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In Postcolonial Grief Jinah Kim explores the relationship of
mourning to transpacific subjectivities, aesthetics, and decolonial
politics since World War II. Kim argues that Asian diasporic
subjectivity exists in relation to afterlives because the deaths of
those killed by U.S. imperialism and militarism in the Pacific
remain unresolved and unaddressed. Kim shows how primarily
U.S.-based Korean and Japanese diasporic writers, artists, and
filmmakers negotiate the necropolitics of Asia and how their
creative refusal to heal from imperial violence may generate
transformative antiracist and decolonial politics. She contests
prevalent interpretations of melancholia by engaging with Frantz
Fanon's and Hisaye Yamamoto's decolonial writings; uncovering the
noir genre's relationship to the U.S. war in Korea; discussing the
emergence of silenced colonial histories during the 1992 Los
Angeles riots; and analyzing the 1996 hostage takeover of the
Japanese ambassador's home in Peru. Kim highlights how the
aesthetic and creative work of the Japanese and Korean diasporas
offers new insights into twenty-first-century concerns surrounding
the state's erasure of military violence and colonialism and the
difficult work of remembering histories of war across the
transpacific.
In Postcolonial Grief Jinah Kim explores the relationship of
mourning to transpacific subjectivities, aesthetics, and decolonial
politics since World War II. Kim argues that Asian diasporic
subjectivity exists in relation to afterlives because the deaths of
those killed by U.S. imperialism and militarism in the Pacific
remain unresolved and unaddressed. Kim shows how primarily
U.S.-based Korean and Japanese diasporic writers, artists, and
filmmakers negotiate the necropolitics of Asia and how their
creative refusal to heal from imperial violence may generate
transformative antiracist and decolonial politics. She contests
prevalent interpretations of melancholia by engaging with Frantz
Fanon's and Hisaye Yamamoto's decolonial writings; uncovering the
noir genre's relationship to the U.S. war in Korea; discussing the
emergence of silenced colonial histories during the 1992 Los
Angeles riots; and analyzing the 1996 hostage takeover of the
Japanese ambassador's home in Peru. Kim highlights how the
aesthetic and creative work of the Japanese and Korean diasporas
offers new insights into twenty-first-century concerns surrounding
the state's erasure of military violence and colonialism and the
difficult work of remembering histories of war across the
transpacific.
In considering medieval illustrated Buddhist manuscripts as sacred
objects of cultic innovation, "Receptacle of the Sacred" explores
how and why the South Asian Buddhist book-cult has survived for
almost two millennia to the present. A book "manuscript" should be
understood as a form of sacred space: a temple in microcosm, not
only imbued with divine presence but also layered with the memories
of many generations of users. Jinah Kim argues that illustrating a
manuscript with Buddhist imagery not only empowered it as a
three-dimensional sacred object, but also made it a suitable tool
for the spiritual transformation of medieval Indian practitioners.
Through a detailed historical analysis of Sanskrit colophons on
patronage, production, and use of illustrated manuscripts, she
suggests that while Buddhism's disappearance in eastern India was a
slow and gradual process, the Buddhist book-cult played an
important role in sustaining its identity. In addition, by
examining the physical traces left by later Nepalese users and the
contemporary ritual use of the book in Nepal, Kim shows how human
agency was critical in perpetuating and intensifying the potency of
a manuscript as a sacred object throughout time.
Garland of Visions explores the generative relationships between
artistic intelligence and tantric vision practices in the
construction and circulation of visual knowledge in medieval South
Asia. Shifting away from the traditional connoisseur approach,
Jinah Kim instead focuses on the materiality of painting: its
mediums, its visions, and especially its colors. She argues that
the adoption of a special type of manuscript called pothi enabled
the material translation of a private and internal experience of
"seeing" into a portable device. These mobile and intimate objects
then became important conveyors of many forms of knowledge-ritual,
artistic, social, scientific, and religious-and spurred the spread
of visual knowledge of Indic Buddhism to distant lands. By taking
color as the material link between a vision and its artistic
output, Garland of Visions presents a fresh approach to the history
of Indian painting.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
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