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Empire's Imagination: Race, Settler Colonialism, and Indigeneity in 'Local' Hawai`i Narratives

机译:帝国的想像力:种族,定居者殖民主义和“本地”夏威夷人叙事中的本土性

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摘要

My dissertation, "Empire's Imagination: Race, Settler Colonialism, and Indigeneity in 'Local' Hawai'i Narratives," addresses the history of U.S. empire in Hawai'i, arguing that empire persists into the present through the structuring of contemporary literary representations of Asian migrants and Kanaka Maoli, the Indigenous population. This project intervenes into postcolonial studies, American studies, and ethnic studies as I rely on the optic of U.S. empire to reveal the concurrent processes of Asian and Indigenous racialization historically and in cultural memory. Through a comparative approach to Asian American studies and Indigenous studies, I demonstrate how Hawai'i operates as an opportunity to reckon with the determinative force of U.S. empire in the imaginative realm of aesthetic production. Contrary to the belief that contemporary literature's imaginative force can transcend or repair the violence of U.S. empire restoring voice to those whom empire violated, I theorize the desire for literary representation as a legacy of empire. Furthermore, I argue for a more contradictory understanding of contemporary literature, one in which the history of U.S. empire remains coercive and determinative. By examining narratives about and by Hawai'i based writers, commonly referred to as "local" writing, I argue that "local" writing often functions as a "resolution" to the past. While it makes visible the history of empire through the stories it tells, "local" writing often positions itself as evidence of contemporary Hawai'i as a multicultural paradise of universal belonging. Yet, I demonstrate how "local" writing can only "resolve" the violence of empire by perpetuating the erasure of Kanaka Maoli colonization in the present. I argue the genre of "local" writing both critiques and perpetuates the violence of Indigenous dispossession and liberal racial formation. This leads me to also argue for the limitations of literary narrative to reconcile or resist the violences of U.S. empire. Thus, "local" writing produces Asian migrants as "local" subjects, substitutes for Kanaka Maoli, in order to maintain U.S. settler colonial hegemony.;My dissertation examines specific flashpoints of U.S. empire in Hawai'i in the 19th and 20th century with post-2000 literary and cultural production that reimagines these moments. Together, these cultural texts demonstrate the possibilities and limitations of "local" fiction to reckon with the history of colonization and its legacies in the colonial present. Thus, in order to resist the paradigm of U.S. empire and to reimagine alternatives to colonized spaces, I propose the possibility of a material politics that accounts for how imperial epistemologies constitute the realm of the historical and literary imaginaries. In refusing to collapse Kanaka Maoli and Asian settler into a false political and racial equivalence, I instead argue for the necessity of reorienting the figure of the "local" Asian settler reveals the continuation of U.S. nationalist and imperialist knowledge production in the present. This relationality between history and narrative conveys how imaginative practices undergo continual colonization. This situates my project at the juncture of settler colonialism, racial capitalism, and ethnic studies where my theoretical interventions identify how Hawai'i's history and literary production reveals the limits of current Asian American and postcolonial studies. Thus, my project calls for alternative strategies of decolonization where the aesthetic imagination becomes a material site of decolonizing politics. As such, I theorize how this form of decolonial and anti-imperial politics needs to account for how the imaginative realm is structured by the history of U.S. empire.
机译:我的论文“帝国的想像力:种族,定居者的殖民主义和'本地'夏威夷叙事中的本土性”论述了夏威夷的美国帝国历史,认为帝国通过构筑当代文学表现形式而持续至今。亚洲移民和土著居民卡纳卡·毛利(Kanaka Maoli)。由于我依靠美国帝国的视角来揭示亚洲和土著种族化的历史和文化记忆,因此该项目介入了后殖民研究,美国研究和种族研究。通过对亚裔美国人研究和土著研究的比较方法,我展示了夏威夷如何作为一个机会,可以在审美生产的想象领域中把握美国帝国的决定性力量。与认为当代文学的想象力可以超越或修复美国帝国为那些受到帝国侵犯的人恢复声音的暴力行为相反,我将对文学表征的渴望作为帝国的遗产进行了理论化。此外,我主张对当代文学有一种更矛盾的理解,在这种理解中,美国帝国的历史仍然具有强制性和决定性。通过研究关于夏威夷作家的叙述以及通常被称为“本地”写作的夏威夷作家,我认为“本地”写作通常是对过去的“解决”。尽管它通过故事讲述了帝国的历史,但“本地”写作常常将自己定位为当代夏威夷作为普遍归属的多元文化天堂的证据。但是,我证明了“本地”写作如何才能通过永久消除卡纳卡·毛利人的殖民化而“解决”帝国的暴力。我认为“本地”写作既批评又使土著剥夺和自由种族形成的暴力永久化。这也使我也主张文学叙事在调和或抵抗美国帝国的暴力方面的局限性。因此,“本地”写作将亚洲移民作为“本地”主题,以取代卡纳卡·毛利,以维持美国殖民者的殖民霸权。我的论文研究了19世纪和20世纪夏威夷美国帝国的具体爆发点。 -2000年的文学和文化作品重现了这些时刻。这些文化文本共同证明了“本地”小说的可能性和局限性,以适应殖民时期的历史及其在殖民时期的遗产。因此,为了抵制美国帝国的范式并重新构想殖民化空间的替代方案,我提出了一种物质政治的可能性,该政治解释了帝国主义认识论如何构成历史和文学虚构的领域。我拒绝让卡纳卡·毛利人和亚洲定居者沦为虚假的政治和种族对等人,相反,我认为重新定位“本地”亚洲定居者的形象的必要性揭示了当今美国民族主义和帝国主义知识生产的延续。历史与叙事之间的这种联系传达了想象力实践如何经历持续的殖民化。这使我的项目处于定居者殖民主义,种族资本主义和种族研究的交汇处,在那里我的理论干预确定了夏威夷的历史和文学生产如何揭示了当前亚裔美国人和后殖民研究的局限性。因此,我的项目要求采取非殖民化的替代策略,其中美学想象力成为非殖民化政治的重要场所。因此,我从理论上解释了这种形式的殖民主义和反帝制政治需要如何解释美国帝国历史如何构想想象领域。

著录项

  • 作者

    Day, Leanne.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Washington.;

  • 授予单位 University of Washington.;
  • 学科 American literature.;Asian American studies.;Ethnic studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2017
  • 页码 336 p.
  • 总页数 336
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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