AfroAsian Encounters: Culture, History, Politics

AfroAsian Encounters: Culture, History, Politics

AfroAsian Encounters: Culture, History, Politics

AfroAsian Encounters: Culture, History, Politics

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Overview

With a Foreword by Vijay Prashad and an Afterword by Gary Okihiro
How might we understand yellowface performances by African Americans in 1930s swing adaptations of Gilbert and Sullivan's The Mikado, Paul Robeson's support of Asian and Asian American struggles, or the absorption of hip hop by Asian American youth culture?
AfroAsian Encounters is the first anthology to look at the mutual influence of and relationships between members of the African and Asian diasporas. While these two groups have often been thought of as occupying incommensurate, if not opposing, cultural and political positions, scholars from history, literature, media, and the visual arts here trace their interconnections and interactions, as well as the tensions between the two groups that sometimes arise. AfroAsian Encounters probes beyond popular culture to trace the historical lineage of these coalitions from the late nineteenth century to the present.
A foreword by Vijay Prashad sets the volume in the context of the Bandung conference half a century ago, and an afterword by Gary Okihiro charts the contours of a “Black Pacific.” From the history of Japanese jazz composers to the current popularity of black/Asian “buddy films” like Rush Hour, AfroAsian Encounters is a groundbreaking intervention into studies of race and ethnicity and a crucial look at the shifting meaning of race in the twenty-first century.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814776902
Publisher: New York University Press
Publication date: 11/01/2006
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 342
Sales rank: 336,587
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Heike Raphael-Hernandez is professor of English at the University of Maryland in Europe. She is editor of Blackening Europe: The African American Presence.
Shannon Steen is assistant professor of theater, dance, and performance studies at the University of California at Berkeley.
Vijay Prashad is author of Everybody was Kung Fu Fighting: Afro-Asian Connections and the Myth of Cultural Purity.
Gary Okihiro is author of Common Ground: Reimagining American History.

Table of Contents

AcknowledgmentsForeword: “Bandung Is Done”Vijay PrashadIntroduction: AfroAsian EncountersHeike Raphael-Hernandez and Shannon SteenPart I Positioning AfroAsian Racial Identities1 “A Race So Different from Our Own”Sanda Mayzaw Lwin2 Crossings in Prose: Jade Snow Wong and the Demand for a New Kind of Expert Cynthia Tolentino3 Complicating Racial Binaries: Asian Canadians and African Canadians as Visible Minorities Eleanor Ty4 One People, One Nation? Creolization and Its Tensions in Trinidadian and Guyanese Fiction Lourdes López Ropero5 Black-and-Tan Fantasies: Interracial Contact between Blacks and South Asians in Film Samir DayalPart II Confronting the Color Hierarchy6 “It Takes Some Time to Learn the Right Words”Heike Raphael-Hernandez7 Chutney, Métissage, and Other Mixed MetaphorsContexts Gita Rajan8 These Are the BreaksOliver WangPart III Performing AfroAsian Identities9 Racing American ModernityShannon Steen10 Black Bodies/Yellow MasksDeborah Elizabeth Whaley11 The Rush Hour of Black/Asian Coalitions?Mita Banerjee12 Performing Postmodernist PassingCathy Covell WaegnerPart IV Celebrating Unity13 Persisting SolidaritiesBill V. Mullen14 Internationalism and JusticeGreg Robinson15 “Jazz That Eats Rice”David W. Stowe16 Kickin’ the White Man’s AssFred HoAfterword: Toward a Black Paci?c Gary Y. OkihiroAbout the Contributors Index 

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Succeeds at placing blacks and Asians at the center of the Americas, inviting productive dialogue against the notion that interaction between these groups is out of the ordinary.”
-Journal of American Ethnic History

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“This collection is evidence of the important topics and perspectives generated by illuminating AfroAsian linkages.”

-The Journal of African American History

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“As fresh and exciting as it is important. This crucial book changes the conversation around American Studies and Ethnic Studies in key ways, challenging scholars to light out for previously-uncharted places on our mental maps in which borders are interrogated and challenged, alliances forged through imagined communities, commerce, popular culture, or politics are investigated and probed, and questions that are simultaneously new, and half a century old, are revivified. This volume, the first interdisciplinary anthology dealing with AfroAsian encounters, stands to become a landmark work in the field.”
-Shelley Fisher Fishkin,Stanford University

“What critical anthologies do best is to present. . . . And AfroAsian Encounters does that.”
-Journal of Asian American Studies

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“A ground-breaking interdisciplinary anthology entirely devoted to the studies of historical and contemporary African/Asian interactions.”
-African American Review

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