Model Machines: A History of the Asian as Automaton

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In the contemporary Western imagination, Asian people are frequently described as automatons, which disavows their humanity. In Model Machines, Long Bui investigates what he calls Asian roboticism or the ways Asians embody the machine and are given robotic characteristics.

Bui offers the first historical overview of the overlapping racialization of Asians and Asian Americans through their conflation with the robot-machine nexus. He puts forth the concept of the “model machine myth,” which holds specific queries about personhood, citizenship, labor, and rights in the transnational making of Asian/America.

The case studies in Model Machines chart the representation of Chinese laborers, Japanese soldiers, Asian sex workers, and other examples to show how Asians are reimagined to be model machines as a product of globalization, racism, and colonialism. Moreover, it offers examples of how artists and everyday people resisted that stereotype to consider different ways of being human. Starting from the early nineteenth century, the book ends in the present with the new millennium, where the resurgence of China presages the “rise of the machines” and all the doomsday scenarios this might spell for global humanity at large.

Author(s): Long T. Bui
Series: Asian American History & Culture
Publisher: Temple University Press
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 285
City: Philadelphia

Contents
List of Images
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Model Machine Myth
1. Labor Machines: Fighting the Mechanized Coolie in the Age of Industrial Slavery
2. War Machines: Assembling the Robotic Japanese Soldier under the Shadow of Empire
3. Sex Machines: Exploiting the Bionic Woman of Color for the Cold War Economy
4. Virtual Machines: Containing the Alien Cyborg during the Era of Late Capitalism
5. Global Machines: Reconfiguring the Roboticized Asian within the New Millennium
Epilogue: On Posthuman Historical Futures
Notes
Bibliography
Index