Alien Capital

Alien Capital Asian Racialization and the Logic of Settler Colonial Capitalism

Paperback (18 Mar 2016)

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Publisher's Synopsis

In Alien Capital Iyko Day retheorizes the history and logic of settler colonialism by examining its intersection with capitalism and the racialization of Asian immigrants to Canada and the United States. Day explores how the historical alignment of Asian bodies and labor with capital's abstract and negative dimensions became one of settler colonialism's foundational and defining features. This alignment allowed white settlers to gloss over and expunge their complicity with capitalist exploitation from their collective memory. Day reveals this process through an analysis of a diverse body of Asian North American literature and visual culture, including depictions of Chinese railroad labor in the 1880s, filmic and literary responses to Japanese internment in the 1940s, and more recent examinations of the relations between free trade, national borders, and migrant labor. In highlighting these artists' reworking and exposing of the economic modalities of Asian racialized labor, Day pushes beyond existing approaches to settler colonialism as a Native/settler binary to formulate it as a dynamic triangulation of Native, settler, and alien populations and positionalities.
 

Book information

ISBN: 9780822360933
Publisher: Duke University Press Books
Imprint: Duke University Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 305.89507309034
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: 256
Weight: 388g
Height: 154mm
Width: 230mm
Spine width: 18mm