Metroimperial intimacies : fantasy, racial-sexual governance, and the Philippines in U.S. imperialism, 1899-1913

Author(s)

    • Mendoza, Victor Román

Bibliographic Information

Metroimperial intimacies : fantasy, racial-sexual governance, and the Philippines in U.S. imperialism, 1899-1913

Victor Román Mendoza

(Perverse modernities)

Duke University Press, 2015

  • : pbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [259]-277) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In Metroimperial Intimacies Victor Roman Mendoza combines historical, literary, and archival analysis with queer-of-color critique to show how U.S. imperial incursions into the Philippines enabled the growth of unprecedented social and sexual intimacies between native Philippine and U.S. subjects. The real and imagined intimacies-whether expressed through friendship, love, or eroticism-threatened U.S. gender and sexuality norms. To codify U.S. heteronormative behavior, the colonial government prohibited anything loosely defined as perverse, which along with popular representations of Filipinos, regulated colonial subjects and depicted them as sexually available, diseased, and degenerate. Mendoza analyzes laws, military records, the writing of Philippine students in the United States, and popular representations of Philippine colonial subjects to show how their lives, bodies, and desires became the very battleground for the consolidation of repressive legal, economic, and political institutions and practices of the U.S. colonial state. By highlighting the importance of racial and gendered violence in maintaining control at home and abroad, Mendoza demonstrates that studies of U.S. sexuality must take into account the reach and impact of U.S. imperialism.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix Introduction 1 1. Racial-Sexual Governance and the U.S. Colonial State in the Philippines 35 2. Unmentionable Liberties: A Racial-Sexual Differend in the U.S. Colonial Philippines 63 3. Menacing Receptivity: Philippine Insurrectos and the Sublime Object of Metroimperial Visual Culture 95 4. The Sultan of Sulu's Epidemic of Intimacies 131 5. Certain Peculiar Temptations: Little Brown Students and Racial-Sexual Governance in the Metropole 167 Conclusion 203 Notes 211 Bibliography 259 Index 279

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