This article examines the vibrant city infrastructures of Karen Tei Yamashita\u27s 1997 novel Tropic of Orange in order to highlight interdependency as political and aesthetic value. The novel\u27s emphasis on urban support systems—the oft-unnoticed roads, pipes, wires, and labor networks that allow the city to function—positions infrastructure as itself a critical lens, one that can reassess the relationship of ethnic American literature and subjectivity to the values of self-ownership, protest, and independence. By amplifying the overlooked support networks that underpin fictions of self-sufficiency, Yamashita\u27s Tropic of Orange diverges from the narrative of self-ownership as liberatory endpoint. Instead, it recuperates the much-malig...
In Los Angeles, the influence of Hollywood and the film industry, combined with a non-stop barrage o...
This dissertation focuses on representations of the unavailability of spatial and environmental just...
Plastic remains one of the most ubiquitous forms that oil takes as a mediating force in our everyday...
This article examines the vibrant city infrastructures of Karen Tei Yamashita\u27s 1997 novel Tropic...
[[abstract]]This chapter takes an interdisciplinary approach to explore the thematic concern of Kare...
This dissertation argues that city infrastructure, in the literary-cultural afterlife of 1996 U.S. w...
What would a map of Los Angeles drawn from the ground up look like? In his groundbreaking work The P...
The absence of the homeless community in literary texts is of concern to the world of academia becau...
In Tropic of Orange (1997), Karen Tei Yamashita builds an expansive narrative on the premise that th...
Raussert W. Global Cities and Cosmopolitanism Revisited: Inter-American Mobility in Karen Tei Yamash...
In her novel Tropic of Orange, Karen Tei Yamashita uses narratives of activism to highlight various ...
Raussert W. Global Cities and Cosmopolitanism Revisited: Inter-American Mobility in Karen Tei Yamash...
Through a comparative reading of two important transnational Asian American texts, Jessica Hagedorn’...
This poster details an ongoing and expanding undergraduate research collaboration between the fields...
Rail and subway lines, distribution grids, communications rights-of-way, on and off ramps, highways—...
In Los Angeles, the influence of Hollywood and the film industry, combined with a non-stop barrage o...
This dissertation focuses on representations of the unavailability of spatial and environmental just...
Plastic remains one of the most ubiquitous forms that oil takes as a mediating force in our everyday...
This article examines the vibrant city infrastructures of Karen Tei Yamashita\u27s 1997 novel Tropic...
[[abstract]]This chapter takes an interdisciplinary approach to explore the thematic concern of Kare...
This dissertation argues that city infrastructure, in the literary-cultural afterlife of 1996 U.S. w...
What would a map of Los Angeles drawn from the ground up look like? In his groundbreaking work The P...
The absence of the homeless community in literary texts is of concern to the world of academia becau...
In Tropic of Orange (1997), Karen Tei Yamashita builds an expansive narrative on the premise that th...
Raussert W. Global Cities and Cosmopolitanism Revisited: Inter-American Mobility in Karen Tei Yamash...
In her novel Tropic of Orange, Karen Tei Yamashita uses narratives of activism to highlight various ...
Raussert W. Global Cities and Cosmopolitanism Revisited: Inter-American Mobility in Karen Tei Yamash...
Through a comparative reading of two important transnational Asian American texts, Jessica Hagedorn’...
This poster details an ongoing and expanding undergraduate research collaboration between the fields...
Rail and subway lines, distribution grids, communications rights-of-way, on and off ramps, highways—...
In Los Angeles, the influence of Hollywood and the film industry, combined with a non-stop barrage o...
This dissertation focuses on representations of the unavailability of spatial and environmental just...
Plastic remains one of the most ubiquitous forms that oil takes as a mediating force in our everyday...