"[Santa Ana] makes a critical contribution to the recent body of scholarship on emotion specifically addressing race and ethnicity.... Racial Feelings provides thoughtful, meticulous readings of texts by artists of Asian descent, and these readings are situated in Asian American history and cultural studies and Marxist and materialist theory."--MELUS “Jeffrey Santa Ana’s Racial Feelings is an engaging and generative study that significantly enhances our understanding of Asian American cultural politics by mapping the complex convergence of affect and political economy that has made and remade Asian America. With its focus on how Asian American cultural texts make legible the intersections of capitalist development and affective subject formation, Racial Feelings illuminates how it feels to be economically constituted, and in doing so provides an immensely useful critical framework for appreciating the capacities and implications of Asian American critique across diverse contexts.” -Victor Bascara, University of California, Los Angeles “Racial Feelings addresses the emotions created by capitalism in Asian American and Asian mixed-race subjects. That capitalism can produce feelings is an intellectually exciting argument. Santa Ana is a meticulous researcher who illuminates the affective process of belonging in America in his careful investigation of literature, graphic narratives, and advertising by and about Asian Americans. He points out the discrepancies between Asian Americans who are created and contained by capitalism as national models while also held at arm’s length as potential threats in their global, capitalist efficiency. His fascinating arguments include those about marketing multiculturalism, the matter of race in the notion of ‘feeling ancestral,’ and how ethnic remembering grates against corporate/capitalist post-racialism. Santa Ana’s careful work unearths what really was quite visible and palpable all along.”-Monica Chiu, author of Scrutinized! Surveillance in Asian North American Literature