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- Title Pages
- Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 American and International Whaling, c. 1770–1820
- 2 Spanish Manila
- 3 Residing in “South-Eastern Asia” of the Antebellum United States
- 4 “Thank God for the Maladjusted”
- 5 Land, History, and the Law
- 6 Genealogizing Colonial and Indigenous Translations and Publications of the Kumulipo
- 7 The Open Ocean for Interimperial Collaboration
- 8 Maxine Hong Kingston’s Transpacific Imagination
- 9 Memories of Murder
- 10 Transnational American Studies
- 11 Recalling Oceanic Communities
- 12 Oceania as Peril and Promise
- Contributors
- Index
(p.283) Contributors
(p.283) Contributors
- Source:
- Oceanic Archives, Indigenous Epistemologies, and Transpacific American Studies
- Author(s):
- Yuan Shu, Otto Heim, Kendall Johnson
- Publisher:
- Hong Kong University Press
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- Title Pages
- Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 American and International Whaling, c. 1770–1820
- 2 Spanish Manila
- 3 Residing in “South-Eastern Asia” of the Antebellum United States
- 4 “Thank God for the Maladjusted”
- 5 Land, History, and the Law
- 6 Genealogizing Colonial and Indigenous Translations and Publications of the Kumulipo
- 7 The Open Ocean for Interimperial Collaboration
- 8 Maxine Hong Kingston’s Transpacific Imagination
- 9 Memories of Murder
- 10 Transnational American Studies
- 11 Recalling Oceanic Communities
- 12 Oceania as Peril and Promise
- Contributors
- Index