Denise Khor is assistant professor of American studies at the University of Massachusetts, Boston.
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Description
"A significant contribution toward alternative film histories and might usefully help both scholars and students alike not only decenter the West but also imagine new historical tra&2;jectories for the moving picture that place minoritized groups at the center rather than the margins of the story. . . . Khor's work is a welcome addition to scholarly inquiries into the circulation of films and film culture in racialized communities in the United States in the first half of the twentieth century."--Journal of Cinema and Media Studies Transpacific Convergences offers a rich portrait of Japanese American film culture, and deftly shows how it emerged and thrived by engaging the wider Pacific world. The story is told with admirable efficiency and clarity. Students and scholars of history, film, and culture will learn a great deal from it."--Diplomatic History Transpacific Convergences reveals diverse worlds of Japanese American leisure, recreation, and community building almost entirely new to the historiography . . . These worlds unfold against transformations in the Hollywood and Japanese film industries, while Khor also highlights parallels with Black race films to frame out her story."--Western Historical Quarterly A marvelous, well-researched exploration of Japanese American film culture. . . . This methodical, exemplary book is a valuable contribution to early-20th-century film culture in the US. Essential."--CHOICE Illuminating . . . Khor clarifies how the Japanese American film culture has been shaped by the transpacific circulation of people, things, and ideas. She also demonstrates how its narratives and histories have been mediated in or haunted by these geopolitical concepts and theories."--Japanese Studies One of the most revolutionary studies to contribute to the new scholarship on Asian American film history. . . . [Khor] uncovers the entrepreneurial spirit of the first Japanese American immigrants who founded their own film production companies to combat the negative portrayal of Japanese Americans in film."--Los Angeles Review of Books Rich in historical insight and historiographic intervention . . . [Khor] connects the histories of cinema and Asian American immigration in novel and valuable ways while also illuminating the fascinating lives of its characters, the rich social worlds they inhabited, and the remarkable cultural texts they created."--Southern California Quarterly