The Gift of Freedom by Mimi Thi Nguyen
The Gift of Freedom by Mimi Thi Nguyen
The Gift of Freedom by Mimi Thi Nguyen
The Gift
of Freedom
War, Debt, and
Other Refugee
Passages
The Gift of Freedom
The Gift
of Freedom
WAR, DEBT, AND
OTHER REFUGEE
PASSAGES
Preface ix
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction. The Empire of Freedom 1
1. The Refugee Condition 33
2. Grace, the Gift of the Girl in the Photograph 83
3. Race Wars, Patriot Acts 133
Epilogue. Refugee Returns 179
Notes 191
Bibliography 239
Index 267
PREFACE
Rebuilding Iraq will require a sustained commitment from many nations, in-
cluding our own: we will remain in Iraq as long as necessary, and not a day more.
America has made and kept this kind of commitment before—in the peace that
followed a world war. After defeating enemies, we did not leave behind occupy-
ing armies, we left constitutions and parliaments. We established an atmosphere
of safety, in which responsible, reform-minded local leaders could build lasting
institutions of freedom. In societies that once bred fascism and militarism, liberty
found a permanent home.
— GEORGE W. BUSH, February ≤∏, ≤≠≠≥
In a televised address from the Oval O≈ce on August 31, 2010, President
Barack Obama declared the U.S. combat mission in Iraq ended, over seven
years after it began: ‘‘Operation Iraqi Freedom is over, and the Iraqi people
now have lead responsibility for the security of their country.’’ Outlining
an accelerated timetable for complete troop withdrawal by the end of the
following year, and the subsequent transfer of security functions to Iraqi
forces, Obama continued solemnly:
Ending this war is not only in Iraq’s interest—it is in our own. The United
States has paid a huge price to put the future of Iraq in the hands of its
people. We have sent our young men and women to make enormous sacri-
fices in Iraq, and spent vast resources abroad at a time of tight budgets at
home. We have persevered because of a belief we share with the Iraqi people
—a belief that out of the ashes of war, a new beginning could be born in this
cradle of civilization. Through this remarkable chapter in the history of the
United States and Iraq, we have met our responsibility. Now, it is time to
turn the page.∞
x PREFACE
martial adventures; in 2010 alone, U.S. Special Operations forces were
reportedly deployed for preemptive or retaliatory strikes in seventy-five
countries—including the Philippines, Columbia, Yemen, Somalia, and
elsewhere in Africa and Central Asia—in what one counterinsurgency
advisor has called ‘‘an almost industrial-scale counterterrorism killing
machine.’’≥ War further annexes ‘‘homeland security’’; the domestic front
is now contiguous with the battlefield and recruited to a state of perma-
nent potential paramilitarization. The 2012 National Defense Authoriza-
tion Act codified into law those powers the Bush and Obama administra-
tions had until now claimed as emergency actions for the conduct and
intensification of a global war on terror (including indefinite detention,
among other programs). Toward this end, the United States as the uncon-
tested superpower on the world stage today instrumentalizes an idea of
human freedom as a universal value, and intensifies an administrative and
bureaucratic legality as its rational order to reinforce a politics of war,
terror, and occupation. We therefore find in the passage between liberal
peace and liberal war a ‘‘zone of indistinction,’’ to borrow Giorgio Agam-
ben’s phrase.∂ Because war is no longer finite—no more a violent event ‘‘out
there,’’ but instead a vital presence permeating our everyday—we might say
that the transition between war and peace is rule by multiple and mutable
means. Nor can we yet know this project in its totality (though we know
that there are more refugees, and more deaths, being created through both
war and peace making), especially because we are still caught in the terrible
engines of modernity—perfectibility and progress.
Edward Said observed in the preface to the twenty-fifth anniversary
edition of Orientalism: ‘‘Every single empire in its o≈cial discourse has
said that it is not like all the others, that its circumstances are special, that
it has a mission to enlighten, civilize, bring order and democracy, and that
it uses force only as a last resort.’’∑ The task before us is to theorize the
significant ways in which liberal war and liberal peace as conjoined opera-
tions proceed under the signs of exception and emergency, and which are
neither. Especially with never-ending war on the horizon, it is more cru-
cial than ever to understand how the exception is foundational to liberal
empire, while tropes of transition and timetable in fact prolong the dura-
tion of war, terror, and occupation. How then do we parse the seeming
paradox in which U.S. military interventions are described through benef-
icence and defense, and at the same time demand occupations and dis-
locations of racial, colonial others in the name of the human, through
PREFACE xi
invocations of peace, protection, rights, democracy, freedom, and secu-
rity? I describe the premise of a global power that perceives that its self-
interest is secured by granting to an other the advantage of human free-
dom as the gift of freedom, and it is the purpose of this book not only to
explore some part of the historical emergence of the gift of freedom as a
story about the emergence of U.S. global hegemony from the Cold War in
general, and the hot war in Viet Nam in particular, but also to rethink the
significant collocations of war and peace, bondage and freedom, that
organize contemporary structures of liberalism in an age of empire. Thus,
The Gift of Freedom endeavors to provide a diagnostic of our present in
order to retheorize the terrible press of freedom and its histories unfolding
asymmetrically across the globe through the structures and sensibilities of
modern racial governmentality and liberalism’s empire.∏
In this attempt to engage the past and near future of empire, I argue the
gift of freedom is not simply a ruse for liberal war but its core proposition,
and a particularly apt name for its operations of violence and power. It is
for this reason that this book brings together in the preface’s epigraphs
President George W. Bush’s declaration that ‘‘America’’ leaves not occupy-
ing armies, but constitutions and parliaments, with Aimé Césaire’s obser-
vation that from ‘‘American’’ domination, one never recovers unscarred.
