"Beenash Jafri delivers in this superb appraisal of decolonial commitments in Asian diasporic film. With dexterity and care, she dives into the fraught edges of Asian diasporic solidarity with Indigenous peoples and complicity with settler colonialism. By exploring the way Asian diasporic and Indigenous political relation is mediated by critical impasse, Jafri takes us to a new level of ethical commitment to decolonial struggle." -Iyko Day, author of Alien Capital: Asian Racialization and the Logic of Settler Colonial Capitalism"This book is a far-reaching study of Asian diasporic media in the context of North American settler colonialisms. Its sustained analysis of ‘affective attachments’ moves us beyond the impasses of immigrant nostalgia and settler inclusion toward what Beenash Jafri, deftly interweaving women-of-color feminism with Indigenous theory and critique, calls ‘relational survivance.’" -Glen Mimura, University of California, Irvine