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Decolonial Becoming

Immobility, Indigeneity, and Disability in Transpacific Korea

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ANIMA: Critical Race Studies Otherwise

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Book

Pages: 248

Illustrations: 3 illustrations

Release Date: January 05, 2027

Decolonial Becoming reimagines decolonization by centering questions of Indigeneity, disability, and the settler-diaspora in modern Korea from the 1930s to the present. Jeong Eun Annabel We traces the ways that South Korean military and economic practices in the Pacific have functioned as a sub-empire of US settler colonialism and how South Korea’s nationalist ideology of monoethnicity as Indigeneity under US and Japanese occupations have come at the expense of myriad Indigenous and disabled peoples. Arguing that Korea must grapple with its place in this transpacific colonial order, We challenges the binary of mobility as freedom and immobility as unfreedom through what she calls “decolonial becoming,” a polyrhythmic theory of dialectics in which immobility is a condition of occupation as well as a critical site of relationality. She places Asian, diasporic, and transpacific theories and literatures of decolonization in conversation with Caribbean and Latin American decolonial thought and Native and Indigenous Studies to show how immobility can offer a means of unlearning settler colonial logics.

Praise

Decolonial Becoming moves brilliantly across geographies, modalities, narratives, and histories of the militarized Pacific to explore how immobility and mobility are used for colonial subjugation. It is a daring, original, and creative intervention that understands decolonial becoming as an archipelagic project that requires transpacific connections beyond visibility.” - Eunjung Kim, author of Curative Violence: Rehabilitating Disability, Gender, and Sexuality in Modern Korea

Decolonial Becoming radically rethinks modern Korean history. Its theory-infused critical readings of the literary archives from across historical, transnational, and diasporic Koreas enable a repositioning and re-understanding of ‘Korea’ in its relationality with the past and ongoing de/neo/coloniality of other global locations.” - Jin-kyung Lee, University of California, San Diego

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Author/Editor Bios

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Jeong Eun Annabel We is Assistant Professor of Asian Languages and Cultures at Northwestern University.

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Sales/Territorial Rights: World

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Paper ISBN: 978-1-4780-3945-7 / Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-4780-3448-3 / eISBN: 978-1-4780-6305-6 /