A radical revision of the politics of race and sexuality within racial capitalism, Uncoupling American Empire provides an original cultural genealogy of how the institutionalization of marriage shaped imagined relationships among working people who were seen as sexually deviant in nineteenth-century U.S. imperial cultures. Departing from the longstanding focus on domesticity as a middle-class white women's imaginary construct of home, nation, and empire, this book foregrounds the relationship between marriage and subjects marked by slavery, prostitution, indentured labor, and colonialism through tracing overlooked linkages among the period's fiction texts, journalistic accounts, pictorial illustrations, and missionary narratives. Yu-Fang Cho's feminist intersectional approaches illuminate the complex web of social difference that uneven access to marriage has historically produced; the cumulative effects of the ironic-and indeed cynical-promise of freedom, equality, and inclusion through sexual conformity; and the central role that cultural imagination plays in forging alternative relations among minoritized subjects.



Autorentext

Yu-Fang Cho is Associate Professor of English and Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, and a founding member of the Asian/Asian American Studies Program at Miami University of Ohio.



Inhalt

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments

Introduction: Unfree Labor and the Geopolitics of Marriage and Sexuality

Part I: Uncertain Domesticity

1. Sexual Deviance and Racial Excess

2. Orientalism, Black Domesticity, and Imperial Ambivalence

Part II: Trans-Pacific Archives Unbound

3. "Yellow Slavery" and Sensational Violence

4. Domesticating the Aliens: Sentimental Benevolence

5. Domesticity, Race, and Colonial Modernity

Postscript: The Obama Paradox
Notes
Works Cited
Index

Titel
Uncoupling American Empire
Untertitel
Cultural Politics of Deviance and Unequal Difference, 1890-1910
EAN
9781438449005
Format
E-Book (epub)
Veröffentlichung
06.01.2014
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
8.74 MB
Anzahl Seiten
226