Fr. 149.00

Feeling Asian American - Racial Flexibility Between Assimilation and Oppression

English · Hardback

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Description

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"Asian Americans have become the love-hate subject of the American psyche: at times celebrated as the model minority, at other times hated as foreigners. Wen Liu examines contemporary Asian American identity formation while placing it within a historical and ongoing narrative of racial injury. The flexible racial status of Asian Americans oscillates between oppression by the white majority and offers to assimilate into its ranks. Identity emerges from the tensions produced between those two poles. Liu dismisses the idea of Asian Americans as a coherent racial population. Instead, she examines them as a raced, gendered, classed, and sexualized group producing varying physical and imaginary boundaries of nation, geography, and citizenship. Her analysis reveals repeated norms and acts that capture Asian Americanness as part of a racial imagination that buttresses capitalism, white supremacy, neoliberalism, and the US empire. An innovative challenge to persistent myths, Feeling Asian American ranges from the wartime origins of Asian American psychology to anti-Asian attacks to present Asian Americanness as a complex political assemblage"--

List of contents










Acknowledgments
Introduction    Feeling Asian American

  1. Psychology and Racial Flexibility
  2. Black Lives Matter and Asian American Political Fracture
  3. Racial Loss, Diasporic Attachments, and Anti-Imperialism
Epilogue         Sideways to Asian America
Notes
Select Bibliography
Index


About the author










Wen Liu is an assistant research fellow at the Institute of Ethnology, Academia Sinica, Taiwan.

Product details

Authors Wen Liu
Publisher University Of Illinois Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.05.2024
 
EAN 9780252045790
ISBN 978-0-252-04579-0
No. of pages 200
Series NWSA / UIP First Book Prize
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Psychology > Theoretical psychology
Non-fiction book > History > Miscellaneous
Social sciences, law, business > Sociology > Sociological theories

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