- 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
Against the Yellowwashing of Israel: The BDS Movement and Liberatory Solidarities across Settler States
Against the Yellowwashing of Israel: The BDS Movement and Liberatory Solidarities across Settler States
- Chapter:
- (p.150) Chapter 9 Against the Yellowwashing of Israel: The BDS Movement and Liberatory Solidarities across Settler States
- Source:
- Flashpoints for Asian American Studies
- Author(s):
Candace Fujikane
- Publisher:
- Fordham University Press
Following the focus on Palestine in the previous chapter, Chapter 9 takes as a critical starting point the complicit relationship Asian American politicians such as Senator Daniel Inouye shared with Israel. Such complicit “yellowwashing,” which involves a strategic remembrance of World War II–era Japanese American incarceration, presages Fujikane’s alternative evaluation of “liberatory solidarities” between Pacific Islanders and Palestinians.
Keywords: Asian American studies, BDS and Palestine, Indigenous Studies, settler colonialism, yellowwashing
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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