Description
Recognizing the ways that Native Hawaiians or Kanaka Maoli are impacted by shifting, violent, and hierarchical colonial structures that include racial inequalities, the editors and contributors explore questions of personhood and citizenship through language, land, labor, and embodiment. By admitting to these tensions and ambivalences, the editors set the pace and tempo of powerfully argued essays that engage with the various ways that Kanaka Maoli and the influx of differentially racialized settlers continue to shift the social, political, and cultural terrains of the Hawaiian Islands over time.
About the Author
Camilla Fojas is associate professor in the Departments of Media Studies and American Studies at the University of Virginia.
Rudy P. Guevarra Jr is associate professor of Asian Pacific American studies in the School of Social Transformation at Arizona State University.
Nitasha Tamar Sharma is associate professor of Asian American studies and African American studies at Northwestern University.
Jonathan Y. Okamura is associate professor of ethnic studies at the University of Hawai'i.
Gary Y. Okihiro is a professor of international and public affairs and the founding director of the Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race at Columbia University.
John P. Rosa is assistant professor of history at the University of Hawai'i at Manoa.
Aiko Yamashiro is a poet, a founding editor of Vice-Versa, a graduate student in English, and an instructor of de/anti-colonial literature of Hawai'i.
Book Information
ISBN 9780824869885
Author Camilla Fojas
Format Hardback
Page Count 288
Imprint University of Hawai'i Press
Publisher University of Hawai'i Press