Home
Warring Genealogies: Race, Kinship, and the Korean War
Barnes and Noble
Warring Genealogies: Race, Kinship, and the Korean War
Current price: $99.50


Barnes and Noble
Warring Genealogies: Race, Kinship, and the Korean War
Current price: $99.50
Size: Hardcover
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
Warring Genealogies
examines the elaboration of kinships between Chicano/a and Asian American cultural production, such as the 1954 proxy adoption of a Korean boy by Leavenworth prisoners. Joo Ok Kim considers white supremacist expressions of kinshipin prison magazines, memorials, U.S. military songbooksas well as critiques of such expressions in Chicana/o and Korean diasporic works to conceptualize racialized formations of kinship emerging from the Korean War.
unpacks writings by Rolando Hinojosa
(Korean Love Songs
,
The Useless Servants)
and Luis Valdez
(I Don’t Have to Show You No Stinking Badges
Zoot Suit)
to show the counter-representations of the Korean War and the problematic depiction of the United States as a benevolent savior. Kim also analyzes Susan Choi’s
The Foreign Student
as a novel that proposes alternative temporalities to dominant Korean War narratives. In addition, she examines Chicano military police procedurals, white supremacist women’s organizations, and the politics of funding Korean War archives.
Kim’s comparative study Asian American and Latinx Studies makes insightful connections about race, politics, and citizenship to critique the Cold War conception of the “national family.”
examines the elaboration of kinships between Chicano/a and Asian American cultural production, such as the 1954 proxy adoption of a Korean boy by Leavenworth prisoners. Joo Ok Kim considers white supremacist expressions of kinshipin prison magazines, memorials, U.S. military songbooksas well as critiques of such expressions in Chicana/o and Korean diasporic works to conceptualize racialized formations of kinship emerging from the Korean War.
unpacks writings by Rolando Hinojosa
(Korean Love Songs
,
The Useless Servants)
and Luis Valdez
(I Don’t Have to Show You No Stinking Badges
Zoot Suit)
to show the counter-representations of the Korean War and the problematic depiction of the United States as a benevolent savior. Kim also analyzes Susan Choi’s
The Foreign Student
as a novel that proposes alternative temporalities to dominant Korean War narratives. In addition, she examines Chicano military police procedurals, white supremacist women’s organizations, and the politics of funding Korean War archives.
Kim’s comparative study Asian American and Latinx Studies makes insightful connections about race, politics, and citizenship to critique the Cold War conception of the “national family.”