(Half of the world’s refugees today are fleeing from the U.S. wars of
freedom in Iraq and Afghanistan.π) In and against the spirit of a ‘‘new
dawn,’’ The Gift of Freedom follows from the ashes of war to understand
the cumulative repercussions of enduring freedom (the name, of course,
of the U.S. war in Afghanistan), a phrasing that suggests both freedom’s
duration and also duress. From these ashes rises the afterlife of empire as
the promise that presses the moving target into the shape of ‘‘finally’’
human, and as the debt that demands and defers repayment from those
subjects of freedom who are even now emerging from the ruins. This book
is thus addressed to those crisscrossing histories of our presents in order to
reckon with ghosts among us, life after death, the future of life, and more
deaths to come.
xii PREFACE
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
It is perhaps obvious to say that the present work is also a refugee passage,
though the route it follows is long and winding, and has no single origin.
That said, I cannot begin to acknowledge enough the enduring imprint of
my first and most influential interlocutor, Caren Kaplan, whose unfailing
friendship and insight have been crucial for me in forms traceable, and as
yet unfathomable. To her I also owe my greatest debt as a scholar, a debt I
gladly bear into the future. For nearly as long, Inderpal Grewal has been an
encouraging and critical commentator, whose brilliant scholarship and
deep commitment to the field formation of women and gender studies I
hope to honor on my own path. As well, Elaine Kim has been unstinting
with her warm and wise counsel, and her intellectual perspicuity and
professional generosity are an inspiration. I thank Caren, Inderpal, and
Elaine for their ongoing commitment to engage both ethical obligation
and critical inquiry in necessary collaboration with others. What good I
do as a scholar, a colleague, and a teacher, I owe to their examples.
This book’s first incarnations were generously encouraged by May
Joseph and George Yudice during my brief time in the American studies
doctoral program at New York University. Among my cohort there, I recall
with particular fondness Kimberly Johnson, Kristen Elliot Hood, Jerry
Philogene, Alondra Nelson, and especially Thuy Linh Nguyen Tu, who is
both a good friend and a sympathetic collaborator. In the ethnic studies
graduate program at the University of California, Berkeley, I am thankful
for Sau-Ling Wong, whose kindness as a graduate advisor I remember
well; Michael Omi, who greeted my sometimes wild-eyed discourse with
good humor; and Patricia Penn Hilden, whose rigor and conviction that
theory must be made to matter so informed this project. For demonstrat-
ing collegiality and commitment (as well as sharing antics), I thank David
Hernandez, Harriet Skye, Karina Cespedes, Steven Lee, Irene Nexica, Ka-
thy Yep, Mercy Romero, Robert Soza, Matt Richardson, and Oliver Wang.
Vernadette Vicuña Gonzalez in particular is a comrade in arms, and to her
I am beholden not only for her enduring friendship and her insights into
empire, but also the good timing that brought forth at once our completed
dissertations and my beautiful, brilliant goddaughter Inez.
I consider myself lucky to have as my colleagues in the Asian American
Studies Program and the Gender and Women’s Studies Department at the
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, Nancy Abelmann, Teresa
Barnes, C. L. Cole, Augusto Espiritu, Karen Flynn, Stephanie Foote, Sa-
mantha Frost, Pat Gill, Moon-Kie Jung, Susan Koshy, Esther Lee, Vicki
Maha√ey, Martin F. Manalansan IV, Cris Mayo, Erik McDu≈e, Chantal
Nadeau, Lisa Nakamura, Kent Ono, Yoon Pak, Sarah Projansky, Junaid
Rana, Siohban Somerville, Sharra Vostral, and Caroline Yang. Among
other colleagues across the colleges, I am also glad for Susan Becker, Jodi
Byrd, Isabel Molina-Guzman, Edna Viruell-Fuentes, and Deke Weaver.
Without the dedicated sta√, I would be much poorer at this labor. My
thanks to Jennifer Chung, Mary Ellerbe, Viveka Kudaligama, and Piavanh
Sengsavanh in Asian American Studies, and Jacque Kahn, Virginia Swi-
sher, and April Thomas in Gender and Women’s Studies. I received gen-
erous support as an Andrew Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow at the Rackham
School of Graduate Studies and Women’s Studies at the University of
Michigan, Ann Arbor. There, my o≈ce mate, Melanie Boyd, o√ered both
good humor and lively conversation during this initial foray into the
Midwest. Other support for this project was generously provided by mul-
tiple grants from the Research Board at the University of Illinois and the
Asian American Studies Consortium of the Committee for Institutional
Cooperation, which funded a manuscript workshop at the University of
Illinois. Kandice Chuh and Laura Hyun Yi Kang generously read drafts
and provided both scrupulously attentive comments and much-needed
encouragement at a critical juncture.
As academics we cast wide nets, and though I am separated from some
friends and colleagues by long distances, I appreciate those things—times,
meals, ideas—we share. Many of the Asian American studies postdoctoral
fellows at the University of Illinois have kept company with me during the
years, and I often wish I could gather them closer now, including Naomi
Paik and Bianca Isaki, who both spent time with parts of this manuscript,
and the backyard grill; and Kimberly Alidio, Victor Mendoza, Cynthia
Marasigan, and Elda Tsou, who all provided glad fellowship and occa-
sional chocolates on the second floor. Kirstie Dorr and Sara Clark Kaplan
xiv ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
brought Berkeley to Champaign for a brief time, and Minh-Ha Pham,
with whom I coauthor Threadbared, is my partner in new feminist pub-
lics. I thank as well Vivek Bald, Toby Beauchamp, Cynthia Degnan, Chris-
tina Hanhardt, Yumi Lee, Nhi Lieu, L. J. Martin, Mike Masatsugu, Golnar
Nikpour, Erica Rand, Beth Stinson, and Craig Willse for cerebral and
subcultural camaraderie. Lauren Berlant, David Eng, Minoo Moallem,
Louisa Schein, and Jennifer Terry o√er kind words and encouragement
whenever our paths cross one another’s. Among my former undergradu-
ate students, Stephanie Murphy and Elizabeth Verklan together broke the
mold. Far-flung friend and collaborator Mariam Beevi Lam never fails to
impress me with her agile mind, and to her I am thankful for unstinting
support and buoyant good humor.
