Positively no Filipinos allowed : building communities and discourse /
Saved in:
Imprint: | Philadelphia, PA : Temple University Press, 2006. |
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Description: | ix, 258 p. : ill. ; 24 cm. |
Language: | English |
Series: | Asian American history and culture |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/5922587 |
Table of Contents:
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Critical Considerations
- I. Imperial Legacies and Filipino Subjectivities
- 1. Patterns of Reform, Repetition, and Return in the First Centennial of the Filipino Revolution 1896-1996
- 2. On Filipinos, Filipino Americans, and U.S. Imperialism Interview with Oscar V. Campomanes
- 3. Filipino Bodies, Lynching, and the Language of Empire
- 4. "Just Ten Years Removed from a Bolo and a Breech-cloth" The Sexualization of the Filipino "Menace"
- II. Public Policy, Law, and the Construction of Filipinos
- 5. Losing Little Manila Race and Redevelopment in Filipina/o Stockton, California
- 6. Filipino Americans, Foreigner Discrimination, and the Lines of Racial Sovereignty
- III. Reconfiguring the Scope of Filipino Politics
- 7. On the Politics of (Filipino) Youth Culture Interview with Theodore S. Gonzalves
- 8. Colonial Amnesia Rethinking Filipino "American" Settler Empowerment in the U.S. Colony of Hawai'i
- IV. Resignifying "Filipino American"
- 9. "A Million Deaths?" Genocide and the "Filipino American" Condition of Possibility
- 10. Reflections on the Trajectory of Filipino/a American Studies Interview with Rick Bonus
- 11. Do You Mis(recognize) Me Filipina Americans in Popular Music and the Problem of Invisibility
- 12. A Different Breed of Filipino Balikbayans The Ambiguities of (Re-)turning
- Notes
- About the Contributors
- Index