Doan / Konishi | Black Transnationalism and Japan | Buch | 978-90-8728-432-9 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, Band 8, 200 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm

Reihe: Global Connections: Routes and Roots

Doan / Konishi

Black Transnationalism and Japan


Erscheinungsjahr 2024
ISBN: 978-90-8728-432-9
Verlag: Leiden University Press

Buch, Englisch, Band 8, 200 Seiten, Format (B × H): 156 mm x 234 mm

Reihe: Global Connections: Routes and Roots

ISBN: 978-90-8728-432-9
Verlag: Leiden University Press


Since before the American Civil War, African American and Japanese encounters produced relationships and discourses of knowledge that transcended Eurocentric conceptions of civilization and hierarchies of personhood. Black Transnationalism and Japan introduces the diverse activity and intellectual movements created, shaped, and led by Japanese and African American people. While some Pan-Asianisms and Pan-Africanisms urged a uniting of colonized spaces against the colonizer, and were often expressed in the form of decolonization movements, this volume introduces various transnational phenomena that transcended such dichotomies. Black American-Japanese transnational encounters often occurred on the non-state level from within the two new competing empires of America and Japan. Such transnational encounters reveal not only heretofore hidden historical actors, friendships, and solidarities, but also innovative cultural productions that challenged hierarchies of race, culture, and imperialism.

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Autoren/Hrsg.


Weitere Infos & Material


Editors’ Introduction Black Transnationalism and Japan: Concepts and Contours, by Natalia Doan and Sho Konishi;

1. Solidarity with Samurai: The Antebellum African American Press, Transnational Racial Equality, and the 1860 Japanese Embassy to the United States, by Natalia Doan;

2. From Peripheries to Transnational: African Americans in Japan’s Identity Formation, 1872–1940, by Yukiko Koshiro;

3. Playing Changes: Music as Mediator between Japanese and Black Americans, by E. Taylor Atkins;

4. Interracial Friendship across Barbed Wire: Mollie Wilson and Lillian Igasaki, by Sonia Gomez;

5. The Transpacific Reworking of Race and Marxist Theory: The Case of Harry Haywood’s Lifework, by Yuichiro Onishi and Toru Shinoda;

6. My Journey into Black/Africana Studies: Knowledge Should Be Power to Unite Us, an interview with Furukawa Tetsushi; Editors’ Introduction Black Transnationalism and Japan: Concepts and Contours, by Natalia Doan and Sho Konishi;

1. Solidarity with Samurai: The Antebellum African American Press, Transnational Racial Equality, and the 1860 Japanese Embassy to the United States, by Natalia Doan;

2. From Peripheries to Transnational: African Americans in Japan’s Identity Formation, 1872–1940, by Yukiko Koshiro;

3. Playing Changes: Music as Mediator between Japanese and Black Americans, by E. Taylor Atkins;

4. Interracial Friendship across Barbed Wire: Mollie Wilson and Lillian Igasaki, by Sonia Gomez;

5. The Transpacific Reworking of Race and Marxist Theory: The Case of Harry Haywood’s Lifework, by Yuichiro Onishi and Toru Shinoda;

6. My Journey into Black/Africana Studies: Knowledge Should Be Power to Unite Us, an interview with Furukawa Tetsushi;

Bibliography;

Index


Konishi, Sho
Professor Sho Konishi, Director of the Nissan Institute of Japanese Studies at Oxford University and Governing Body Fellow at St. Antony’s College, is a historian of Japan specializing in transnational discourses on knowledge. He is the author of Anarchist Modernity (Harvard UP) and co-editor with Olga Solovieva, Japan’s Russia (Cambria).

Doan, Natalia
Dr. Natalia Doan is the Okinaga Junior Research Fellow in Japanese Studies at Wadham College and the Nissan Institute of Japanese Studies, University of Oxford, where she teaches the history of gender and sexuality in Japanese popular culture. She is the author of Civil War Samurai (forthcoming, OUP).



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