“<i>Settler Garrison</i> is a stunning, magisterial work that provides an entirely original definition of US empire as predicated on the production of its legitimation to wield power. Jodi Kim frames spaces heretofore deemed anomalous or marginal-the camptown, the POW camp, and the unincorporated territory-as the very sites where US empire establishes its authority to rule. In the process of redefining and reframing US empire, Kim offers a unique and sorely needed relational methodology for understanding the connection between its various modes, in particular between military empire and settler colonialism." - Grace Kyungwon Hong, author of (Death beyond Disavowal: The Impossible Politics of Difference) "An ambitious undertaking. . . . <i>Settler Garrison</i> is a powerful antidote to conceptions of the Pacific as merely a US mare nostrum." - Jim Glassman (Pacific Affairs) "That <i>Settler Garrison</i> is a study of many things (e.g., capitalism, decolonization, militarism, settler colonialism, and sexual violence) should draw scholars from an extensive range of disciplines to examine this question alongside her and consider it in their own work." - Sarah Meiners (Journal of American Ethnic History) "This book is a worthwhile read for those who are interested in further understanding the mechanisms of exported US imperialism and in search of articulations of transpacific futurities. . . . <i>Settler Garrison</i> maintains a strong argument surrounding the operations of US militarism and a thoughtful commitment to transpacific futurities as envisioned by the people who have endured this violence and its settler imperial failures." - Katherine Funes (Modern Fiction Studies)
1. Perverse Temporalities: Primitive Accumulation and the Settler Colonial Foundations of Debt Imperialism 39
2. The Military Base and Camptown: Seizing Land "by Bulldozer and Bayonet" and the Transpacific Masculinist Compact 62
3. The POW Camp: Waging Psychological Warfare and a New Settler Frontier 113
4. The Unincorporated Territory: Constituting Indefinite Deferral and "No Page Is Ever Terra Nullius" 138
Epilogue. Climate Change, Climate Debt, Climate Imperialism 174
Acknowledgments 185
Notes 189
Bibliography 229
Index 249