No arrivals : the cultural politics of mobilities in queer Asian diasporas in Canada

This dissertation project examines the cultural politics of mobilities for the organization of counterpublics and oral histories in and across marginalized communities within a transnational migration frame. I conducted a three-year, interview-based and media-centered ethnography in the Lower Mainla...

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Main Author: Kojima, Dai
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/51949
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-519492018-01-05T17:27:59Z No arrivals : the cultural politics of mobilities in queer Asian diasporas in Canada Kojima, Dai This dissertation project examines the cultural politics of mobilities for the organization of counterpublics and oral histories in and across marginalized communities within a transnational migration frame. I conducted a three-year, interview-based and media-centered ethnography in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia with fourteen queer migrant men and a transgender migrant woman with a wide range of intersectional identifications and residence statuses, who were originally from multiple countries and regions across Pacific Asia. The purpose of this fieldwork was to trace the translocal movements of queer Asian migrants with a critical attention to how their encounters with national discourses, histories and knowledges of race and sexuality shaped the trajectories of their life narratives. Drawing on these embodied accounts, my analyses illustrate how these migrant, racial strangers and sexual others manage to negotiate multiple displacing forces through tactical practices of representation, space-making, and diasporic networks of kinship and care with and through media. This interdisciplinary project significantly contributes to several areas of theorizing. First, this study revises theories of agency in mobilities research by introducing the concept of mobility as problematic to highlight the cultural dynamics between displacement and movement, and foregrounds the everyday, mediated practices of mobility as various forms of survival that often remain invisible to structural analysis and theory. Second, this project advances queer critiques of race by analyzing how queer Asian migrants do and perform racialized identity. This research theorizes how transnational subjects actively participate in global processes of racialization, which departs significantly from traditional scholarship that underscores national frames and histories of race and sexuality. Finally, this project contributes to postcolonial feminist methodologies by introducing a queer historiography method I call enigma as evidence. This innovative framework argues for elusive meanings, identities and silences as a productive site for ethically charged research practices that evidence the experiences of oppression, survival and everyday intimacies of cultural others. Education, Faculty of Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of Graduate 2015-01-22T20:10:30Z 2015-01-22T20:10:30Z 2015 2015-02 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/51949 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 Canada http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ca/ University of British Columbia
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language English
sources NDLTD
description This dissertation project examines the cultural politics of mobilities for the organization of counterpublics and oral histories in and across marginalized communities within a transnational migration frame. I conducted a three-year, interview-based and media-centered ethnography in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia with fourteen queer migrant men and a transgender migrant woman with a wide range of intersectional identifications and residence statuses, who were originally from multiple countries and regions across Pacific Asia. The purpose of this fieldwork was to trace the translocal movements of queer Asian migrants with a critical attention to how their encounters with national discourses, histories and knowledges of race and sexuality shaped the trajectories of their life narratives. Drawing on these embodied accounts, my analyses illustrate how these migrant, racial strangers and sexual others manage to negotiate multiple displacing forces through tactical practices of representation, space-making, and diasporic networks of kinship and care with and through media. This interdisciplinary project significantly contributes to several areas of theorizing. First, this study revises theories of agency in mobilities research by introducing the concept of mobility as problematic to highlight the cultural dynamics between displacement and movement, and foregrounds the everyday, mediated practices of mobility as various forms of survival that often remain invisible to structural analysis and theory. Second, this project advances queer critiques of race by analyzing how queer Asian migrants do and perform racialized identity. This research theorizes how transnational subjects actively participate in global processes of racialization, which departs significantly from traditional scholarship that underscores national frames and histories of race and sexuality. Finally, this project contributes to postcolonial feminist methodologies by introducing a queer historiography method I call enigma as evidence. This innovative framework argues for elusive meanings, identities and silences as a productive site for ethically charged research practices that evidence the experiences of oppression, survival and everyday intimacies of cultural others. === Education, Faculty of === Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of === Graduate
author Kojima, Dai
spellingShingle Kojima, Dai
No arrivals : the cultural politics of mobilities in queer Asian diasporas in Canada
author_facet Kojima, Dai
author_sort Kojima, Dai
title No arrivals : the cultural politics of mobilities in queer Asian diasporas in Canada
title_short No arrivals : the cultural politics of mobilities in queer Asian diasporas in Canada
title_full No arrivals : the cultural politics of mobilities in queer Asian diasporas in Canada
title_fullStr No arrivals : the cultural politics of mobilities in queer Asian diasporas in Canada
title_full_unstemmed No arrivals : the cultural politics of mobilities in queer Asian diasporas in Canada
title_sort no arrivals : the cultural politics of mobilities in queer asian diasporas in canada
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/51949
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