This article examines the intimate encounters between Japanese women and African American servicemen in post–World War II Japan and the ways in which these intimacies challenged American racial politics that were reproduced in Occupied Japan, while at the same time reaffirmed American heterosexual masculine power and the subordination of Japanese women. It interrogates the gendered politics of the historical conception of Afro-Asian solidarity, and contributes to studies of the Black Pacific by considering these interracial intimacies as sites of potent marriage rights discursive production in the postwar years
From the Meiji period’s (1868-1912) ryōsai kenbo (good wife, wise mother) to the Pacific War\u27s (1...
This thesis analyses the experiences, memories, and events of the World War II mass incarceration of...
This essay examines the relationship between US policy toward commercialized sex, known as the ‘Amer...
On 25 August 1945, ten days after the defeat, Japanese feminists gathered to discuss suffrage and th...
This project analyzes how "Japanese war brides" who married American GIs as a result of the U.S. occ...
Following the unconditional surrender of Japan on September 2, 1945, the Allied forces set out to es...
Even though the Pacific Ocean stands as an aqueous wall between Japan and the United States, World W...
This dissertation examined the formation of Japanese identity politics after World War II. Since Wor...
As the number of mixed race people grows in Japan, anxieties about miscegenation in today's context ...
This dissertation examines how death, generationality, and normativity operate intimately to legitim...
Sanitized Sex analyzes the development of new forms of regulation concerning prostitution, venereal ...
American discourse has feminized Japan since Commodore Perry?s 1853 invasion of Tokyo Bay. From the ...
This article reconsiders the postwar democracy in Japan in terms of a certain involvement between un...
This article addresses the process of locating global violence as a project of politicisation throug...
Although current literature depicts Japanese women who covet Blackness as reproducing stereotypes as...
From the Meiji period’s (1868-1912) ryōsai kenbo (good wife, wise mother) to the Pacific War\u27s (1...
This thesis analyses the experiences, memories, and events of the World War II mass incarceration of...
This essay examines the relationship between US policy toward commercialized sex, known as the ‘Amer...
On 25 August 1945, ten days after the defeat, Japanese feminists gathered to discuss suffrage and th...
This project analyzes how "Japanese war brides" who married American GIs as a result of the U.S. occ...
Following the unconditional surrender of Japan on September 2, 1945, the Allied forces set out to es...
Even though the Pacific Ocean stands as an aqueous wall between Japan and the United States, World W...
This dissertation examined the formation of Japanese identity politics after World War II. Since Wor...
As the number of mixed race people grows in Japan, anxieties about miscegenation in today's context ...
This dissertation examines how death, generationality, and normativity operate intimately to legitim...
Sanitized Sex analyzes the development of new forms of regulation concerning prostitution, venereal ...
American discourse has feminized Japan since Commodore Perry?s 1853 invasion of Tokyo Bay. From the ...
This article reconsiders the postwar democracy in Japan in terms of a certain involvement between un...
This article addresses the process of locating global violence as a project of politicisation throug...
Although current literature depicts Japanese women who covet Blackness as reproducing stereotypes as...
From the Meiji period’s (1868-1912) ryōsai kenbo (good wife, wise mother) to the Pacific War\u27s (1...
This thesis analyses the experiences, memories, and events of the World War II mass incarceration of...
This essay examines the relationship between US policy toward commercialized sex, known as the ‘Amer...