Acknowledgments
Technologizing Orientalism: An Introduction
Part I Iterations & Instantiations
Chapter 1 Demon Courage and Dread Engines: America’s Reaction to the Russo-Japanese War and the Genesis of the Japanese Invasion Sublime
Chapter 2 “Out of the Glamorous, Mystic East”: Techno-Orientalism in Early Twentieth-Century United States Radio Broadcasting
Chapter 3 Looking Backward from 2019 to 1882: Reading the Dystopias of Future Multiculturalism in the Utopias of Asian Exclusion
Chapter 4 Queer Excavations: Technology, Temporality, Race
Chapter 5 I, Stereotype: Detained in the Uncanny Valley
Chapter 6 The Mask of Fu Manchu, Son of Sinbad, and Star Wars IV: A New Hope: Techno-Orientalist Cinema as an Mnemotechnics of 20th Century U.S.-Asian Conflicts
Chapter 7 Racial Speculations: (Bio)Technology, Battlestar Galactica, and Mixed-Race Imagining
Chapter 8 “Never Stop Playing”: StarCraft and Asian Gamer Death
Chapter 9 “Home Is Where the War Is”: Remaking Techno-Orientalist Militarism on the Homefront
Part II Reappropriations & Recuperations
Chapter 10 Thinking about Bodies, Souls, and Race in Gibson’s Bridge Trilogy
Chapter 11 Re-imagining Asian Women in Feminist Post-Cyberpunk Science Fiction
Chapter 12 The Cruel Optimism of Asian Futurity and the Reparative Practices of Sonny Liew’s Malinky Robot
Chapter 13 Palimpsestic Orientalisms and Antiblackness: Or, Joss Whedon’s “grand vision of an Asian/American tomorrow”
Chapter 14 “How Does It Not Know What It Is?”: The Techno-Orientalized Body in Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner and Larissa Lai’s Automaton Biographies
Chapter 15 “A Poor Man from a Poor Country”: Nam June Paik, TV-Buddha, and the Techno-Orientalist Lens
Desiring Machines, Repellant Subjects: A Conclusion
Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index