Many others shared with me their love and friendship during the years of
writing this book. During graduate school, the Maximumrocknroll com-
pound was a second home, and I am grateful for the crucial reminder that
we can do it ourselves. Whether green-taping records, hauling bulk mail
bundles, or just hanging out at the house or show, Arwen Curry has ever
been an incisive and imaginative interlocutor on matters intellectual, polit-
ical, fantastical, musical. Mark Murrmann has been a stalwart friend for
road trips, pinball marathons, and rock ’n’ roll. Jennifer Allen, a fellow
traveler, taught me invaluable lessons in generous self-care and graceful
movement through a sometimes-wearying world. And, to the countless
friends whose fierce passions and politics continue to inspire me, I say, ‘‘Up
the punks!’’
Among my colleagues I also found good friends whose generosity and
goodwill sustain me. While this list of their virtues is necessarily partial,
nonetheless I wish to thank Stephen Hocker for devastating desserts and sly
jokes; Dustin Allred for an impeccable aesthetic and wry disposition;
Mireya Loza for thrifting adventures and bumping it freestyle; Ian Sprandel
for glad fellowship in nerddom; Ruth Nicole Brown for her strength of
spirit and commitment to girl genius; David Coyoca for late-night rumina-
tions on human natures and postcolonial fictions; Isabel Molina-Guzman
for her openhanded counsel as well as her boundless compassion; Lisa
Marie Cacho for her ethical compass and horticultural aptitude; and Soo
Ah Kwon for an even-keeled outlook and unwavering solidarity. I must also
thank the small people, including Max for sharing so generously with me
chocolate cake and butter chicken, Blake for bookending our workdays
with his sly smile and mischief making, and Luciano for brightening the last
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xv
days of copyedits with his elemental presence. Last, but not at all least, I am
grateful to Yutian Wong, who is a paragon for her buoyant, savvy intel-
ligence in all things.
Ken Wissoker has been a tireless champion of this manuscript from its
earliest incarnations, even when I was not. To him I extend heartfelt
gratitude for editorial guidance and support. At various stages, Anitra
Grisales, Mandy Earley, Jade Brooks, and Mark Mastromarino provided
cheerful, calming navigation through the labyrinthine publishing process.
Beth Stinson and Rachel Lauren Storm rescued me during panicked mo-
ments and completed the bibliography and endnotes with good cheer.
Hong-An Truong generously provided me with stills from Explosions in
the Sky and permission to reproduce them, while Hellen Jo illustrated so
well the beautiful, but oh-so sinister, presence on this book’s paperback
cover. I also thank the two anonymous readers at Duke University Press
for their insightful reviews and concomitant belief in this manuscript, and
the Next Wave series editors, Inderpal Grewal, Caren Kaplan, and Robyn
Wiegman, for accepting me to their roster.
From my parents, Hiep and Lien Nguyen, I received unwavering love and
unconditional, if sometimes worried, support for their wayward daughter.
From their example, I learned at a young age to push for more than what is
given, and to protect that which is truly important. The consequences at
times caused them concern, but these gifts are how I understand what I am
to do each day. To them, I will always be indebted, which is no doubt just
what they intended. The generous and steadfast friendship of my brother
and oldest ally, George, has sustained me through every stage of my jour-
ney, and this project. Gina Fan is the kindest sister-in-law I could hope for,
welcoming me whenever my wandering heart brings me home. Though we
share no blood, Iraya Robles is the soul sister of my heart, and our almost
twenty-year-old friendship is a source of constant renewal and pleasure.
Smallest but hardly least among those closest to me, Morton always knows
my need for an enormous cat to sit on my hands or chest, or to accompany
me when I take a turn around the room.
Fiona I. B. Ngô is my heart. The passage that brought me through the
final writing of the book and beyond would not have been possible with-
out her love, her luminous insight. There are not enough songs for her,
but I will sing them all.
xvi ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
INTRODUCTION
Los Angeles—Madalenna Lai arrived on U.S. soil in May ∞Ωπ∑ after fleeing the
Communist takeover of Vietnam in a boat and staying in a Guam refugee camp.
She was ≥∂, penniless and the sole provider for four children, all younger
than ∞≠.
Lai quickly created a career for herself, starting beauty shops in El Monte and
then in Pomona before opening a cosmetology school in Pomona. She raised her
children by herself, although she jokes that at some point some of her children
began raising her.
The Vietnamese refugee sees the life she has cultivated in the United States as
a gift from the people and country that adopted her, she said. In ∞ΩΩ≥, she
decided to thank as many of them as she could and let the world know how
grateful she is.
On New Year’s Day she will do just that to a worldwide television audience
estimated at ≥∑≠ million people and an audience along the parade route of ∞.∑
million. Amid the floral pomp of the Tournament of Roses will come Lai’s version
of a thank-you card: a fully bedecked parade float that suggests the story of the
boat people like her who left Vietnam by sea.
In a year in which the Rose Parade is expected to be awash with red, white
and blue patriotism—plus University of Nebraska red—Lai’s Vietnam-themed
float will carry a simple message from an immigrant: ‘‘Thank you America and the
world.’’
— TIPTON BLISH, Los Angeles Times
This is not an analytics of truth; it will concern what might be called an ontology
of the present, an ontology of ourselves.
