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Racial Beings

Experiments in Asian American New Materialisms

Cover of Racial Beings shows layers of paint and textures featuring sunset hues of yellows, oranges, pinks, and blues. The title is written in all caps in a white sans serif type.

ANIMA: Critical Race Studies Otherwise

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Book

Pages: 264

Illustrations: 18 illustrations

Published: March 2026

In Racial Beings, Michelle N. Huang brings a feminist new materialist lens to bear on contemporary Asian American literature’s innovative play with discourses of science and technology. She argues that emerging from these works is a “molecular aesthetics”—formal experimentation that diminishes the boundaries of the human—which challenge the perception of racial identity as a trait of an individual human. Instead, molecular aesthetics reveals how race permeates the matter of the world. Reading works by authors such as Ruth Ozeki, Larissa Lai, Mei-mei Berssenbrugge, and Julie Otsuka through the language of scientific discourses like quantum physics, genetic engineering, and elemental chemistry, Huang develops a synthetic reading practice which shows both that the nexus of race and science is not reducible to scientific racism and that science can provide an unlikely creative reservoir for Asian American writers and artists which allows us to imagine alternative ways of understanding racial being beyond the limits of the human individual.

Praise

“In this strikingly elegant and philosophical book, Michelle N. Huang makes a compelling case for why Asian Americans are an apt template for unveiling the line between the human and nonhuman. Focusing on experimental Asian American creative practices that challenge the materiality of race, Huang shows us how the projection of racialization onto things in the natural world enables varying forms of resource extraction, whether animal, mineral, or human.” - Leslie Bow, author of Racist Love: Asian Abstraction and the Pleasures of Fantasy

“Huang leads us through the unexpected processes of subduction, reheating, and resqueezing of magma as an alluring metaphor for racial mattering—molecular processes that can both solidify a stony racism and, quite possibly, help critical thinkers get ahead of the distributed undoings of older racial forms as they stubbornly reform as newer metamorphic piles.” - Rachel C. Lee, author of The Exquisite Corpse of Asian America: Biopolitics, Biosociality and Posthuman Ecologies

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Author/Editor Bios

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Michelle N. Huang is Assistant Professor of English and Asian American Studies at Northwestern University.

Table Of Contents

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Acknowledgments  ix
Introduction. Human: Reading Besides the Individual Racialized Subject  1
1. Object: Excavating Waste’s Ecologies of Entanglement  25
2. Gene: Rethinking Clone Fiction’s Consciousness  57
3. Element: Relating Water’s Phase Changes  93
4. Species: Reorienting Alien Encounters  127
5. Atom: Dissipating Nuclear Exceptionalism  159
Conclusion. Race: Accessing a Multiverse of Matter and Meaning  189
Notes  199
Bibliography  225
Index

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Additional Information

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Paper ISBN: 978-1-4780-3319-6 / Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-4780-2976-2 / eISBN: 978-1-4780-6195-3 / DOI: https://doi.org/10.1215/9781478061953