Domesticating Brown
Movements of Racial Imagination
Christopher B Patterson author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Duke University Press
Publishing:31st Mar '26
£22.99
This title is due to be published on 31st March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£100.00(9781478029465)

Domesticating Brown interrogates the slippery senses that brownness as a racial form has manifested over time, charting its transitions across historical colonial contexts and into the transpacific dynamics of contemporary empire. Christopher B. Patterson rethinks universalist definitions of race to consider the constant movements in racial contexts, meanings, and practices that “brownness” reveals: as a site for the ungovernable brown mass, as peoples marked for domestication through strategies of colonial containment, and as the complex shades that reveal troubling genealogies and shameful intimacies. Tracing the emergences and transformations of brownness in various contexts of transpacific encounter – from the Mongol Empire to Filipino plantation migration in Hawai’i, from the imperial management of Hong Kong to contemporary brown authorship – Domesticating Brown explores how colonial subjects and other marginalized peoples have strategized ways of resisting and reversing dominating notions of brownness through art, story, and embodied difference.
“A luminous and methodologically daring work, this book is a lyrical collage that reframes how we theorize brownness. Insightful, beautifully written, and intellectually fearless, it will become a guiding text for future scholarship on race, embodiment, and colonial modernity.”—Sony Coráñez Bolton, author of Crip Colony: Mestizaje, US Imperialism, and the Queer Politics of Disability in the Philippines
“A highly ambitious and theoretically rigorous book, Domesticating Brown weaves family histories with racial historical narratives, moving through personal experiences of travel and grief, and grappling with domestication as a racial colonial project.”—Ma Vang, author of History on the Run: Secrecy, Fugitivity, and Hmong Refugee Epistemologies
ISBN: 9781478032892
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 445g
328 pages