Michelle N. Huang is Assistant Professor of English and Asian American Studies at Northwestern University.
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Description
Acknowledgments ix Introduction. Human: Reading Besides the Individual Racialized Subject 1 1. Object: Excavating Waste's Ecologies of Entanglement 25 2. Gene: Rethinking Clone Fiction's Consciousness 57 3. Element: Relating Water's Phase Changes 93 4. Species: Reorienting Alien Encounters 127 5. Atom: Dissipating Nuclear Exceptionalism 159 Conclusion. Race: Accessing a Multiverse of Matter and Meaning 189 Notes 199 Bibliography 225 Index
"In this strikingly elegant and philosophical book, Michelle N. Huang makes a compelling case for why Asian Americans are an apt template for unveiling the line between the human and nonhuman. Focusing on experimental Asian American creative practices that challenge the materiality of race, Huang shows us how the projection of racialization onto things in the natural world enables varying forms of resource extraction, whether animal, mineral, or human."-Leslie Bow, author of, Racist Love: Asian Abstraction and the Pleasures of Fantasy

