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Immigrant Acts - On Asian American Cultural Politics (Paperback, New)
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Immigrant Acts - On Asian American Cultural Politics (Paperback, New)
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In Immigrant Acts, Lisa Lowe argues that understanding Asian
immigration to the United States is fundamental to understanding
the racialized economic and political foundations of the nation.
Lowe discusses the contradictions whereby Asians have been included
in the workplaces and markets of the U.S. nation-state, yet,
through exclusion laws and bars from citizenship, have been
distanced from the terrain of national culture. Lowe argues that a
national memory haunts the conception of Asian American, persisting
beyond the repeal of individual laws and sustained by U.S. wars in
Asia, in which the Asian is seen as the perpetual immigrant, as the
"foreigner-within." In Immigrant Acts, she argues that rather than
attesting to the absorption of cultural difference into the
universality of the national political sphere, the Asian
immigrant-at odds with the cultural, racial, and linguistic forms
of the nation-displaces the temporality of assimilation. Distance
from the American national culture constitutes Asian American
culture as an alternative site that produces cultural forms
materially and aesthetically in contradiction with the institutions
of citizenship and national identity. Rather than a sign of a
"failed" integration of Asians into the American cultural sphere,
this critique preserves and opens up different possibilities for
political practice and coalition across racial and national
borders. In this uniquely interdisciplinary study, Lowe examines
the historical, political, cultural, and aesthetic meanings of
immigration in relation to Asian Americans. Extending the range of
Asian American critique, Immigrant Acts will interest readers
concerned with race and ethnicity in the United States, American
cultures, immigration, and transnationalism.
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