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Bundok: A Hinterland History of Filipino America

  • NYU King Juan Carlos Center 53 Washington Square South New York, NY, 10012 United States (map)

Organizer: The Philippine Studies Initiative at NYU and NYSEAN

Type/Location: Virtual

Description:

"From the late eighteenth century, the hinterlands of Northern Luzon and its Indigenous people were in the crosshairs of imperial and capitalist extraction. Combining the breadth of global history with the intimacy of biography, Adrian De Leon follows the people of Northern Luzon across space and time, advancing a new vision of the United States's Pacific empire that begins with the natives and migrants who were at the heart of colonialism and its everyday undoing. From the emergence of Luzon's eighteenth-century tobacco industry and the Hawaii Sugar Planters' Association's documentation of workers to the movement of people and ideas across the Suez Canal and the stories of Filipino farmworkers in the American West, De Leon traces 'the Filipino' as a racial category emerging from the labor, subjugation, archiving, and resistance of native people. De Leon's imaginatively constructed archive yields a sweeping history that promises to reshape our understanding of race-making in the Pacific world."

Adrian De Leon is the author of barangay: an offshore poem (Buckrider Books, 2021) and Bundok: A Hinterland History of Filipino America (University of North Carolina Press, 2023). His current book project, Balikbayan: The Invention of the Filipino Homeland, is under contract with the University of Washington Press. He is the 2023-2024 Jack and Nancy Farley Distinguished Visiting Scholar in History at Simon Fraser University, and an incoming Assistant Professor of U.S. History at New York University.

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