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30 June 2026

Since the late nineteenth century, various agencies of the U.S. government have developed elaborate bureaucratic procedures to manage "suspect" Asian groups. Ju Yon Kim explores the modes of engagement and contestation available to those who are subjected by the state to both relentless documentation and demands to perform
Linking histories of Chinese immigration exclusion, the U.S. colonization of the Philippines, the internment of Japanese Americans, and FBI surveillance of political groups, Kim brings together studies of paperwork and performance to demonstrate their continued, intertwined impact on Asian American history and culture.
"In equal measures historical, theoretical, and archival, this fascinating book utilizes a rich and meticulous cache of legal documents to highlight how the gap between what is written and what is performed opens up a critical space for the analysis of race and form—that is, for a sustained investigation of the material transactions and discursive effects configuring racial embodiment, suspicion, rights, and punishment for Asian Americans over more than a century." —David L. Eng, University of Pennsylvania