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  • Contributors

Andrew Aoki is professor of political science at Augsburg College. He is a co-author of Newcomers, Outsiders, and Insiders: Immigrants and American Racial Politics in the Early Twenty-First Century (University of Michigan Press, 2010), and Asian American Politics (Polity Press, 2008).

Rosalind S. Chou is the Samuel Dubois Cook Postdoctoral Fellow at Duke University. She co-authored the book, The Myth of the Model Minority: Asian Americans Facing Racism (Paradigm, 2008), with Joe R. Feagin. She is completing her second book, Asian American Sexual Politics: The Construction of Race, Gender, and Sexuality.

Theodore S. Gonzalves is associate professor of American studies at the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa. He is the author of The Day the Dancers Stayed: Performing in the Filipino/American Diaspora (Temple University Press, 2009) and Stage Presence: Conversations with Filipino American Performing Artists (Meritage Press, 2007).

Christopher Lee is assistant professor of English at the University of British Columbia, where he is also Associate Principal of St. John's College. He has recently published articles in Amerasia, Canadian Literature, and Modern Fiction Studies. He recently completed a manuscript on aesthetic mediation and the politics of post-identity. His current research focuses on trans-Pacific circulations of literary formalism during the Cold War.

Steven Marc Lee teaches English at an independent school in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Pei-te Lien is professor of Political Science at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Her research focuses on race, ethnicity, gender, and the political participation and incorporation of Chinese and other Asian Americans. Her latest book, The Transnational Politics of Asian Americans (2009), is co-edited with Chris Collet. [End Page 165]

Jana K. Lipman is assistant professor of history at Tulane University. She is the author of Guantánamo: A Working-Class History between Empire and Revolution (University of California Press, 2009), which was the 2009 Co-Winner of the Taft Prize in Labor History.

Natalie Masuoka is assistant professor of political science at Tufts University. Her research specializes in the politics of race, ethnicity and immigration in the United States with a focus on political behavior and public opinion.

Kasturi Ray is assistant professor of Women and Gender Studies at San Francisco State University. She specializes in studies of gender, ethnicity, and labor, settler colonialism, and decolonization. She is currently at work on a manuscript on contemporary domestic workers in literature and film.

Da Zheng is professor of English at Suffolk University. In addition to articles in the areas of American literature, Asian American literature, and popular culture, his biography Chiang Yee: The Silent Traveler from the East was published by Rutgers University Press in 2010. [End Page 166]

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