New Book Announcement: “Campaign of Knowledge: US Pedagogies of Colonialism and Occupation in the Philippines and Japan” by Malin Johar Schueller

Campaigns of Knowledge: U.S. Pedagogies of Colonialism and Occupation in the Philippines and Japan, Malini Johar Schueller (Temple University Press, November 2019)
Campaigns of Knowledge: US Pedagogies of Colonialism and Occupation in the Philippines and Japan, Malini Johar Schueller (Temple University Press, November 2019)

The creation of a new school system in the Philippines in 1898 and educational reforms in occupied Japan, both with stated goals of democratization, speaks to a singular vision of America as savior, following its politics of violence with benevolent recuperation. The pedagogy of recovery—in which schooling was central and natives were forced to accept empire through education—might have shown how Americans could be good occupiers, but it also created projects of Orientalist racial management: Filipinos had to be educated and civilized, while the Japanese had to be reeducated and “de-civilized.”

In Campaigns of Knowledge, Malini Schueller contrapuntally reads state-sanctioned proclamations, educational agendas, and school textbooks alongside political cartoons, novels, short stories, and films by Filipino and Filipino Americans, Japanese and Japanese Americans to demonstrate how the U.S. tutelary project was rerouted, appropriated, reinterpreted, and resisted. In doing so, she highlights how schooling was conceived as a process of subjectification, creating particular modes of thought, behaviors, aspirations, and desires that would render the natives docile subjects amenable to American-style colonialism in the Philippines and occupation in Japan.

 

Campaign of Knowledge: US Pedagogies of Colonialism and Occupation in the Philippines and Japan
by Malin Johar Schueller
Temple University Press, Nov 2019 (ISBN 9781439918562)