The Trans-Pacific imagination : rethinking boundary, culture and society
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Bibliographic Information
The Trans-Pacific imagination : rethinking boundary, culture and society
World Scientific, c2012
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Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This anthology critically re-examines and re-articulates the discursive boundary that binds the region called East Asia in order to produce Trans-Pacific Studies. Recognizing that the creation of regional boundaries depends on a new configuration of both inter- and intra-national power relations and the ideological constructs that generate historical, ideological, and cultural effects, this volume proposes that the term "trans-Pacific" be mobilized to complicate the phrase "East Asian" as the boundary of academic discipline and socio-cultural discourse. The anthology also examines the historical conditions under which "East Asia" was constructed as an area and the trans-Pacific directives that nurtured the sense of nationality in each component nation of East Asia.With the contribution of: Sun Ge (The Institute of Literature, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences); Soyoung Kim (Korean National University of Arts); Hyoduk Lee (Tokyo University of Foreign Studies); Jie-Hyun Lim (Hanyang University); Lisa Lowe (University of California); Tessa Morris-Suzuki (The Australian National University); Naoki Sakai (Cornell University), Yuko Shibata (Saint John's University); Annmaria Shimabuku (University of California); Ikuo Shinjou (University of the Ryukyus); Hyon Joo Yoo (University of Vermont).
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- National Ontology and the New Asian Immigrant in US Empire after September 11
- Trans-Pacific Studies and US - Japan Complicity
- Re-Imagining the Space of East Asia - from Empire to Cold War and Beyond
- The Political Formation of the Homoerotics and the Cold War: Battle of the Gazes at and from Okinawa
- Transnationality of the Victimhood Nationalism
- Making Sense of East Asia: From China's Point of View
- East Asia as an Objective of an Intellectual History
- Securing Okinawa for Miscegenation: A Biopolitical Reading of Nagado Eikichi's "Tent Village of Garama"
- Postcolonial Hiroshima, Mon Amour: Franco-Japanese Collaboration in the American Shadow
- Postcolonial Film Historiography in Taiwan and South Korea: The Puppet Master and Chihwaseon
- The Incurable Feminine of Women without a Country in East Asian Cinema.
by "Nielsen BookData"