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Crip Colony: Mestizaje, Us Imperialism, and the Queer Politics of Disability in the Philippines (Hardcover)

Crip Colony: Mestizaje, Us Imperialism, and the Queer Politics of Disability in the Philippines Cover Image
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Description


In Crip Colony, Sony Cor ez Bolton examines the racial politics of disability, mestizaje, and sexuality in the Philippines. Drawing on literature, poetry, colonial records, political essays, travel narratives, and visual culture, Cor ez Bolton traces how disability politics colluded with notions of Philippine mestizaje. He demonstrates that Filipino mestizo writers in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries used mestizaje as a racial ideology of ability that marked Indigenous inhabitants of the Philippines as lacking in civilization and in need of uplift and rehabilitation. Heteronormative, able-bodied, and able-minded mixed-race Filipinos offered a model and path for assimilation into the US empire. In this way, mestizaje allowed for supposedly superior mixed-race subjects to govern the archipelago in collusion with American imperialism. By bringing disability studies together with studies of colonialism and queer-of-color critique, Cor ez Bolton extends theorizations of mestizaje beyond the United States and Latin America while considering how Filipinx and Filipinx American thought fundamentally enhances understandings of the colonial body and the racial histories of disability.

Product Details
ISBN: 9781478016922
ISBN-10: 1478016922
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication Date: February 17th, 2023
Pages: 224
Language: English