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Who Is the Asianist?
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11 October 2022

— Don J. Wyatt, McCardell Distinguished Professor, Middlebury College and Chair, Diversity and Equity Committee, Association for Asian Studies
These outstanding essays compel us to reflect on the ways in which the pernicious ‘color line’ belts the world (Du Bois), including Asia, but in ways that must be attentive to both the singularities of locality and the entanglements of our worlded conditions. This means that we must also interrogate the past and present of Asian Studies as a radicalized formation. A courageous, timely, and important intervention that should be read in and far beyond Asian Studies.
— Takashi Fujitani, Dr. David Chu Professor and Director in Asia Pacific studies, University of Toronto and author, Race for for Empire: Koreans as Japanese and Japanese as Americans During WWII
This extremely timely and crucial book helps Asian Studies to finally reckon with its racial unconscious in epistemological, pedagogical, and institutional terms. It examines the racial logic in various Asian countries in relation to the global racial formation, and shows how such studies are critical for Asian Studies. A must read for all Asianists.
— Shu-Mei Shih, Irving and Jean Stone Chair in the Humanities, and Professor of Comparative Literature, Asian Languages and Cultures & Asian American Studies, UCLA
Thus far Asian studies has often ignored issues of race and Blackness and also lacked a sustained engagement with ethnic studies and Black studies, so this book is a welcome attempt to re-address this situation and also pay attention to the growing field of Afro-Asian studies.
— Marina Svensson, Lund University
Will Bridges (Edited by)
Will Bridges is Associate Professor of Japanese, Arthur Satz Professor of the Humanities, and a Core Faculty member with the Frederick Douglass Institute for African and African-American Studies at the University of Rochester. His first monograph, Playing in the Shadows: Fictions of Race and Blackness in Postwar Japanese Literature was published by the University of Michigan Press in 2020.
Nitasha Tamar Sharma (Edited by)
Nitasha Tamar Sharma is Professor of African American Studies and Asian American Studies at Northwestern University. She is author of Hawai'i is my Haven: Race and Indigeneity in the Black Pacific and Hip Hop Desis: South Asian Americans, Blackness, and a Global Race Consciousness, both published by Duke University Press, and coeditor of Beyond Ethnicity: New Politics of Race in Hawai'i, published by the University of Hawai’I Press.
Marvin D. Sterling (Edited by)
Marvin D. Sterling is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Indiana University, Bloomington. He is author of Babylon East: Performing Dancehall, Roots Reggae, and Rastafari in Japan (Duke UP 2010).
Introduction: Do Black Lives Matter for Asian Studies?
Will Bridges, Nitasha Tamar Sharma,
and Marvin D. Sterling / 1
1: Who Is a South Asianist? A Conversation on Positionality
Hoda Bandeh-Ahmadi and Isabel Huacuja Alonso / 23
2: A Different Way of Seeing: Reflections of a Black Asianist
Carolyn T. Brown / 39
3: From Bhagdād to Baghpūr: Sailors and Slaves in Global Asia
Guangtian Ha / 53
4: The Asianist is Muslim: Thinking through Anti-Muslim Racism
with the Muslim Left
Soham Patel and M. Bilal Nasir / 75
5: Racial Capitalism and the National Question in the Early
People’s Republic of China
Jeremy Tai / 89
6: Science without Borders? The Contested Science of “Race Mixing”
circa World War II in Japan, East Asia, and the West
Kristin Roebuck / 109
7: Toward an Afro-Japanese and Afro-Ainu Feminist Practice:
Reading Fujimoto Kazuko and Chikappu Mieko
Felicity Stone-Richards / 125
8: Black Japanese Storytelling as Praxis: Anti-Racist Digital
Activism and Black Lives Matter in Japan
Kimberly Hassel / 139
9: From Black Brother to Black Lives Matter: Perception of
Blackness in Viet Nam
Phuong H. Nguyen and Trang Q. Nguyen / 159
10: “We Have a Lot of Names Like George Floyd”:
Papuan Lives Matter in Comparative Perspective
Chris Lundry / 183