Postcolonial Grief: The Afterlives of the Pacific Wars in the Americas
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About this book
Postcolonial Grief: The Afterlives of the Pacific Wars in the Americas by Kim, Jinah. paperback edition. ISBN: 9781478002932.
In Postcolonial Grief Jinah Kim explores the relationship of mourning to transpacific subjectivities, aesthetics, and decolonial politics since World War II. Kim argues that Asian diasporic subjectivity exists in relation to afterlives because the deaths of those killed by U.S. imperialism and militarism in the Pacific remain unresolved and unaddressed. Kim shows how primarily U.S.-based Korean and Japanese diasporic writers, artists, and filmmakers negotiate the necropolitics of Asia and how their creative refusal to heal from imperial violence may generate transformative antiracist and decolonial politics. She contests prevalent interpretations of melancholia by engaging with Frantz Fanons and Hisaye Yamamotos decolonial writings; uncovering the noir genres relationship to the U.S. war in Korea; discussing the emergence of silenced colonial histories during the 1992 Los Angeles riots; and analyzing the 1996 hostage takeover of the Japanese ambassadors home in Peru. Kim highlights how the aesthetic and creative work of the Japanese and Korean diasporas offers new insights into twenty-first-century concerns surrounding the states erasure of military violence and colonialism and the difficult work of remembering histories of war across the transpacific.