— MICHEL FOUCAULT, ‘‘The Art of Telling the Truth’’
On a clear January morning in Pasadena, a fishing boat in the form of a
golden bird made of a hundred thousand flowers washed ashore. Floating
along a boulevard lined with celebrants, the boat carried refugees to the
new world, bearing with them a message of love: ‘‘Thank You America and
the World.’’ Two tales surface alongside this particular boat—the chronicle
of a refugee grandmother and her profuse gratitude, and the more un-
canny story about its making. Fleeing the war-torn country on a small
fishing boat; raising her four young children alone in a new world, while
her husband remained behind, and missing, for an interminable decade—
throughout the long years, the first story goes, Madalenna Lai not only
endures but triumphs. Now a prosperous entrepreneur operating beauty
salons and a cosmetology school, she wishes to show her appreciation to
‘‘America’’ (and, as an afterthought, ‘‘the world’’) for the gift of her life, her
freedom.∞ For years, Lai had solicited donations in front of local Viet-
namese supermarkets and in door-to-door encounters, even going so far
as to sacrifice her hard-earned wealth in order to convey her gratitude
with the sumptuous, spectacular beauty that America made possible. In
interviews she enthuses: ‘‘I think this country looks like heaven. I have
peace of mind. I didn’t have to worry about the people being unfair.’’≤
‘‘The more I see of this country the more I feel I have to say thank you.
This is a country of freedom and human rights.’’≥ ‘‘The United States
opened her arms to me and my children. We no longer went hungry and
my kids received a good education. I told myself after my children finished
school and I reunited with my husband, I would give my life to thank
America.’’∂
Her gratefulness invites us to consider a second tale, about the powers
through which a benevolent empire bestows on an other freedom. In Lai’s
words, we find all the good and beautiful things the gift claims as its conse-
quence—the right to have rights, the choice of life direction, the improve-
ment of body and mind, the opportunity to prosper—against a spectral
future of their nonexistence, under communism, under terror. That she is
rescued from such psychic death through the gift of freedom as a promise
of care encodes a benign, rational story about the United States as the
uncontested superpower on the world stage today. But the gift of freedom
also discloses for us liberalism’s innovations of empire, the frisson of
freedom and violence that decisively collude for same purposes—not just
because the gift of freedom opens with war and death, but also because it
may obscure those other powers that, through its giving, conceive and
2 INTRODUCTION
shape life. So I begin with a story in which we are invited to know the
refugee’s sorrow, and her indebtedness for its cure, in order to tell us
something meaningful about the genealogies of liberal powers that under-
gird the twinned concerns of this scene: the gift of freedom and the debt
that follows. The present work considers this twofold nature by posing
these questions: How is this act of thankfulness, and all that it implies
about the gift and its giving, a problem of imperial remains? What special
significance does this act carry from a refugee, especially this refugee from
that tarnished war of American ambition? Why are we—those of us who
have received this precious, poisonous gift of freedom—obliged to thank?
What powers oblige us?
One significant challenge to theorizing the powers of liberal empire is the
elasticity of its terms. The coupling of empire with the assumed scenes of
liberalism—human self-possession as the property and precondition for
freedom, especially as the consciousness to act, to enter into contract with
others—has led to triumphant claims to an exceptional power, through
which the tolerant collectivity of the well governed bears a grave duty to
ease the su√ering and unhappiness of others. The contemporary political
life of this empire often goes by the name the gift of freedom, a world-
shaping concept describing struggles aimed at freeing peoples from unen-
lightened forms of social organization through fields of power and vio-
lence. This altruistic self-concept has long been under siege, of course. (As
we well know, the crucible of the United States, christened by Thomas Jef-
ferson as an ‘‘empire of liberty,’’∑ is conquest and captivity.) Noam Chom-
sky, a rigorous critic of the U.S. wars in Southeast Asia, sco√s, ‘‘When
precisely did the United States try to help the South Vietnamese choose
their own form of government and social order? As soon as such questions
are posed, the absurdity becomes evident.’’∏ So critics of our present mo-
ment, wrought through the exception to encompass indefinite detention,
brutal torture, and incalculable death, regard with incredulity and outrage
the gift of freedom that purports to refute the lethal nature of empire. But
the now-familiar ‘‘disclosure’’ that the gift of freedom is an insubstantial
ruse for what might be called a liberal way of war, both then and especially
now, has scarcely attenuated invocations of freedom as an intuition, and an
at-times blunt instrument, for the disposition of hope and despair, life and
death.π The idea of the gift of freedom therefore may capture something
more than bad faith and falsehood, but indeed, an ever-expanding crisis of
confusions and conflicts around the ethics and assemblages of liberal
4 INTRODUCTION
where, fearful of the regime to come. Multitudes fled over land or by sea,
and of these many fell to brigands or starvation or despair; those who
chanced the perilous voyage on the open water were colloquially dubbed
boat people. This harrowing tale takes a fantastical turn decades later, as a
humble fishing boat is transformed into a mythical bird, ferrying her
passengers to an Eden of abundance and awesome beauty. As refugee-
cum-happy-citizen, Madalenna Lai is similarly converted in the encounter
with America, but because the gift of freedom secures her life in multiple
dimensions—its preservation, convenience, and pleasure—her debt comes
through as literally monumental. Particularly meaningful, then, in these
accounts is their economy of arguably impossible equivalence. On the one
hand, all that Lai gains through her freedom is coupled with all that she
waives in recompense: she sells her home, she invests all her ‘‘free’’ time,
and still (she confesses) she cannot hope to acquit her debt. On the other
hand, this nonequivalence is ‘‘proper,’’ since the philosophical and politi-
cal truth of freedom is paradoxically beyond value. Such impossible calcu-
lations (enduring debt for all that is given) haunt the reception of this
refugee’s homage: ‘‘You’re welcome!’’∞≤
I begin with the particular optimism of this figure of the Vietnamese
refugee, not to recoup a di√erent story about her arrival, but to inquire
about the powers that promise her freedom and demand an enduring
consciousness of her debt. In doing so, I focus on the subject of freedom as
an object of knowledge and a critical methodology that discloses for us the
assemblages and powers through which liberal empire orders the world.∞≥
Each chapter addresses those refugee figurations that do not just indict
imperial powers as premised on devastating violence, but that also ema-
nate through beauty, through love, through hope—in short, the promise
to life—as equally world-making powers, thus allowing us critical pur-
chase on the protracted nature of liberal imperial formations found in
both ‘‘minor’’ and major events and encounters.∞∂ Especially because
structures of race and coloniality, as well as organizing forms of gender
and sexuality, are at the center of this simultaneous promise and duress—
granting access to some intensities of happiness and virtue while imped-
ing others—the gift of freedom emerges as a site at which modern govern-
mentality and its politics of life (and death) unfolds as a universal history
of the human, and the figuration of debt surfaces as those imperial re-
mains that preclude the subject of freedom from being able to escape a
colonial order of things.
