The Mexican Transpacific: Nikkei Writing, Visual Arts, and Performance

The Mexican Transpacific: Nikkei Writing, Visual Arts, and Performance

The Mexican Transpacific: Nikkei Writing, Visual Arts, and Performance

The Mexican Transpacific: Nikkei Writing, Visual Arts, and Performance

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Overview

The Mexican Transpacific considers the influence of a Japanese ethnic background or lack thereof in the cultural production of several twentieth- and twenty-first-century Mexican authors, performers, and visual artists. Despite Japanese Mexicans’ unquestionable influence on Mexico’s history and culture and the historical studies recently published on this Nikkei community, the study of its cultural production and therefore its self-definition has been, for the most part, overlooked.

This book, a continuation of author Ignacio López-Calvo’s previous research on cultural production by Latin American authors of Asian ancestry, focuses mostly on literature, theater, and visual arts produced by Japanese immigrants in Mexico and their descendants, rather than on the Japanese community as a mere object of study. With this interdisciplinary project, López-Calvo aims to bring to the fore this silenced community’s voice and agency to historicize its own experience.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780826504944
Publisher: Vanderbilt University Press
Publication date: 12/15/2022
Series: Critical Mexican Studies
Pages: 276
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Ignacio López-Calvo is a professor of literature, director of the Center for the Humanities, and Presidential Chair in the Humanities at UC Merced.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Emma Nakatani

Introduction: Nikkei Cultural Production and Transpacific Studies from a Latin Americanist Perspective

Part I: Immigrant, Literary Negotiations of National Identity
1. Nonaka's Memoir: From Captain in the Mexican Revolution to Enemy of the State
2. Challenges to Nihonjinron in Nakatani's Memoirs
3. Strategic Essentialism in Akane's Performative Tanka

Part II: Japanese Mexican Visual and Performance Arts
4. Resignifying Yamato-damashii and Utopian Socialism in the Manga Los samuráis de México
5. Nishizawa's Bicultural Dialectics and the Critical Stereotyping of His Art
6. The Transpacific in Akiko's Theatrical Performance

Conclusion: Another Past Is Possible

Notes
Works Cited
Index
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