Globalizing American Studies
Globalizing American Studies
The discipline of American studies was established in the early days of World War II and drew on the myth of American exceptionalism. Now that the so-called American Century has come to an end, what would a truly globalized version of American studies look like? Brian T. Edwards and Dilip Parameshwar Gaonkar offer a new standard for the field’s transnational aspiration with Globalizing American Studies.
The essays here offer a comparative, multilingual, or multisited approach to ideas and representations of America. The contributors explore unexpected perspectives on the international circulation of American culture: the traffic of American movies within the British Empire, the reception of the film Gone with the Wind in the Arab world, the parallels between Japanese and American styles of nativism, and new incarnations of American studies itself in the Middle East and South Asia. The essays elicit a forgotten multilateralism long inherent in American history and provide vivid accounts of post–Revolutionary science communities, late-nineteenth century Mexican border crossings, African American internationalism, Cold War womanhood in the United States and Soviet Russia, and the neo-Orientalism of the new obsession with Iran, among others.
Bringing together established scholars already associated with the global turn in American studies with contributors who specialize in African studies, East Asian studies, Latin American studies, media studies, anthropology, and other areas, Globalizing American Studies is an original response to an important disciplinary shift in academia.
352 pages | 12 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2010
History: American History
Literature and Literary Criticism: American and Canadian Literature
Reviews
Table of Contents
Introduction: Globalizing American Studies
Brian T. Edwards and Dilip Parameshwar Gaonkar
Part I
1. American Studies after American Exceptionalism? Toward a Comparative Analysis of Imperial State Exceptionalisms
Donald E. Pease
2. Bodies of Knowledge: The Exchange of Intellectuals and Intellectual Exchange between Scotland and America in the Post-Revolutionary Period
Kariann Akemi Yokota
3. Ralph Ellison and the Grain of Internationalism
Brent Hayes Edwards
4. Cold War, Hot Kitchen: Alice Childress, Natalya Baranskaya and the Speakin<ap> Place of Cold War Womanhood
Kate Baldwin
Part II
5. Circulating Empires: Colonial Authority and the Immoral, Subversive Problem of American Film
Brian Larkin
6. Scarlett O’Hara in Damascus: Hollywood, Colonial Politics, and Arab Spectatorship during World War II
Elizabeth F. Thompson
7. Chronotopes of a Dystopic Nation: Cultures of Dependency and Border Crossings in Late Porfirian Mexico
Claudio Lomnitz
8. Transpacific Complicity and Comparatist Strategy: Failure in Decolonization and the Rise of Japanese Nationalism
Naoki Sakai
Part III
9. War in Several Tongues: Nations, Languages, Genres
Wai Chee Dimock
10. Neo-Orientalism
Ali Behdad and Juliet Williams
11. American Studies in Motion: Tehran, Hyderabad, Cairo
Brian T. Edwards
List of Contributors
IndexBe the first to know
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