The "affects" of empire : (dis)trust among Osage annuitants / Jean Dennison -- Milking the cow for all its worth : settler colonialism and the politics of imperialist resentment in Hawaiʻi / J. Kēhaulani Kauanui -- Sovereignty, sympathy, and indigeneity / Audra Simpson -- A school of addicts : the coloniality of addiction in Puerto Rico / Adriana María Garriga-López -- Inhabiting the aporias of empire : protest politics in contemporary Puerto Rico / Melissa Rosario -- Training for empire? : Samoa and American gridiron football / Fa'Anofo Lisaclaire Uperesa -- Exceptionalism as a way of life : U.S. empire, Filipino subjectivity, and the global call center industry / Jan M. Padios -- In their places : Cottica Ndyuka in Moengo / Olívia Maria Gomes da Cunha -- Shifting geographies of proximity : Korean-led Evangelical Christian missions and the U.S. Empire / Ju Hui Judy Han -- Sites of the postcolonial Cold War / Heonik Kwon -- Time standards and rhizomatic imperialism / Kevin K. Birth -- Islands of imperialism : military bases and the ethnography of U.S. empire / David Vine -- Domesticating the U.S. Air Force : the challenges of anti-military activism in Manta, Ecuador / Erin Fitz-Henry -- The empire of choice and the emergence of military dissent / Matthew Gutmann and Catherine Lutz -- Locating landmines in the Korean Demilitarized Zone / Eleana Kim -- Love and empire : the CIA, Tibet, and covert humanitarianism / Carole McGranahan -- Trust us : Nicaragua, Iran-Contra, and the discursive economy of empire / Joe Bryan -- Empire as accusation, denial, and structure : the social life of U.S. power at Brazil's Spaceport / Sean T. Mitchell -- Radicalizing empire : youth and dissent in the War on Terror / Sunaina Maira -- Deporting Cambodian refugees : youth activism, state reform, and imperial statecraft / Soo Ah Kwon -- Hunters of the Sourlands : empire and displacement in Highland New Jersey / John F. Collins -- From exception to empire : sovereignty, carceral circulation, and the "Global War on Terror" / Darryl Li.
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How do we live in and with empire? The contributors to this book pursue this question by examining empire as an unequally shared present. Here empire stands as an entrenched, if often invisible, part of everyday life central to making and remaking a world in which it is too often presented as an aberration rather than as a structuring condition. This volume presents scholarship from across U.S. imperial formations: settler colonialism, overseas territories, communities impacted by U.S. military action of political intervention, Cold War alliances and fissures, and, most recently, new forms of U.S. empire after 9/11. From the Mohawk Nation, Korea, and the Philippines to Iraq and the hills of New Jersey, the contributors show how a methodological and theoretical commitment to ethnography sharpens all of our understandings of the novel and timeworn ways people live, thrive, and resist in the imperial present.
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