Description

Book Synopsis
Analyzing pre and post-1954 American literature, film, autobiography, government documents, ethnography, photographs, and popular culture, this title investigates the ways in which racially 'in-between' people and communities were brought to heel within the South's prevailing cultural logic.

Trade Review
Partly Coloredis a work that should be read not only by those interested in the South or regionalism but by all scholars interested in issues of racialization. -- Jennifer Ho * Journal of Asian American Studies *
Bow's work is an imoprtant contribution to Asian American studies and southern literary criticism, and it brings together two forms of intellectual inquiry that have been treated as quite distinct by other scholars. -- Krystyn R. Moon * The Journal of Southern History *
Intelligent and provocative. Partly Colored exemplifies the full possibility of & trans scholarshiptransnational, transracial, transgender, and transdisciplinary. With a deep appreciation of the ways in which mobility, hybridity and interstitiality itself exist within systems of power, accommodating themselves to the tropes and laws of the white supremacist South, Bow consistently demonstrates the telling power of black/white divisions. -- David Roediger,author of How Race Survived U.S. History
Through her brilliantly executed and wide ranging analyses of how Asian Americans, Native Americans and other & partly colored subjects in the American South have been depicted and have depicted themselves, Bow reveals the region to be haunted by a different set of racial histories than the ones with which we have become familiar. She offers a revelatory perspective on how those who occupy the liminal zone between black and white negotiate the dynamic and contradictory social processes that sustain a monochromatic conception of race. -- Daniel Y. Kim,author of Writing Manhood in Black and Yellow: Ralph Ellison, Frank Chin and the Literary Politics of Identity
An impressive and well-researched interdisciplinary response. * MELUS *
Scrutinizing the bipolar axis of power separating black from white under the Jim Crowe system of segregation, Bow tracks the oppression and elision of those who are partly colored"here chiefly Asian Americans but with comparative nods to Native Americans and the binaries characterizing gender and sexuality . . . What she finds is not a "third space" apart from black or white but an eneven extension of repression of racial differences into which Asian American subjects are shoehorned or erased. * Journal of American History *
In a refreshingly wide-ranging study, Bow compares the circumstances of the Lumbee Indians with those of Asiansthe two groups were not classified as black or white. The author considers the consequences of intermarriage in the racialization of Asians, as well as the roles of class and gender. Above all, she explores the rich interstitial possibilities of Asians being in-between set categories. This stimulating read is suitable for a broad audience. * Choice *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Introduction: Thinking Interstitially 1 Coloring between the Lines: Historiographies of Southern Anomaly 2 The Interstitial Indian: The Lumbee and Segregation's Middle Caste 3 White Is and White Ain't: Failed Approximation and Eruptions of Funk in Representations of the Chinese in the South 4 Anxieties of the 'Partly Colored' 5 Productive Estrangement: Racial-Sexual Continuums in Asian American as Southern Literature 6 Transracial/Transgender: Analogies of Difference in Mai's America Afterword: Continuums, Mobility, Places on the Train Notes Works Cited Index About the Author

Partly Colored Asian Americans and Racial

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    A Paperback / softback by Leslie Bow

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      View other formats and editions of Partly Colored Asian Americans and Racial by Leslie Bow

      Publisher: New York University Press
      Publication Date: 23/04/2010
      ISBN13: 9780814791332, 978-0814791332
      ISBN10: 0814791336

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Analyzing pre and post-1954 American literature, film, autobiography, government documents, ethnography, photographs, and popular culture, this title investigates the ways in which racially 'in-between' people and communities were brought to heel within the South's prevailing cultural logic.

      Trade Review
      Partly Coloredis a work that should be read not only by those interested in the South or regionalism but by all scholars interested in issues of racialization. -- Jennifer Ho * Journal of Asian American Studies *
      Bow's work is an imoprtant contribution to Asian American studies and southern literary criticism, and it brings together two forms of intellectual inquiry that have been treated as quite distinct by other scholars. -- Krystyn R. Moon * The Journal of Southern History *
      Intelligent and provocative. Partly Colored exemplifies the full possibility of & trans scholarshiptransnational, transracial, transgender, and transdisciplinary. With a deep appreciation of the ways in which mobility, hybridity and interstitiality itself exist within systems of power, accommodating themselves to the tropes and laws of the white supremacist South, Bow consistently demonstrates the telling power of black/white divisions. -- David Roediger,author of How Race Survived U.S. History
      Through her brilliantly executed and wide ranging analyses of how Asian Americans, Native Americans and other & partly colored subjects in the American South have been depicted and have depicted themselves, Bow reveals the region to be haunted by a different set of racial histories than the ones with which we have become familiar. She offers a revelatory perspective on how those who occupy the liminal zone between black and white negotiate the dynamic and contradictory social processes that sustain a monochromatic conception of race. -- Daniel Y. Kim,author of Writing Manhood in Black and Yellow: Ralph Ellison, Frank Chin and the Literary Politics of Identity
      An impressive and well-researched interdisciplinary response. * MELUS *
      Scrutinizing the bipolar axis of power separating black from white under the Jim Crowe system of segregation, Bow tracks the oppression and elision of those who are partly colored"here chiefly Asian Americans but with comparative nods to Native Americans and the binaries characterizing gender and sexuality . . . What she finds is not a "third space" apart from black or white but an eneven extension of repression of racial differences into which Asian American subjects are shoehorned or erased. * Journal of American History *
      In a refreshingly wide-ranging study, Bow compares the circumstances of the Lumbee Indians with those of Asiansthe two groups were not classified as black or white. The author considers the consequences of intermarriage in the racialization of Asians, as well as the roles of class and gender. Above all, she explores the rich interstitial possibilities of Asians being in-between set categories. This stimulating read is suitable for a broad audience. * Choice *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments Introduction: Thinking Interstitially 1 Coloring between the Lines: Historiographies of Southern Anomaly 2 The Interstitial Indian: The Lumbee and Segregation's Middle Caste 3 White Is and White Ain't: Failed Approximation and Eruptions of Funk in Representations of the Chinese in the South 4 Anxieties of the 'Partly Colored' 5 Productive Estrangement: Racial-Sexual Continuums in Asian American as Southern Literature 6 Transracial/Transgender: Analogies of Difference in Mai's America Afterword: Continuums, Mobility, Places on the Train Notes Works Cited Index About the Author

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