Who Is the Asianist? reconsiders the past, present, and future of
Asian Studies through the lens of positionality, questions of authority,
and an analysis of race with an emphasis on Blackness in Asia. From
self-reflective essays on being a Black Asianist to the Black Lives
Matter movement in Papua New Guinea, Japan, and Viet Nam, scholars
grapple with the global significance of race and local articulations of
difference. Other contributors call for a racial analysis of the figure
of the Muslim as well as a greater transregional comparison of slavery
and intra-Asian dynamics that can be better understood, for instance,
from a Black feminist perspective or through the work of James Baldwin.
As a whole, this diversified set of essays insists that the
possibilities of change within Asian Studies occurs when, and only when,
it reckons with the entirety of the scholars, geographies, and histories
that it comprises.