Tonal intelligence : the aesthetics of Asian inscrutability during the long Cold War /
Temperament, temporality, and the American Cold War in Asia
Sunny Xiang.
- New York : Columbia University Press, c2020.
- xi, 353 p. : ill.
- Literature now .
- Literature now. .
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction: Hardly war, partly history -- The tone of intelligence : unconventional warfare and its archives -- The tone of the rumors : something in the air -- The tone of the times : a surpassing hurry -- The tone of documentation : the brainwashee's drone -- The tone of intimacy : among the fish -- Coda: The tone of commons : solidarities without a solid.
"In postwar America, different expressions of the "Inscrutable Oriental" have produced and challenged ideas about how we perceive, process, and make claims about race during periods of dramatic change and historical unpredictability. In Neutral Tones, Sunny Xiang examines two different modes of Asian and Asian-American self-representation. The first, produced during the height of the Cold War were US-sponsored projects that furthered U.S. strategic and ideological goals in Japan, Korea, China, and Vietnam. In addition to helping to reinforce Washington's goal of communist containment, they also reinforced liberal notions of racial assimilation and integration. Examining such case studies as Hirohito's transformation into a democratic human emperor, the testimonies of South Korean women, and the autobiography of a Korean POW, Xiang considers how these examples became sources of intelligence and certainty. While the earlier texts come from the records of the US foreign policy, the later come from literary and artistic works from the 1970s to the 2000s by figures such as Ha Jin, Kazuo Ishiguro, Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, and Viet Thanh Nguyen. These works, Xiang argues, critique and subvert earlier forms of self-expression and challenges and neutralizes standard markers and personas of race. In the place of compulsory forms of racial self-expression sponsored by mid-century US cold war liberalism, this new formulation of racial identity gave expression to an emergent economic regime that valorizes flexible persons - a regime increasingly associated with the rise of the Pacific Rim as an economic power"--
9780231196963 0231196962 9780231196970 0231196970
2020017168
Orientalism--History--United States--20th century. Cold War--Secret service. Asians in literature. Asians in motion pictures. Asian Americans--Race identity. Propaganda, American --History --Asia --20th century. Propaganda, American --History --Pacific Area --20th century.
Asia--Foreign public opinion, American. Pacific Area --Foreign public opinion, American. United States --Foreign relations --1945-1989.