asia, Journal of Consumer Culture, Mobility in History, Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia, Journal of Vietnamese Studies, and Visual Anthropology.
Dr. Small鈥檚 research has been particularly engaged with Vietnam and the Vietnamese American diaspora. His first book, Currencies of Imagination: Channeling Money and Chasing Mobility in Vietnam (Cornell 2019), examines the changing social, spatial and material dimensions of migration and remittances between the U.S. and Vietnam since 1975, drawing on fieldwork in San Jose and Orange County California, and Saigon and Quy Nhon Vietnam. It considers the affective role of remittances in mediating trans-Pacific kinship networks, contests the symmetrical relationality assumed in the domesticated analytical category of 鈥渢he gift鈥 in anthropology and the humanities, and offers a transnational lens focusing on how diasporic mobility affects not only processes of refugee and immigrant community formations in the United States but also, the orientations, desires and expectations of those who stay behind. Examining the qualitative correlation between reception of remittances and aspirations for migration, Small demonstrates how the characteristics of the remittance gifting medium of U.S. dollars in a global economy, including transnational mobility and exchangeable value, come to partially define the relationships and aspirations of the exchange participants. The book traces a genealogy of how this phenomenon has shifted through changing remittance forms and transfer channels from 1975 to present: from material and black market forms to formal bank and money service transfers. Transformations in the social and institutional relations among givers, receivers, and remittance facilitators accompany these shifts, demonstrating that the socio-cultural work of remittances extends far beyond the economic realm to which they are typically consigned.
Dr. Small is also co-editor (with Bill Maurer and Smoki Musaraj) of the book Money at the Margins: Global Perspectives on Technology, Financial Inclusion & Design (Berghahn 2018), featuring comparative ethnographic work on technological financial inclusion initiatives driven by Global North entrepreneurial development stakeholders and their reception in the Global South. This includes monetary exchange, transfer and accounting practices including rotating credit associations and digital mobile money 鈥 in countries ranging from Kenya to the Philippines, but also their value ecology conceptualizations by experts in research and development nodes like New York, Los Angeles, Washington D.C. and London. Dr. Small remains involved in various emerging global financial technology research projects related to the anthropology of money, including the Human Economy Research Programme at the University of Pretoria, South Africa.
In his most recent fieldwork, Dr. Small extends his analyses of mobility to transportation consumption patterns shaped by international and regional trade agreements in Southeast Asia, in particular the ASEAN Free Trade Area. Examining how mobility service providers 鈥 ranging from automotive manufacturers to multi-modal transportation concept labs, are projecting the future of mobility and the technologies that shape them onto emerging Asian markets, Dr. Small interrogates how generalized conceptions related to automobility, Asian culture, technological futures, and environmental sustainability are mobilized and modeled by marketers, designers, planners and engineers. He also examines how the emergent mobility infrastructures produced by these transportation stakeholders are apprehended and embodied by consumers of transportation commodities and services in rapidly expanding Vietnamese megacities.
Dr. Small鈥檚 latest research agenda triangulates post-1975 first, second and third wave migration, remittance, transportation and investment patterns by Southeast Asians moving between the Northeast, California, and sunbelt cities in the South (Atlanta and Houston). He is interested in comparative Southeast Asian American community formations and transnational connections as they relate to the aesthetics and affordances of ethno-suburban development. This includes how Houston鈥檚 鈥淎siatown鈥 has been shaped by various domestic and international migration and capital circulations, and community demands for visibility and inclusion in practices of place making.
Dr. Small鈥檚 achievements have been recognized through multiple research awards and teaching honor rolls, he has also served as coordinator of Asian Studies among other leadership positions. He is an active member of the American Anthropological Association, Association for Asian Studies, and Association for Asian American Studies, and is an executive board member of the War Legacies Project.
Selected Publications
Books
(Cornell University Press, 2019). (Reviewed by American Ethnologist, Cross Currents, International Migration Review, Mekong Review, Pacific Affairs, Journal of Vietnamese Studies, Journal of Asian Studies. Podcasts available at Gatty Rewind and New Books Network.)
, co-edited with Bill Maurer and Smoki Musaraj (Berghahn Press, 2018).
(Reviewed by American Ethnologist, Current Anthropology, Journal of the Royal Anthropological
Institute.)
Peer Reviewed Articles
2022: 鈥淒riving is Terrifying: Auto-Mobile Horizons, Projections and Networks in Vietnam and ASEAN鈥, Journal of Cultural Economy.
2021: 鈥淲andering Money: Valuating and Mediating Remittances in Vietnam鈥, TRaNS: Trans -Regional and -National Studies of Southeast Asia 9(1), 31-43.
2021: 鈥淐hallenges Facing Vietnam鈥檚 Emerging Automobility Landscapes鈥, Perspective 83. Singapore: ISEAS Press.
2019: 鈥淩emitting Desire: Trans-Pacific Migration, Returns and Imaginaries in Vietnam鈥. Perspective 56. Singapore: ISEAS Press.
2018: 鈥淎ffecting Mobility: Consuming Driving and Driving Consumption in Southeast Asian Emerging Markets鈥, Journal of Consumer Culture 18(3), 377-396.
2018: 鈥淩emittance Channels and Regulatory Chokepoints鈥, Limn 10, 53-58.
2016: 鈥淔raming and Encompassing Movement: Transportation, Migration, and Social Mobility in Vietnam鈥, Mobility in History 7(1), 79-90.
2014: 鈥淏etwixt & Between: Tragedies and Memories of the Vietnamese Exodus, in Film and Audience鈥, Visual Anthropology 27(1-2), 197-200.
2012: 鈥淥ver There: Imaginative Displacements in Vietnamese Remittance Gift Economies鈥, Journal of Vietnamese Studies 7(3), 157-183.
2012: 鈥淓mbodied Economies: Vietnamese Transnational Migration & Return Regimes鈥, Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia 27(2), 234-259.
Chapters in Books
2022: 鈥淐apitalist Lack: Vietnamese American Remittances as Cultural Supplement and Political Critique鈥, The Vietnamese Diaspora in a Transnational Context: Contested Spaces, Contested Narratives, Victor Satzewich and Anna Vu, ed. Leiden: Brill Press, 123-142.
2020: 鈥淓cologies of Immateriality: Remittances and the Cashless Allure鈥, Who鈥檚 Cashing In? Contemporary Perspectives on New Monies and Global Cashlessness, Atreyee Sen, J. Lindquist and M. Kolling, ed. Oxford: Berghahn, 57-72.
2019: 鈥淰exed Returns: Vietnamese Returnee Interactions with Home and State鈥, Governance and Internal Migration, William Ascher and Shane Barter, ed. New York: Peter Lang, 129-146.
2018: 鈥淎nticipating the Automobile: Transportation Transformations in Vietnam鈥, Consumer Culture Theory, Research in Consumer Behavior 19, Russell Belk, Alladi Venkatesh, Samantha Cross and Cecilia Ruvalcaba, ed. Emerald Group Publishing, UK, 145-161.
2013: 鈥淭he Vietnamese Transnational(s)鈥, Figures of Modernity in Southeast Asia, Joshua Barker, Erik Harms, and Johan Lindquist, ed. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. 72-75.
Courses
- Migration / Borders / Citizenship
- Transnational Vietnam
- Economic Anthropology
- Theories of Culture