- Title Pages
- Epigraph
-
Introduction Crisis, Conundrum, and Critique -
Chapter 1 Five Decades Later: Reflections of a Yellow Power Advocate Turned Poet -
Chapter 2 Has Asian American Studies Failed? -
Chapter 3 The Racial Studies Project: Asian American Studies and the Black Lives Matter Campus -
Chapter 4 Planned Obsolescence, Strategic Resistance: Ethnic Studies, Asian American Studies, and the Neoliberal University -
Chapter 5 Un-homing Asian American Studies: Refusals and the Politics of Commitment -
Chapter 6 No Muslims Involved: Letter to Ethnic Studies Comrades -
Chapter 7 Outsourcing, Terror, and Transnational South Asia -
Chapter 8 Asian American Studies and Palestine: The Accidental and Reluctant Pioneer -
Chapter 9 Against the Yellowwashing of Israel: The BDS Movement and Liberatory Solidarities across Settler States -
Chapter 10 Transpacific Entanglements -
Chapter 11 Tensions, Engagements, Aspirations: The Politics of Knowledge Production in Filipino American Studies -
Chapter 12 Asian International Students at U.S. Universities in the Post-2008 Collapse Era -
Chapter 13 Asians Are the New … What? -
Chapter 14 Asian Americans, Disability, and the Model Minority Myth -
Chapter 15 Buddhist Meditation as Strategic Embodiment: An Optative Reflection -
Chapter 16 What Is Passed On (Or, Why We Need Sweetened Condensed Milk for the Soul) -
Chapter 17 An Ethics of Generosity -
Afterword Becoming Bilingual, or Notes on Numbness and Feeling - Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- Index
Outsourcing, Terror, and Transnational South Asia
Outsourcing, Terror, and Transnational South Asia
- Chapter:
- (p.115) Chapter 7 Outsourcing, Terror, and Transnational South Asia
- Source:
- Flashpoints for Asian American Studies
- Author(s):
Asha Nadkarni
- Publisher:
- Fordham University Press
In dialogue with the previous chapter, Nadkarni examines the ways in which South Asian subjectivity and racial formation lay bare the polemics of contemporary economic discourse (specifically with regard to outsourcing), present-day War on Terror racializations, and postcolonial/neo-colonial registers.
Keywords: diaspora, globalization, Islamophobia, neoliberalism, South Asian American Studies
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- Title Pages
- Epigraph
-
Introduction Crisis, Conundrum, and Critique -
Chapter 1 Five Decades Later: Reflections of a Yellow Power Advocate Turned Poet -
Chapter 2 Has Asian American Studies Failed? -
Chapter 3 The Racial Studies Project: Asian American Studies and the Black Lives Matter Campus -
Chapter 4 Planned Obsolescence, Strategic Resistance: Ethnic Studies, Asian American Studies, and the Neoliberal University -
Chapter 5 Un-homing Asian American Studies: Refusals and the Politics of Commitment -
Chapter 6 No Muslims Involved: Letter to Ethnic Studies Comrades -
Chapter 7 Outsourcing, Terror, and Transnational South Asia -
Chapter 8 Asian American Studies and Palestine: The Accidental and Reluctant Pioneer -
Chapter 9 Against the Yellowwashing of Israel: The BDS Movement and Liberatory Solidarities across Settler States -
Chapter 10 Transpacific Entanglements -
Chapter 11 Tensions, Engagements, Aspirations: The Politics of Knowledge Production in Filipino American Studies -
Chapter 12 Asian International Students at U.S. Universities in the Post-2008 Collapse Era -
Chapter 13 Asians Are the New … What? -
Chapter 14 Asian Americans, Disability, and the Model Minority Myth -
Chapter 15 Buddhist Meditation as Strategic Embodiment: An Optative Reflection -
Chapter 16 What Is Passed On (Or, Why We Need Sweetened Condensed Milk for the Soul) -
Chapter 17 An Ethics of Generosity -
Afterword Becoming Bilingual, or Notes on Numbness and Feeling - Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- Index