Sovereignty is inextricably linked to questions of both belonging and ownership. During her six-year stay in Taiwan, filmmaker Yvonne Welbon “learned the importance of choosing to name one’s self, the importance of knowing one’s self,” the ability to declare your own sovereignty. Welbon briefly took the name Wei-yi Fang. She interrogates her Black past in fluent Chinese; she was born in the United States to Honduran parents. This building of a multiplicity of selves forms a prism, through which Weibon is able to sharply comment on the differing racisms that her multiple selves have encountered. A cohesive personal history is fittingly assembled from many sources—interviews, recreations, documentary and archive—until a sovereign self comes into focus