As American overseas territories expanded after the Spanish-American War, a new kind of sociological literature emerged, treating indigenous people of the Philippines, Hawaii, and elsewhere as objects of US benevolence. They were studied and analyzed as something outside of, and lesser than, American whites. The sociological literatures that resulted, according to Tolentino (English, U. of Oregon), created an atmosphere for writers of color who sought to redefine the relationship between white Americans and people of color through their literature. In this challenging monograph, the author analyzes four seminal works, viewing each from the intersection of racism, racial emergence, and US imperialism. Annotation ©2010 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
During World War II, the rising visibility of anticolonial and antiracist movements exposed contradictions between the U.S. democratic mission in Europe and racist practices against people of color at home. Yet the professional success stories of people of color gave ideological support to the notion that liberal antiracism was spreading within the United States.
Challenging conventional accounts of U.S. ethnic literature rooted in 1960s and 1970s social movements, Cynthia H. Tolentino sees this literary work as emerging from a political climate in which arguments about the integration of racial minorities and the moral legitimacy of U.S. international leadership are intertwined. Probing how sociologists including Robert E. Park, Gunnar Myrdal, and Emory Bogardus situated Asian Americans, Filipinos, and African Americans as model citizens and problems, Tolentino contends that such studies served as a staging ground for writers of color to become narrators of racial identity, citizenship, and U.S. neocolonialism.
Tracing the literary engagements of Richard Wright, Carlos Bulosan, and Jade Snow Wong with the sociology of race, Tolentino assesses their works as critical expressions of class negotiation on the global stage and illuminates the significance of U.S. ethnic literature.