6 INTRODUCTION
critiques, then, I observe that the dual character of freedom as the de-
velopment of capacities and the intensification of power, to draw from
Foucault once again,∞π has ever operated as a global-historical project of
modernity hinged upon structures of race and coloniality, and through
which liberalism’s empire unfolds across the globe through promises to
secure it for others.
The Gift and Freedom As so many others have understood before, the gift
is a great and terrible thing. The counterintuitive continuities between gift
and appropriation, giving and taking, have long preoccupied anthropolo-
gists, linguists, and philosophers.∞∫ For the purposes of this book, I am
drawn to, and depart from, the concept of the gift as articulated by Der-
rida (in response to Marcel Mauss) as the impossible. The aporia of giving
can be condensed as follows: the gift as the transfer of a possession from
one to another shapes a relation between giver and recipient that en-
genders a debt, which is to say that the gift belongs to an economy that
voids its openhanded nature. ‘‘For there to be [genuine] gift,’’ Derrida
acidly observes, ‘‘there must be no reciprocity, return, exchange, counter-
gift, or debt.’’∞Ω For there to be gift, the giver cannot recognize that he or
she is giving, because to do so would subsume the gift as testimonial to the
self who gives so generously, and the recipient cannot know who is giving,
lest he or she be obliged to reciprocate in equal or greater measure.≤≠ The
gift thus is annulled by consciousness of the gift as being or appearing a
gift, by anything that proposes equivalence or recompense, because pure
gift must not demand commensurability or otherwise calculative reason-
ing. This gift that is not an entirely gratuitous gesture is instead an aporia,
through which the gift conveys these conditions of possibility and impos-
sibility, and that is also the issuance of its power. Derrida notes of the gift’s
capacities, ‘‘one may say as readily ‘to give a gift’ as ‘to give a blow’ [donner
un coup], ‘to give life’ [donner la vie] as ‘to give death’ [donner la mort ].’’≤∞
He elaborates further:
8 INTRODUCTION
other to continuous subjection.) We can observe here that in the first
mode through which the gift of freedom functions, the gift stages the
circulation of persons and things (in the case of war, troops and arma-
ments) to bind a relation of giver and recipient across the globe. In the
second, duration and deferral take on deep resonance as concepts of time
in which what is given here—that is, sovereignty, freedom, virtue—is al-
ways ‘‘to come’’ because the debt extends endlessly. It is on these grounds
that the gift is not just an alibi of power but the first conceptual wedge that
pries open the arguments of this book.
The second is freedom, one of the most common multitudinous con-
cepts with which critics have long labored because freedom is so com-
plexly bound to notions of human nature and questions of justice. For
example, Hegel writes, ‘‘No idea is so generally recognized as indefinite,
ambiguous, and open to the greatest misconceptions (to which therefore
it actually falls victim) as the idea of Freedom: none in common currency
with so little appreciation of its meaning.’’≤∑ Kant presents freedom as
nothing less than the ‘‘keystone of the whole architecture of the system of
pure reason,’’ while Jean-Luc Nancy observes that freedom might be expe-
rienced as ‘‘thing, force, and gaze.’’≤∏ These remarks, proliferating ever-
widening questions rather than answers, are nonetheless useful for reck-
oning with freedom as a radical plurality, or at least seemingly limitless in
its workings. Indeed, we might propose that with freedom, presumably all
is given.
Though freedom is often surmised to be the end of a universal evolution
of consciousness, and all human life believed to harbor a desire for free-
dom, freedom is not already everywhere. For these reasons, liberalism as a
practice, a principle, and a method for the rationalization of the exercise of
government claims at its heart freedom as the reference for its politics, as
power’s problem. In the lectures collected as The Birth of Biopolitics, Fou-
cault suggests that liberalism is a consumer of freedom, ‘‘inasmuch as it can
only function as a number of freedoms actually exist: freedom of the mar-
ket, freedom to buy and sell, the free exercise of property rights, freedom of
discussion, possible freedom of expression, and so on. The new govern-
mental reason needs freedom therefore, the new art of government con-
sumes freedom. It consumes freedom, which means that it must produce it.
It must produce it, it must organize it.’’≤π Accordingly, Foucault observes,
‘‘So, freedom in the regime of liberalism is not a given, it is not a ready-
made region which has to be respected, or if it is, it is so only partially,
10 INTRODUCTION
enclosure as a precondition for rational action and contract with like oth-
ers, including wage labor, marriage, and family deemed the most natural of
such forms, through which possessive ownership is perceived as a historical
necessity for human freedom. As Lisa Lowe succinctly observes, drawing on
Hegel’s original formulations: ‘‘Through property the condition of pos-
sibility of human self-possession—of one’s body, interiority, and life direc-
tion—is established.’’≥≤ But in this and other accounts, liberal theories mea-
sure and manufacture freedom for the human person and society in terms
that also presuppose the alienability of the self—or dispossession. Thus, we
might grasp the abstraction of human freedom as a property—both as
capacity and capital—as the necessary ground for ethical interactions with
others and its profound consequences. Ideas of gender, race, and colo-
niality are central to these assumed scenes of liberalism, and to the global
empires that found liberalism’s emergence.
