Asian American History & Cultu
Asian America in a Capitalist Culture of Emotion
- English
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- Available on iOS & Android
Asian American History & Cultu
Asian America in a Capitalist Culture of Emotion
About This Book
In Racial Feelings, Jeffrey Santa Ana examines how Asian American narratives communicate and critiqueâto varying degreesâthe emotions that power the perception of Asians as racially different.
Santa Ana explores various forms of Asian American cultural production, ranging from literature and graphic narratives to film and advertising, to illuminate the connections between global economic relations and the emotions that shape aspirations for the good life. He illustrates his argument with examples including the destitute Filipino immigrant William Paulinha, in Han Ong's Fixer Chao, who targets his anger on the capitalist forces of objectification that racially exploit him, and Nan and Pingpin in Ha Jin's A Free Life, who seek happiness and belonging in America.
Racial Feelings addresses how Asian Americans both resist and rely on stereotypes in their writing and art work. In addition, Santa Ana investigates how capitalism shapes and structures an emotional discourse that represents Asians as both economic exemplars and threats.
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Table of contents
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Asian America and Racial Feelings
- 1. Feeling in Historical Memory: Reimagining Kingstonâs China Men with Shaun Tanâs Graphic Narratives
- 2. Happiness for Hire: The Anger of Carlos Bulosan as a Critique of Emotional Labor
- 3. Feeling Asian/American: Ambivalent Attachments in Asian Diasporic Narratives
- 4. Feeling Ancestral: Memory and Postracial Sensibility in Mixed-Race Asian American Literature
- 5. Happiness, Optimism, Anxiety, and Fear: Asiatic Racial Sentiments in Twenty-First-Century America
- Conclusion: The Comfort of Belonging
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index