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Strange fruit of the Black Pacific : imperialism's racial justice and its fugitives

Title
Strange fruit of the Black Pacific : imperialism's racial justice and its fugitives / Vince Schleitwiler.
ISBN
9781479864690
1479864692
9781479857081
1479857084
Publication
New York : New York University Press, [2017]
Physical Description
xiii, 300 pages ; 23 cm.
Summary
"Set between the rise of the U.S. and Japan as Pacific imperial powers in the 1890s and the aftermath of the latter's defeat in World War II, Strange Fruit of the Black Pacific traces the interrelated migrations of African Americans, Japanese Americans, and Filipinos across U.S. domains. Offering readings in literature, blues and jazz culture, film, theatre, journalism, and private correspondence, Vince Schleitwiler considers how the collective yearnings and speculative destinies of these groups were bound together along what W.E.B. Du Bois called the world-belting color line. The links were forged by the paradoxical practices of race-making in an aspiring empire--benevolent uplift through tutelage, alongside overwhelming sexualized violence--which together comprise what Schleitwiler calls 'imperialism's racial justice.' This process could only be sustained through an ongoing training of perception in an aesthetics of racial terror, through rituals of racial and colonial violence that also provide the conditions for an elusive countertraining. With an innovative prose style, Strange Fruit of the Black Pacific pursues the poetic and ethical challenge of reading, or learning how to read, the Black and Asian literatures that take form and flight within the fissures of imperialism's racial justice. Through startling reinterpretations of such canonical writers as James Weldon Johnson, Nella Larsen, Toshio Mori, and Carlos Bulosan, alongside considerations of unexpected figures such as the musician Robert Johnson and the playwright Eulalie Spence, Schleitwiler seeks to reactivate the radical potential of the Afro-Asian imagination through graceful meditations on its representations of failure, loss, and overwhelming violence"--From publisher's website.
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
February 16, 2017
Series
Nation of nations (NYU Press)
Nation of nations : immigrant history as American history
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Overture: The good news of empire
The violence and the music, April-December 1899
Shaming a diaspora
Love notes from a Third-conditional World
What comes after a chance
The rainbow sign and the fire, every time Los Angeles burns
Afterthought: The passing of multiculturalism.
Citation

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