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  • Afro-Asian Connections in Latin America and the Caribbean ed. by Luisa Marcela Ossa and Debbie Lee-DiStefano
  • Tao Leigh Goffe
Afro-Asian Connections in Latin America and the Caribbean. Edited by Luisa Marcela Ossa and Debbie Lee-DiStefano. Lanham: Lexington, 2019. $90.00 cloth. doi:10.1017/tam.2019.121

This book takes on the worthy and weighty task of illuminating forgotten Afro-Asian connections in the Western Hemisphere. The collection of essays takes varying literary, historical, and cultural-studies approaches to the convergence of African and Asian diasporas in the Americas.

Linda Ainouche wonders if the dearth of studies results from a lack of research, interest, or sources. In any case, the alignment of Afro-Asian connections has the potential to form an incisive critique of the ways that nationalisms and latinidad, in particular, have formed across Latin America and have functioned to erase such racialized difference and specific histories of exploitation. The first chapter, by co-editor Debbie Lee-DiStefano, on this context in Peru puts Chineseness and blackness in conversation with indigeneity, setting the ground for these important configurations of race and ethnicity. The book is part of a trend of renewed inquiry into the triangulation of race, to use Claire Jean Kim's formulation. Another recent book by literary scholar Ana Paulina Lee, Mandarin Brazil (2018), forms a cultural counter-archive to critique how Brazilian multiculturalist nationalism formed against the figure of the Chinese foreigner.

In many ways, this new book is a continuation of a conversation in the co-edited Imagining Asia in the Americas arranged by Lee-DiStefano and Zelideth Maria Rivas, who is also a contributor to this collection. It is renewed here with a more specialized focus on Latin America and the Caribbean, as opposed to highlighting the Latinx US context. Even as the volume aims to decenter the United States, Europe, and whiteness, these formations remain ever-present because they are being written against in the coalition of Afro-Asia. The volume importantly centers the institution of racial [End Page 154] indenture, which was not implemented in the United States after the abolition of racial slavery, forming the contrast in the racialization of Asians in Latin America and the Caribbean versus the United States. It is clear that the chapters are the result of a robust intellectual synthesis taking place at conferences on Asians in the Caribbean and Latin America, with numerous special sessions at annual conferences of the Association of Asian American Studies, the Asian Studies Association, the Latin American Studies Association, and the yearly Asians in the Americas conference that takes place at various US institutions. Out of a dearth, a community has created a plenty of specificity and publications to accompany the conversation.

The book represents this wealth of engagement and is organized in three sections of three chapters each; the sections examine in turn identity, contact zones, and bodies. Even though interludes and an introduction form the necessary connective tissue to cohere the disparate essays, the sections and chapters feel as though they could be organized in multiple ways. Borrowing from the theoretical undergirding by critics Lisa Lowe and Mary Louise Pratt, the frame of the book is outlined by leaders in the field: historian Kathleen López, who wrote Chinese Cubans (2013), and literary critic Lisa Yun, who wrote The Coolie Speaks (2008). Their foundational books on the Chinese in Cuba have set the grounds for an approach that entwines the legal and historical transnational stakes of examining African enslavement and Chinese indenture together.

Yun and López pave the way for the other contributors, a number of them emerging scholars who analyze site-specific case studies, from the legibly Chinese aesthetic of modernist Cuban painter Wifredo Lam's artwork to the historic racialization of the Chinese and Africans in Peru, to the Hindu legacy of dreadlocks in Rastafari culture, to the trope of the woman of mixed ancestry—la mulata achinada—in Cuba. At times, there in an uneasy comparison formed between the atrocities of indenture and enslavement that pits Asianness against blackness rather than connecting the two as the title suggests. Though most of the chapters examine Afro-Chinese intimacies, it...

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