New Books in East Asian Studies

Christina Yi et al., "Passing, Posing, Persuasion: Cultural Production and Coloniality in Japan's East Asian Empire" (U Hawaii Press, 2023)

Jul 27, 2024
In this engaging discussion, Christina Yi delves into her work on cultural production and coloniality in Japan's East Asian Empire. She unpacks the paradox of 'passing' versus 'posing,' revealing how these concepts highlight the complexities of identity for marginalized groups like Zainichi Koreans. Yi explores the role of art, theater, and film in shaping narratives of assimilation while resisting imperial propaganda. The conversation also touches on the tensions between inclusion and oppression, prompting listeners to reconsider the nuanced dynamics of culture and identity under colonial rule.
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INSIGHT

Empire's Inclusion-Exclusion Paradox

  • Passing, posing, and persuasion reveal how empire both invited inclusion and enforced hierarchy.
  • These dynamics made identity unstable and opened spaces for negotiation across media and regions.
INSIGHT

Two Faces Of Identity Performance

  • Passing functions as ontological identity-making and a response to systemic inequalities.
  • Posing highlights the visible gap between assigned and assumed identity while passing seeks to erase that gap.
INSIGHT

Persuasion Beats Simplistic Propaganda

  • The editors prefer 'persuasion' over 'propaganda' to capture negotiation and multilateral meaning-making.
  • Cultural products often coexisted with state aims but allowed audiences and creators to reinterpret messages.
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