Humanities Forum — Adrian De Leon
November 4, 4:00 pm - 5:30 pm
Location: Albin O. Kuhn Library Gallery
Adrian De Leon, Assistant Professor, History, New York University
Diaspora’s Boondocks: Hinterlands in Filipino American History
This event is part of the Fall 2024 Humanities Forum.
How were the native people from the margins of empire, from Christianized lowlands peasants to sovereign indigenous people in the mountainous highlands, thrust into the center of late Spanish and American imperial projects of race-making across the Pacific? In this talk, Adrian De Leon re-routes the history of Filipino American migration to its indigenous roots in the bundok (Tagalog: the hinterland) of Northern Luzon. Beginning from the early modern history of uplands Southeast Asia, through the shifts in global imperialism after the Seven Years War and the opening of the Suez Canal, De Leon traces the emergence of “the Filipino” from the racial archives of Spanish plantations. Through their agricultural labor, Ilokano lowlands peoples shaped the racialization of the migrant peasant. Likewise, through the recording of their anti-colonial insurgency and Indigenous economies, Igorot highlands peoples shaped transpacific formations of the “savage.” Through the mutual study of indigeneity and migrant labor, this talk places colonized people at the heart of race-making across the Pacific, and the anticolonial struggles of the Asian migrant and Indigenous people that seek to dismantle them.
Adrian De Leon is an Assistant Professor of US History at New York University, where he is the co-chair of Sulo: The Philippine Studies Initiative at NYU. He has published and lectured on US-Philippine relations, global indigeneity and settler colonialism, US immigration, and Asian American culture. De Leon was also the co-host of A People’s History of Asian America (2021) and the first season of Historian’s Take (2022) on PBS Digital Studios. He is the author and editor of four books, most recently barangay: an offshore poem (2021) and Bundok: A Hinterland History of Filipino America (2023). His next book, Balikbayan: The Invention of the Filipino Homeland, is forthcoming.
Admission is free.
This event is co-sponsored by the Asian Studies Program, the Department of American Studies, the Department of History, and the Global Studies Program.