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Transpacific Convergences

Race, Migration, and Japanese American Film Culture before World War II

Denise Khor
Barcode 9781469667966
Book

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Original price £122.95 - Original price £122.95
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£122.95
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Current price £122.95

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Release Date: 30/06/2022

Genre: Society & Culture
Sub-Genre: Social Sciences
Label: The University of North Carolina Press
Language: English
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Pages: 208

Race, Migration, and Japanese American Film Culture before World War II. Drawing from a fascinating multilingual archive including the films themselves, movie industry trade press, Japanese American newspapers, oral histories, and more, this book reveals the experiences of Japanese Americans at the cinema and traces an alternative network of film production, exhibition, and spectatorship. Despite the rise of the Hollywood system and hostility to Asian migrant communities in the early twentieth-century United States, Japanese Americans created a thriving cinema culture that produced films and established theaters and exhibition companies to facilitate their circulation between Japan and the United States. Drawing from a fascinating multilingual archive including the films themselves, movie industry trade press, Japanese American newspapers, oral histories, and more, this book reveals the experiences of Japanese Americans at the cinema and traces an alternative network of film production, exhibition, and spectatorship. In doing so, Denise Khor recovers previously unknown films such as The Oath of the Sword (1914), likely one of the earliest Asian American film productions, and illuminates the global circulations that have always constituted the multifaceted history of American cinema.

Khor opens up transnational lines of inquiry and draws comparisons between early Japanese American cinema and Black cinema to craft a broad and expansive history of a transnational public sphere shaped by the circulation and exchange of people, culture, and ideas across the Pacific.