Preface ix
1. Immigration, Citizenship, Racialization: Asian American Critique
1
2. Canon, Institutionalization, Identity: Asian American Studies
37
3. Heterogeneity, Hybridity, Multiplicity: Asian American
Differences 60
4. Imagining Los Angeles in the Production of Multiculturalism
84
5. Decolonization, Displacement, Disidentification: Writing and the
Question of History 97
6. Unfaithful to the Original: The Subject of Dictee 128
7. Work, Immigration, Gender: Asian "American" Women 154
Epilogue 174
Notes 177
Bibliography 223
Index 241
Lisa Lowe is Samuel Knight Professor of American Studies at Yale University, and is the author of Critical Terrains: French and British Orientalisms and coeditor (with David Lloyd) of The Politics of Culture in the Shadow of Capital (Duke University Press).
"Lisa Lowe does the most important and influential work in Asian American cultural studies today. Her book is noteworthy for its breathtakingly skillful deployment of 'materialist methodology,' its penetrating and sensitive interpretations of various works of literature and film, and its attention to the relationships between Asian American cultural production and social and political issues in Asian American communities. Immigrant Acts is written with sophisticated grace. A profoundly and passionately humane voice emerges from it." - Elaine H. Kim, University of California, Berkeley "At long last a study that theorised the crucial place of the Asian American Immigrant Subject in the historical constitution of 'the color line,' and thus, in the making of America. Tracing the genealogy of Asian immigrant labor and cultural production in the racial and gender formations of the pre-World War II, and contemporary U.S. State, Lisa Lowe offers us an ambitious, elegant, and incisive analysis that propels Asian immigrant women workers (and comparative feminist theory) to the center of discourses of nation and citizenship. Truly a book for the twenty first century." - Chandra Talpade Mohanty, Hamilton College "Lisa Lowe has written a brilliant, erudite, and meticulously thorough 'genealogy' and critique of the U.S. institution of citizenship and immigration acts. Immigrant Acts will take its place as an indispensable text for theorists in cultural studies, ethno-racial literary studies, and Asian American feminist materialist critique. A stunning tour de force!" - Jose David Sald'var, University of California, Berkeley "In Immigrant Acts, Lowe grapples with some of the most challenging and complex issues before us in the humanities and in cultural studies today. This is a major work by a mature scholar who brings authority and wisdom to her subject." - Emory Elliott, University of California, Riverside "Immigrant Acts is a compelling and persuasively written presentation of Asian American 'cultural production.' It is both an exciting and instructive volume." - Barbara Harlow, The University of Texas at Austin
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