The Politics of Indigenous Collaboration: The Role of Chamorro Interpreters in Japan's Pacific Empire, 1914-1945

CEAS Japanese Luncheon Series

Keith Camacho, Assistant Professor, Department of Asian American Studies, UCLA

In this talk, Professor Camacho will examine indigenous forms of collaboration in Japan's empire in the Pacific, from 1914-1945. Emphasis will be placed on the roles of Chamorro interpreters and police assistants during the Japanese wartime occupation of the Mariana Islands. Rather than view collaboration as a sign of moral failure or victory, as has been the case with most studies of collaboration, Camacho will treat collaboration as a category of analysis that can shed light on the conflicting, multiple and sometimes complementary modes of indigenous agency. The goal is to situate collaboration as an idea worth thinking about in terms of its methodological and theoretical contributions to and implications for the study of colonialism and resistance.

 
Date and Time:
 Monday, February 12, 2007.  12:00 PM.
Approximate duration of 1.25 hour(s).
Location:
Philippines Conference Room, Encina Hall, 3rd Floor  [Map]
URL:
Audience:
Faculty/Staff
Alumni/Friends
General Public
Students
Members
Category:
Lectures/Readings
Sponsor:
Center for East Asian Studies Stanford Society of Fellows in Japanese Studies
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Last Modified:
February 5, 2007