This productive encounter between these critical genealogies helps us not
to dismiss the experience of the gift of freedom as a ruse, or revert to the
very terms that are under scrutiny, in the hope that an ideal presence might
lie elsewhere. (As Chandan Reddy observes, ‘‘the unevenness in the mean-
ing of freedom’’—an unevenness that nevertheless establishes features in
common, alongside failures in application—fueled so many twentieth-
century struggles and revolutionary movements.≥≥) Bringing together Der-
rida and Foucault now, we chance on an uncanny, semantic plurality be-
tween ‘‘to give’’ and ‘‘to govern.’’ Foucault further registers ‘‘to govern’’
multiply, as ‘‘to conduct someone,’’ in the spiritual sense of the government
of souls; ‘‘to impose a regimen,’’ in the form of command or control that
one might exercise over oneself or another, ‘‘body, soul and behavior’’; or
‘‘to an intercourse, to a circular process or process of exchange between
one individual or another.’’ We might well consider that ‘‘to give’’ holds
these same powers and properties in hand, through obligation and recom-
pense.≥∂ Indeed, and as I elaborate throughout the book, it is precisely in
their crisscrossing compulsions we find the measures of the ‘‘ ‘too little’
existing freedom,’’ ‘‘ ‘even more’ freedom demanded,’’ and ‘‘all is given,’’
setting liberalism’s empire in motion.
We also learn from this unfaithful passage through Derrida and Fou-
cault, bringing us to the work of postcolonial and other critics, that the gift
of freedom does not merely replicate liberal subjectivization, even if we are
to understand freedom as a rationale of government, and as the develop-
ment of capacities and the intensification of powers, for all persons. These
The Subjects of Freedom What, then, is the gift of freedom? For our
purposes of this book, we can begin to understand it as an assemblage of
liberal political philosophies, regimes of representation, and structures of
enforcement that measure and manufacture freedom and its others. To
elaborate further: where the attachment to freedom appears an intuitive,
universal issue, the implementation of its measure as such (as an absolute
value) conceives, and consolidates, fields of knowledge and power whose
function lies in the idea that freedom’s presence cannot manifest in the
present of some peoples and spaces for whom it is currently absent, and
that produces a regime of control and interference that provides and
defers its substantiation for an indefinite time. In the terms of our discus-
sion, the attachment to freedom and its implementation through gift
giving are therefore precisely the forms through which the encounter with
the racial, colonial other can be appropriated, through an existing con-
tinuity with imperial discourse, into liberal empire.
Consider the example of President Harry Truman’s 1949 inaugural ad-
dress that proposed a four-point program for ensuring the liberty and
prosperity of the United States and the world. Revisiting some of the
tenets from his 1947 address that set forth the so-called Truman Doctrine
(including the stratagem of containment, discussed in the first chapter),
Truman unequivocally places the United States against coloniality, and
‘‘that false philosophy of Communism.’’ He grieves that so many of the
world’s peoples su√er, often ‘‘in conditions approaching misery. Their
food is inadequate. They are victims of disease. Their economic life is
primitive and stagnant. Their poverty is a handicap and a threat both to
12 INTRODUCTION
them and to more prosperous areas.’’≥∑ As the final point in his four-point
program, Truman pledged to share technical knowledge and skills with
such miserable peoples in so-called primitive places to aid and assist in
their development:
This historic speech is less an origin story than an immensely useful cluster-
ing of the concepts and targets that underwrite the gift of freedom. Such
that the hope to unite all the world’s peoples under the signs of universal
virtue are at the heart of liberalism’s empire, the gift of freedom calls for the
realignment of heterogeneous social forms of organization with abstract
categories and properties, rendered natural, ine√able, and inalienable, but
also objectified, calculable, and exchangeable—in one form, as an example,
we know them as human rights. Freedom therefore replicates other com-
mitments, other investments—in American imperium or liberal capital,
for instance, which also goes by the names of democracy and development
—rendered analogous to liberty and prosperity for all. But especially clear
because this speech preceded imminent war in Korea and what was then
Indochina, such ambitions to sovereignty and virtue—truth, social health,
compassion, freedom, abundance, beauty—are realized through the alibi of
the wanting other, the negative image. Truman’s speech is concerned with
this other’s desire and its education for freedom, ‘‘implanted within (un-
derdeveloped) subjectivity,’’ as María Josefina Saldaña-Portillo notes, and
14 INTRODUCTION
peoples to the outside) remain foundational to its project. In this sense,
the gift of freedom introduces a vexing problem both as judgment and
solution. In the carving out and delimiting of areas of social existence and
belonging, the gift of freedom is normative, as a means of making other
ways of being in the world appear to be insecure, illegible, inadequate,
illegal, and illiberal, and it is also instrumental as a means of partitioning
the world into spaces commensurate or incommensurate, comparable
and incomparable, with the rule of liberalism, which thus require certain
forms of action, or force, to manufacture freedom. In doing so, the gift of
freedom inevitably calculates and coheres an ordered taxonomy of what is
deemed necessary for human being, a movement that stretches from the
loss or absence of certain properties, such as reason and rights, into the
often brutal achievement of the conditions for their possibilities in the
future.∂∂ As a promise to freedom-loving peoples that refits structures of
race and coloniality, even as this promise registers these structures as a
political a√ront, the gift of freedom gives imperial reason new life, and
more time. The postcolonial or anticolonial unease with such dreams of
sovereignty and virtue thus derives from both the coordinates of such a
promise and their practicable implementation. As Lila Abu-Lughod warns
of another war engaged for the gift’s delivery: ‘‘When you save someone,
you imply that you are saving her from something. You are also saving her
to something. What violences are entailed in this transformation, and
what presumptions are being made about the superiority of that to which
you are saving her?’’∂∑
The injurious properties of freedom are well documented in the com-
plicity between philosophical discourses of human consciousness and
metaphysics of racial and sexual di√erence since the Enlightenment. In-
truding here is the brutal history of violence operating—insidiously and in-
sistently—through the instrumentalization of colonial cartographies and
racial classifications that sort and grade stages of human being. These car-
tographies and classification schemata are central to the genealogy of hu-
man freedom, not exceptional to it. Liberalism hypostatizes areas in which
we find freedom and unfreedom, and it shapes a politics of knowledge
about those persons or places with di√erentiated access or acclimation to
freedom that are symptomatic of other measures—of cultural di√erence,
technical competence, or a nonbiological, but nonetheless evolutionary,
sociology of race—that mark out anew the racial, colonial other. If we think
again of Truman’s atlas of enlightened obligation, naming those ‘‘under-
16 INTRODUCTION
alism’s empire is also distinctly new. While wrought through concepts of
historicism and teleology that comprehend history as the actualization of
an ideal presence, which here goes by the name of human freedom, the gift
of freedom presumes to knowingly anticipate and manufacture this present
and presence through liberalism as the rational course of human progress
and historical and political transformation. Putting it another way, one in
which a colonialist sharing of time is ‘‘not given but must be accomplished
[and can be denied],’’ as Rey Chow cites and builds on Fabian, suggestively
hints to us that the liberalist distinction is this given time, which of course
brings us again to Derrida, who notes of the gift that what it gives is time.∑∞
The provocations of given time as liberalist alibi are therefore multiple. If
we return to the linear, evolutionary view of colonialism, given time might
refer to a deterministic understanding of time that forecloses the future.
