About Liya
Liya Yu (喻俐雅) is a neuropolitical researcher,
political philosopher, writer & performance artist
I write political books about the neuroscience of racism, dehumanization and polarization in our divided democratic societies. I write fictional books about feminist struggles, Asian immigrant identity and the phenomenology of cultural nomadism. I choreograph performance art pieces about patriarchal oppression, bodily liberation and novel humanizing forms of ritualized sacrality.
My interdisciplinary works are situated at the multicultural nexus between Europe, the US and East Asia – culturally, geopolitically and philosophically. They are held together by a unifying vision of what I call “Gesamtkunstbefreiung”.
I grew up in Germany as the child of first-generation Chinese immigrants from Hunan, and have since lived in China, the UK, the US, Finland, and Taiwan. I have been described as one of the most important intellectual voices in the Asian German diaspora and identify as German Chinese.
I was trained in political science at the University of Cambridge (B.A.) and Columbia University (M.Phil, Ph.D.), and am currently a visiting researcher at the Institute of Medical Psychology, Ludwig-Maximilians University Munich and the Department of Political Science, National Taiwan University.
I split my time between Taiwan and Germany.
Born in Hunan, China, I grew up in Germany (Bayern and Nordrhein-Westfalen) from age two onwards. Starting at fifteen, I began publishing award-winning short stories in German about identity, biculturality and finding home in a hypermobile world. Creating literature was the first way of making sense of myself and the world around me.
I studied political philosophy at the University of Cambridge, Christ’s College (B.A.), where I also founded the Thinking Society with Quentin Skinner. My B.A. thesis was on political theology and totalitarianism in Hobbes, Leo Strauss, Carl Schmitt and Hannah Arendt, advised by Duncan Kelly.
I wrote an interdisciplinary Ph.D. dissertation on the political neuroscience of racial exclusion and dehumanization at Columbia University (M.Phil, Ph.D.). My advisers were social neuroscientist Lasana Harris, International relations scholars Jack Snyder and Robert Jervis, and political theorist David Johnston.
I was a scholarship recipient of the Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes, the Cambridge European Trust, and the Weatherhead East Asian Institute.
I was a lecturer at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville 2016-17 and adjunct faculty at Columbia’s Global Mental Health Lab. Currently I am a guest researcher at the Institute of Medical Psychology, Ludwig-Maximilians University Munich; a visiting fellow at the Department of Political Science, National Taiwan University, and a research fellow/adjunct faculty at the International College of Innovation (ICI), National Chengchi University Taiwan. In 2022, I was elected to the German Federation of Scientists.
I am the author of Vulnerable Minds: The Neuropolitics of Divided Societies (Columbia University Press, 2022) and co-editor of the Routledge Handbook of Neuropolitics (together with Matt Qvortrup, forthcoming 2024).
Interviews and quotes on anti-Asian racism, political neuroscience and democratization in East Asia have appeared in DIE ZEIT, ZDF, Deutsche Welle, Deutschlandfunk, MDR, Radio Bremen, Bayrischer Rundfunk, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, Neue Zürcher Zeitung, TAZ, Berliner Zeitung, Radio Taiwan International, China.Table, flip.de, Amnesty Germany, Mondial Magazine, CGTN and Newsy.
I was an artist-in-residence at Taipei’s Treasure Hill Artist Village 2021-2022, where I worked on a feminist novel set in Beijing, entitled Lotte in Peking. It explores the question why China did not turn liberal after opening up, which psychological and cultural wounds drive Chinese ethnonationalism in the 21st century, and how China can find a more humanizing narrative about its own identity.
At Treasure Hill, I also created an anti-patriarchal dance project about the Asian female body, which has been selected to be sent to the moon as a NFT work with the Arch Mission Foundation’s Lunar Library Project.
Together with Alice Hérait, I organize Klartext Salon 坦白沙龍 in Taipei, a platform for political and civil society debates that aims to advance Taiwan’s democratic discourse.
To me, neuropolitics, literature, performance art and activism are all part of a larger vision that I have for my life’s work, which I term “Gesamtkunstbefreiung“: liberating myself and those on the margins of identity from the brain cell up, creating a new embodied language and philosophy through which to humanize ourselves.