Product details
ISBN
9780816655922
Published
2010-03-29
Publisher
University of Minnesota Press
Height
216 mm
Width
140 mm
Thickness
20 mm
Age
01, G, P, 01, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
344
Author
Biographical note
Jodi Kim is assistant professor of ethnic studies at the University of California, Riverside.
Heftet /
2010
/ Engelsk
446,-
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Ends of Empire examines Asian American cultural production and its challenge to the dominant understanding of American imperialism, Cold War dynamics, and race and gender formation. Jodi Kim demonstrates the degree to which Asian American literature and film critique the record of U.S. imperial violence in Asia and provides a glimpse into the imperial and gendered racial logic of the Cold War. She unfolds this particularly entangled and enduring episode in the history of U.S. global hegemony-one that, contrary to leading interpretations of the Cold War as a simple bipolar rivalry, was significantly triangulated in Asia. The Asian American works analyzed here constitute a crucial body of what Kim reveals as transnational “Cold War compositions,” which are at once a geopolitical structuring, an ideological writing, and a cultural imagining. Arguing that these works reframe the U.S. Cold War as a project of gendered racial formation and imperialism as well as a production of knowledge, Ends of Empire offers an interdisciplinary investigation into the transnational dimensions of Asian America and its critical relationship to Cold War history.
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Ends of Empire examines Asian American cultural production and its challenge to the dominant understanding of American imperialism, Cold War dynamics, and race and gender formation.
Introduction: Unsettling Hermeneutics and Global Nonalignments, 1. Cold War Logics, Cold War Poetics: Conjuring the Specter of a Red Asia, 2. The El Dorado of Commerce: China’s Billion Bellies, 3. Asian America’s Japan: The Perils of Gendered Racial Rehabilitation, 4. The Forgotten War: Korean America’s Conditions of Possibility, 5. The War-Surplus of Our New Imperialism: Vietnam, Masculinist Hypervisibility, and the Politics of (Af)filiationEpilogue: Imagining an End to Empire, Acknowledgments, Notes, Index
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Related products
Ends of Empire examines Asian American cultural production and its challenge to the dominant understanding of American imperialism, Cold War dynamics, and race and gender formation. Jodi Kim demonstrates the degree to which Asian American literature and film critique the record of U.S. imperial violence in Asia and provides a glimpse into the imperial and gendered racial logic of the Cold War. She unfolds this particularly entangled and enduring episode in the history of U.S. global hegemony-one that, contrary to leading interpretations of the Cold War as a simple bipolar rivalry, was significantly triangulated in Asia. The Asian American works analyzed here constitute a crucial body of what Kim reveals as transnational “Cold War compositions,” which are at once a geopolitical structuring, an ideological writing, and a cultural imagining. Arguing that these works reframe the U.S. Cold War as a project of gendered racial formation and imperialism as well as a production of knowledge, Ends of Empire offers an interdisciplinary investigation into the transnational dimensions of Asian America and its critical relationship to Cold War history.
Read more
Ends of Empire examines Asian American cultural production and its challenge to the dominant understanding of American imperialism, Cold War dynamics, and race and gender formation.
Introduction: Unsettling Hermeneutics and Global Nonalignments, 1. Cold War Logics, Cold War Poetics: Conjuring the Specter of a Red Asia, 2. The El Dorado of Commerce: China’s Billion Bellies, 3. Asian America’s Japan: The Perils of Gendered Racial Rehabilitation, 4. The Forgotten War: Korean America’s Conditions of Possibility, 5. The War-Surplus of Our New Imperialism: Vietnam, Masculinist Hypervisibility, and the Politics of (Af)filiationEpilogue: Imagining an End to Empire, Acknowledgments, Notes, Index
Read more
Product details
ISBN
9780816655922
Published
2010-03-29
Publisher
University of Minnesota Press
Height
216 mm
Width
140 mm
Thickness
20 mm
Age
01, G, P, 01, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
344
Author
Biographical note
Jodi Kim is assistant professor of ethnic studies at the University of California, Riverside.