"Making Asian American Film and Video tells the fascinating and significant story of the emergence of Asian American film and video within the wider media culture of the United States."- Gina Marchetti (author of The Chinese Diaspora on American Screens: Race, Sex, and Cinema) "A first-of-its-kind study of Asian American cinema's productive and sometimes uncomfortable relationship to institutional definitions of 'Asian America.'" (Film Quarterly) "Okada has written a very important book. The historical reach, the diversity of texts, and the expansive engagement with filmic influences make it possible for her to take an inventory of Asian American film and video in the second decade of the twenty-first century and wonder what might be possible for the future of Asian American film and video." (Cinema Journal) "Both a hip guide to movies for your queue and an incisive commentary on the ways we (filmgoers, critics, TV executives, and others) use movies and TV to talk about race, sex, and class. Okada makes Asian American film fun again." - Peter X Feng (author of Identities in Motion: Asian American Film and Video) "Institutional context provides Okada with the framework for her illuminating study of Asian American filmmaking from its roots in the early 1970s to the present." (Choice)