But given time also names the liberalist power to set and speed up the
timetable—the timetable for progress through known processes or discrete
stages toward freedom as the achievement of modernity. In other words,
the gift is among other things a gift of time: time for the subject of freedom
to resemble or ‘‘catch up to’’ the modern observer, to accomplish what can
be anticipated in a preordained future, whether technological progress,
productive capacity, or rational government. But the invitation to coeval-
ity also imposes violence—including a politics of comparison, homoge-
nous time, and other commensurabilities—through the intervention (a
war, or development) that rescues history for those peoples stalled or
suspended in time. We could say that the gift of freedom aims to perfect
the civilizing mission.
But the gift of freedom also eclipses the scope of colonialism inasmuch
as its claims to universality (through which liberty and prosperity are the
due and desire of all) are precisely the mandate of liberal empire to address
its powers to all peoples. The liberalist alibi of given freedom thus revolu-
tionizes imperial discourse and opens up histories of racial, colonial pow-
ers for regimes of subjection but also subjectivization, through which
persons are actuated as free—to contract their labor, to educate their
desire, for instance. What then does it mean for a racial, colonial other to
‘‘finally’’ possess freedom? How can it be that the possibility of ‘‘owning’’
freedom is worth everything and nothing? These questions return us to
Derrida and Foucault, who configure for us the gift of freedom in terms of
a di√erential (found in ‘‘ ‘too little’ existing freedom’’ and ‘‘ ‘even more’
freedom demanded’’); a di√erential, furthermore, that administers the gift
18 INTRODUCTION
remainder of its absence—this trace may be called race or gender, among
other names, and does not subside with the passage of time.
Another name for this trace is debt, first as those properties that are
provisionally held and in constant danger of suspension, and second as
the duration of the past as continuous subjection. For Derrida, ‘‘there
where there is gift, there is time. What it gives, the gift, is time, but this gift
is also a demand of time. The thing must not be restituted immediately
and right away.’’∑∑ Especially because the gift of freedom is the promise of
human being in time, and is hence the gift that keeps on giving, the debt it
imposes (both power over and power over time) troubles the recipient far
into the foreseeable future. To be freed, as Hartman remarks, is to be a
debtor forever. The nature of this duration is also twofold. The debt first
requires the perseverance of anachronism, the trace of what was once
absent, and second imposes the onus to recompense the spirit of the gift to
the one who gives.∑∏ (Of the former, we might further observe that debt is
the echo of what Lim lyrically calls ‘‘immiscible times’’—‘‘multiple times
that never quite dissolve into the code of modern time consciousness,
discrete temporalities incapable of attaining homogeneity with or full
incorporation into a uniform chronological present.’’∑π) In this way, the
gift sits alongside debt as the subject of freedom’s absolute condition of
existence. Made to desire a presumably complex personhood that cir-
cumscribes agency and consciousness as autonomous and self-governing,
while bound indefinitely to those particularities of race or gender that are
traces of his or her debt, the subject of freedom is obliged persistently,
without possessing fully, a liberal ideal. Turning once again to Derrida’s
given time, what is given is time to diminish—but never to close—the
distance between the anachronism and the modern, and time to linger
under the lengthening shadow of debt. This dilemma might also be
phrased: They will never be like us; they can never catch up. If duration is
the condition of subjectivity—or, as Lim observes, ‘‘an ever accumulating
ontological memory that is wholly, automatically, and ceaselessly pre-
served’’∑∫ —debt requires an open register on which anachronism or ab-
sence is inscribed forever.
