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Sylvia Chong - The Oriental Obscene: Violence And Racial Fantasies In The Vietnam Era - 9780822348542 - V9780822348542
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The Oriental Obscene: Violence And Racial Fantasies In The Vietnam Era

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Description for The Oriental Obscene: Violence And Racial Fantasies In The Vietnam Era paperback. This book explores the impact of media representations of violence during the Vietnam War on people in the U.S., specifically how images of violence done to and by the Vietnamese were traumatic in ways that deeply affected the American psyche. Num Pages: 384 pages, 84 illustrations. BIC Classification: 1KB; APFA; HBJK; HBWS2; JFC. Category: (P) Professional & Vocational. Dimension: 5969 x 3963 x 25. Weight in Grams: 590.
The Oriental Obscene is a sophisticated analysis of Americans’ reactions to visual representations of the Vietnam War, such as the photograph of the “napalm girl,” news footage of the Tet Offensive, and feature films from The Deer Hunter to Rambo: First Blood Part II. Sylvia Shin Huey Chong combines psychoanalytic and film theories with U.S. cultural history to explain what she terms the oriental obscene: racialized fantasies that Americans derived largely from images of Asians as the perpetrators or victims of extreme violence. Chong contends that these fantasies helped Americans to process the trauma of the Vietnam War, as well as the growth of the Asian American population after the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 and the postwar immigration of Southeast Asian refugees. The oriental obscene animated a wide range of political narratives, not only the movements for and against the war, but causes as diverse as the Black Power movement, law-and-order conservatism, second-wave feminism, and the nascent Asian American movement. During the Vietnam era, pictures of Asian bodies were used to make sense of race, violence, and America’s identity at home and abroad.

Product Details

Format
Paperback
Publication date
2011
Publisher
Duke University Press United States
Number of pages
384
Condition
New
Number of Pages
384
Place of Publication
North Carolina, United States
ISBN
9780822348542
SKU
V9780822348542
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-1

About Sylvia Chong
Sylvia Shin Huey Chong is Associate Professor of Film and Asian American Studies in the English Department and the Program in American Studies at the University of Virginia.

Reviews for The Oriental Obscene: Violence And Racial Fantasies In The Vietnam Era
“The Oriental Obscene is fresh, original, scrupulously researched, and tightly argued. Sylvia Shin Huey Chong uses the psychoanalytic categories of trauma, the primal scene, and fantasy, relying centrally on the work of Jean Laplanche. She quite rightly contends that the theories of Laplanche and Deleuze can enrich each other, and she demonstrates how this works as she rethinks representations of the Vietnam War in visual media. Her book will attract a broad interdisciplinary audience, including scholars of film and media, cultural studies, Asian American studies, and critical race theory.”—Sharon Willis, author of High Contrast: Race and Gender in Contemporary Hollywood Film “Sylvia Shin Huey Chong has located the Vietnam War as the constitutive trauma of modern American nationhood, one that is particularly attached to a visuality of violence. She argues, moreover, that this trauma also serves as something of a primal scene around which whole sets of gendered and racialized positions are generated and then solidified in the public spheres of American politics and sociality. The Oriental Obscene offers a fascinating read for anyone interested in the Vietnam War, American racial politics, popular culture, and the making and endurance of American Orientalism.”—Anne Anlin Cheng, Princeton University “Chong makes an intriguing contribution to the scholarly conversation about Vietnam War imagery with her analysis of the rise in popularity of martial arts films in the US…”
Heather Stur
Journal of American Studies
“Taken in the context of scholarly investigations into representations of the Vietnam War, Chong’s work is a thoughtful and important contribution to the canon. However, as an exploration of otherness and the construction of racial identities, The Oriental Obscene also provides a valuable resource to broader areas of research in film and media theory, cultural studies and other critical approaches to race.”
Josh Nelson
Screening the Past
“Chong's enlightening, comprehensive study serves as an excellent addition to Asian American and media studies.... Highly recommended.”
A.F. Winstead
Choice
“This is an evocative study…. [A] masterful and courageous study in which the author weaves multiple theoretical strands into an integrated whole to pierce the pornographic undertones beneath the consumption of images of violence…. [T]here is no hint of exploitation or sensationalism, only a compelling argument for how the state can be imposed upon the human condition.”
Stella Coram
Ethnic and Racial Studies
“Chong has written a detailed and well-argued study of the portrayal of Asians in American media and society as a response to the Vietnam War. She takes the time to explain her use of sometimes difficult literary and psychoanalytical theory, making this text accessible to enthusiasts as well as academics.”
Patrick Condiffe
Media International Australia
“Chong’s book is a thoughtful consideration of complex, contradictory meanings in the visual archive of the Vietnam War. Her argument usefully delineates a cultural logic of race and the oriental from before and during its rescripting by the post-1965 generation of immigrants and Asian American cultural politics.”
Paul Lai
Journal of Asian American Studies

Goodreads reviews for The Oriental Obscene: Violence And Racial Fantasies In The Vietnam Era


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