Critical American Studies
Series Editor: George Lipsitz
This series examines recent trends in American studies. Fundamental questions about history, culture, social structure, race, gender, sexuality, and citizenship now challenge and motivate work in this discipline and also connect and integrate it with other areas of study. Books in the series analyze and critique the forces (including mass migration, global economy, apparent weaknesses of the nation-state, and ongoing ethnic antagonisms) that compel this field to reevaluate how culture produces individual and collective identities.
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Reinventing Citizenship
Black Los Angeles, Korean Kawasaki, and Community Participation
Samurai among Panthers
Richard Aoki on Race, Resistance, and a Paradoxical Life
Peace Corps Fantasies
How Development Shaped the Global Sixties
Distant Wars Visible
The Ambivalence of Witnessing
Debating the End of History
The Marketplace, Utopia, and the Fragmentation of Intellectual Life
Chains of Babylon
The Rise of Asian America
Aberrations In Black
Toward a Queer of Color Critique
American Pietàs
Visions of Race, Death, and the Maternal
Triangulations
Narrative Strategies for Navigating Latino Identity
Mythohistorical Interventions
The Chicano Movement and Its Legacies
Ends of Empire
Asian American Critique and the Cold War
Heartbeat of Struggle
The Revolutionary Life of Yuri Kochiyama
Urban Triage
Race And The Fictions Of Multiculturalism
Not the Triumph But the Struggle
The 1968 Olympics and the Making of the Black Athlete
