Lexington Books
Pages: 196
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-2903-6 • Hardback • January 2009 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
978-0-7391-2904-3 • Paperback • July 2010 • $57.99 • (£45.00)
978-0-7391-3351-4 • eBook • January 2009 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
Gina Masequesmay is associate professor in the Asian American Studies Department at California State University, Northridge. Sean Metzger is assistant professor of English and theater studies at Duke University.
Chapter 1 1. Embodying Asian/American Sexualities
Chapter 2 2. The Rice Room: Scenes from a Bar
Chapter 3 3. Pornography and Its Dis/Contents: A Roundtable Discussion with Anjali Arondekar, Richard Fung, and Sylvia Chong
Chapter 4 4. The One That She Wants: Margaret Cho, Mediatization, and Autobiographical Performance
Chapter 5 5. Novell-Aah!: A Short Play
Chapter 6 6. And the Crow Cries Before He Dies: A Brandon Lee Spoken Word Soliloquy
Chapter 7 7. Queer Theory and Anti-Racism Education: Politics of Race and Sexuality in the Classroom and Beyond
Chapter 8 8. The Anxiety Over Borders
Chapter 9 9. An Interview with Pauline Park
Chapter 10 10. Public Agenda and Private Struggles: Khmer Girls in Action
Chapter 11 11. Family, Citizenship, and Selfhood in Luong Ung's First They Killed My Father
Chapter 12 12. Homosexuality and Korean Immigrant Protestant Churches
Chapter 13 13. Finding Fellatio: Friendship, History, and Yone Noguchi
Chapter 14 14. Ghosts
Embodying Asian/American Sexualities forges a new intellectual frontier for critical race and queer studies. This extraordinary collection boasts an archive unlike any other. A provocative tour of transgender, religion, and refugees, as well as the secret lives of Margaret Cho, Brandon Lee, Indian rubber dildos, and Asian men as 'undesirable geniuses', this anthology illuminates ever-shifting conceptions of gender and sexuality through which Asian/American bodies are read.
— David L. Eng, University of Pennsylvania
Embodying Asian/American Sexualities mobilizes brave theoretical excursions and conceptual travels across and beyond genders, sexualities, and races. Through deftly designed maneuvers between genres (from fiction to history to journalism), and by positing bodily experiences as the frame through which Asian American selfhoods, activisms, and community are enacted, this collection offers much to readers in search of provocative ideas, methods, and theories.
— Martin F. Manalansan IV, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities