Reimagining the American Pacific: From South Pacific to Bamboo Ridge and Beyond

Author:   Rob Wilson ,  Rob Wilson ,  Wilson ,  Donald E Pease
Publisher:   Duke University Press
ISBN:  

9780822325239


Pages:   320
Publication Date:   24 July 2000
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
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Reimagining the American Pacific: From South Pacific to Bamboo Ridge and Beyond


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Overview

"An exploration of the ""Pacific Rim"" in the American imagination and of how the concept has been variously adapted and resisted in Hawaii, the Pacific Islands, New Zealand and Australia. The text ranges from the 19th century to the present and draws on theories of postmodernism, transnationality, and post-Marxist geography to contribute to the ongoing discussion of what constitutes ""global"" and ""local"". Wilson begins by tracing the arrival of American commerce and culture in the Pacific through missionary and imperial forces in the 19th century and the parallel development of Asia/Pacific as an idea. Using a range of texts - from works by Herman Melville, James Michener, Maori and Western Samoan novelists, and Bamboo Ridge poets to ""Baywatch"", films and musicals such as ""South Pacific"" and ""Blue Hawaii"", and native Hawaiian shark god poetry - Wilson illustrates what it means for a space to be ""regionalised""."

Full Product Details

Author:   Rob Wilson ,  Rob Wilson ,  Wilson ,  Donald E Pease
Publisher:   Duke University Press
Imprint:   Duke University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.658kg
ISBN:  

9780822325239


ISBN 10:   0822325233
Pages:   320
Publication Date:   24 July 2000
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you.

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Reviews

"""This is a splendid piece of work. Reimagining the American Pacific is a crucial contribution to the field of Asian-Pacific studies. It opens up new ground even as it joins and intervenes significantly in the debate on the nature and location of cultural politics. The author does a remarkable job of making available to the reader the history of the Asian-Pacific rim. His special touch has to do with the elegant manner in which he brings theory to bear on incredibly detailed material. The reader of this book will gain a comprehensive education about the importance of the region.""--[PERMISSION PENDING] [edited RR, PP] Rajagopolan Radhakrishnan, University of Massachusetts at WHERE? "" Lyrical and disruptive, Wilson's book masterfully dismantles multiple and contradictory imaginings of ""the Pacific"" and recovers the psychic longings, material histories, and politics that have variously produced the modern ""Asia Pacific."" This book wrenches American studies out of any lingering continent-bound complacency, gives a much needed broader scope to Asian American studies, and discloses crucial blind-spots in Asian area studies. Highly recommended for scholars in all these areas, as well as cultural studies in general.""--David Palumbo -Liu, author of Asian/American: Historical Crossings of a Racial Frontier [See EY routing note re others! We won't have room for these, even, w/out cutting.] ""Reimagining the American Pacific convincingly articulates a common poetics of a Pacific local that illuminates the common ground linking even those factions currently at each others' throats. One comes from this book with a conviction that, as the dust settles, many of those involved in Pacific cultural production will find in Wilson's book an inspired vision of global stakes and local strategy.""--[PERMISSION PENDING] [edited RR, PP] Cristopher Connery, University of California, Santa Cruz [And see EY routing note re others.] ""At ease with the interface of the local and global, Rob Wilson flies in and out of Asia and the Pacific. As he rediscovers and redefines the continent, islands and waters, he constantly rereads America. Such a geographic venture is also an exercise in de-disciplining. Circulating freely among literature, culture, economics, politics, history, and media, Wilson's imagination and judgement are shrewd, sardonic, zestful, zany, and delightful. Reimagining the American Pacific is a thoroughly rewarding book.""--Masao Miyoshi, University of California, San Diego ""This book is a product of the tangled and overlapping multicultural voices it attempts to track. In it one hears a cacophony of voices, from the Hawaiian kings invoked in indigenous shark god poetry to Elvis's ""Blue Hawaii"" to the Asian-American pastoral verse of the pineapple plantations. While the many strands of Wilson's argument are sometimes hard to follow, the knotted whole is greatly evocative of place and literature in contemporary Hawaii.""--Times Literary Supplement, March 16 2001 -"


This is a splendid piece of work. Reimagining the American Pacific is a crucial contribution to the field of Asian-Pacific studies. It opens up new ground even as it joins and intervenes significantly in the debate on the nature and location of cultural politics. The author does a remarkable job of making available to the reader the history of the Asian-Pacific rim. His special touch has to do with the elegant manner in which he brings theory to bear on incredibly detailed material. The reader of this book will gain a comprehensive education about the importance of the region. --[PERMISSION PENDING] [edited RR, PP] Rajagopolan Radhakrishnan, University of Massachusetts at WHERE? Lyrical and disruptive, Wilson's book masterfully dismantles multiple and contradictory imaginings of the Pacific and recovers the psychic longings, material histories, and politics that have variously produced the modern Asia Pacific. This book wrenches American studies out of any lingering continent-bound complacency, gives a much needed broader scope to Asian American studies, and discloses crucial blind-spots in Asian area studies. Highly recommended for scholars in all these areas, as well as cultural studies in general. --David Palumbo -Liu, author of Asian/American: Historical Crossings of a Racial Frontier [See EY routing note re others! We won't have room for these, even, w/out cutting.] Reimagining the American Pacific convincingly articulates a common poetics of a Pacific local that illuminates the common ground linking even those factions currently at each others' throats. One comes from this book with a conviction that, as the dust settles, many of those involved in Pacific cultural production will find in Wilson's book an inspired vision of global stakes and local strategy. --[PERMISSION PENDING] [edited RR, PP] Cristopher Connery, University of California, Santa Cruz [And see EY routing note re others.] At ease with the interface of the local and global, Rob Wilson flies in and out of Asia and the Pacific. As he rediscovers and redefines the continent, islands and waters, he constantly rereads America. Such a geographic venture is also an exercise in de-disciplining. Circulating freely among literature, culture, economics, politics, history, and media, Wilson's imagination and judgement are shrewd, sardonic, zestful, zany, and delightful. Reimagining the American Pacific is a thoroughly rewarding book. --Masao Miyoshi, University of California, San Diego This book is a product of the tangled and overlapping multicultural voices it attempts to track. In it one hears a cacophony of voices, from the Hawaiian kings invoked in indigenous shark god poetry to Elvis's Blue Hawaii to the Asian-American pastoral verse of the pineapple plantations. While the many strands of Wilson's argument are sometimes hard to follow, the knotted whole is greatly evocative of place and literature in contemporary Hawaii. --Times Literary Supplement, March 16 2001 -


Author Information

Rob Wilson is Professor of Literature at the University of California, Santa Cruz. He is the author of numerous books including American Sublime: The Genealogy of a Poetic Genre and several volumes of poetry, and coeditor of Global/Local: Cultural Production and the Transnational Imaginary and of Asia/Pacific as Space of Cultural Production, both published by Duke University Press.

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