Re-signifying “Asia” in the Transnational Turn of Asian/American Studies Cover Image

Re-signifying “Asia” in the Transnational Turn of Asian/American Studies
Re-signifying “Asia” in the Transnational Turn of Asian/American Studies

Author(s): Lin Chien-Ting
Subject(s): Studies of Literature, Comparative Study of Literature, International relations/trade, Comparative politics, Cultural Anthropology / Ethnology, Culture and social structure , Cold-War History, Migration Studies, Inter-Ethnic Relations, Geopolitics
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego
Keywords: Asian American Studies; reconceptualization of Asia; migrant narratives; post cold-war power dynamics; American-Taiwanese relations; Asian American cultural criticism; inter-Asia geopolitics

Summary/Abstract: Bringing inter-Asia cultural studies into conversation with Asian American critique, this paper aims to reframe the critical analysis of the scattered hegemonies of US imperialism in articulating the transpacific historical interconnections. Rather than privileging the US as a primary site of investigation and critique, I draw careful attention to the Cold War conditions of inter-Asian migration as an entry point for discussing how the geopolitics of Taiwanese modernity, from the Cold War up to neoliberal globalization, are inextricably linked to Japanese colonialism, US militarism and modernization, and Chinese globalization. To develop my theoretical and historical (re)conceptualization of “Asia” in Asian/American studies, I look at how migrant narrative of migrant workers in the nonfiction novel “Our Stories” speak to the power dynamics of the US Cold War involvement in Asia, neoliberal globalization, and Taiwan subimperialist relations with its neighboring countries. Whereas Asian American cultural critique offers a new analytics to enable a reconceptualization of Asian America without confining it to an identitarian category, inter-Asia studies redirect critical attention to the historical undercurrents of inter-Asia geopolitics that are largely obscured by the dominant knowledge paradigm of the US Cold War politics in the regions of Asia Pacific.

  • Issue Year: 9/2016
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 27-44
  • Page Count: 18
  • Language: English