On the one hand, then, a truth of the gift of freedom lies in value as ex-
change. Although freedom has so often claimed an exemption from crass
political maneuvering, freedom defined as a universal virtue regularizes an
equivalency between its constituent parts (bourgeois interiority, constitu-
20 INTRODUCTION
following: I am going to produce what you need to be free. I am going to
see to it that you are free to be free.’’∏≤
For these reasons, the other side of the coin—that the gift of freedom is
incidental to the exercise of power to kill others—is equally not true. The
gift of freedom is no mere excuse or authorizing ruse, and even if it were,
recall Derrida’s prescient caution: ‘‘Even if the gift were never anything but
a simulacrum, one must still render an account of the possibility of this
simulacrum and of the desire that impels toward this simulacrum.’’∏≥
Moreover, war is only the most spectacular form through which empire
grants freedom. Once again, the semantic plurality of the concepts that
present themselves as either gift or freedom (and the multiple apparatuses
that secure them, including but not restricted to state forms) are here
precisely the origin of their power, their politics of life.∏∂ No comparison
may seem possible between the expenditure of lives and resources in
combat operations; nation building in the form of contractual economies
and democratic polities; displacement and encampment in the name of
sanctuary; economic development by international aid and agencies as the
capitalization of resources and productive capacity; the dissemination and
discipline of expert knowledges about hygiene, health, and ‘‘right living’’;
and even witness to evil, as kinds of exchange, but these are in fact collo-
cated in the calculations of freedom all the time.∏∑ Nor are these distinct
from the gift of being, which is both a philosophical statement about an
experience of the world and also a social practice for the development of
capacities and structures of feeling (such as chosen sociality or lavish
beauty) comprising a will to subjectivity by another’s power. While distin-
guishing between these political, ethical, and economic forms is crucial,
nonetheless it is this conceptual multitude, with its confusion of categories
and crises of referentiality, that invests the gift of freedom with its tremen-
dous power. For all these reasons, the gift of freedom compels us to think
in terms other than calculation, contradiction, or comparison in order to
see beyond ideal presence. This requires holding a multitudinous concept
of the gift of freedom as a property presumed to bear a particular shape or
dimension, nevertheless unfolding through time and space as the di√use
transmission of power from empire to other that can suddenly, violently—
but also slowly, lovingly—seize control over life and death.
The Gift of Freedom thus haunts empire, not just with mournful ghosts
but also with beautiful visions.∏∏ The task of this book is not to peer
Refugee Passages
To create the new American out of the pipe dream of ‘‘We, the People,’’ or out of
the bogus concept of the world’s policeman, or to give democratic ideals a kind
of moral luck is to forget the violence at the origin.
— GAYATRI CHAKRAVORTY SPIVAK, ‘‘Acting Bits/Identity Talk’’
It is with these concerns in mind that The Gift of Freedom identifies the
war in Viet Nam—and Southeast Asia more generally—as a particularly
pressing and durable event to query what messages of power are transmit-
ted through the gift of freedom. As the Cold War United States christened
Viet Nam (though of course the war trespassed throughout Southeast
Asia) the key theater for the Asian conflict with communism (a proxy, as it
were, for the Soviet Union), we find the simultaneous emergence of mod-
ern forms of state power and biopolitics that inherit colonial and imperial
schema, including those historicisms that order human life and freedom
through stratum and asymmetry but that also mediate between liberal
imaginaries of the good and the true, those things that enliven compassion
and beauty, and liberal structures of government, including contractual
economies, democratic politics, and chosen sociality. That is, in this his-
torical moment a modern paradigm for liberal government and empire
emerges, codified in the 1948 un Universal Declaration of Human Rights
22 INTRODUCTION
preamble (which begins: ‘‘whereas recognition of the inherent dignity and
of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is
the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world’’∏π), through
which freedom is calculable, and hence subject to maximization and se-
curitization by freedom-loving peoples that they may promise and pro-
duce, according to need and want, new configurations of the global order
of things. Underwriting this declaration, which is also a directive, are
arrangements of intuitive and institutional knowledges establishing that
no one is free unless all are free. We might abridge these knowledges as all
peoples wish to be free and one is free under liberal government. As the
defender of the ‘‘free’’ capitalist world, then, the United States during the
Cold War justified its campaigns throughout Asia in response to anti-
colonial struggles and decolonization movements where those struggles
and movements rendered those places deficient in proper governance and
disqualified from the rights of sovereignty, and hence susceptible to oc-
cupation and control by other powers.∏∫ As I elaborate in the first chapter,
the war in Viet Nam and its aftermath illumine for us the conditions of
possibility that structurally link new forms of action with emerging con-
figurations of violence and power, in which managing the ‘‘crisis’’ of the
human requires the mobilization of both armies and aid.
The refugee figure from this war is subject to the gift twice over. In the
first instance as an object of intervention in the Cold War, and in the
second as an object of deliverance in the aftermath of military defeat, the
gift of freedom suspends the distinctions between those processes that play
out in former colonies and those that appear at the imperial centers.
Throughout April 1975, the United States marshaled its battered forces to
protect and preserve what could be from a disastrous war. The Defense
and State Departments evacuated hundreds of thousands of Saigonese
denizens and displaced persons from around the country and encamped
these refugees at military bases throughout the Pacific archipelago, where
foregoing wars had established imperial outposts, and the U.S. mainland.
On May 23, 1975, the U.S. Congress, at the urging of President Gerald Ford,
passed the Indochina Migration and Refugee Assistance Act, granting
refugees from South Viet Nam and Cambodia unprecedented large-scale
entry to, and residence in, the United States. Coordinating both state and
civilian institutions, these operations were auspiciously dubbed New Life
and New Arrivals, presumably that which is given to the subject of free-
dom. In the decades that followed, the United States granted asylum to
24 INTRODUCTION
luck as well as violence at its origin, through its spectacularizations in other
such refugee figurations and imperial remains.
This book focuses not on objects that are lost and must be recovered,
such as subjectivity or sovereignty, though these objects might be other-
wise understood in these terms. Instead, in pursuing what Yen Le Espiritu
has dubbed a ‘‘critical refugee studies,’’π∑ each chapter focuses on a figura-
tion of this refugee’s reception of these objects, those properties of free-
dom, to get at something significant about the imperial forms and forces
that endure beyond the cessation of military intervention and occupa-
tion.π∏ It is without a doubt an understatement to observe at this stage that
the refugee is no simple figure. A historical event, a legal classification, an
existential condition of suspension or surrender (Agamben understands
the refugee as ‘‘nothing less than a limit concept’’ππ), and a focal point for
rescue or rehabilitation, the refugee figure is mired in complicated and
ever emerging matrices and crises of referentiality within political as well
as ontological processes of signification and subjectivization.π∫ This book
focuses on the impact of some of these figurations of crisis, connecting a
series of specific events and conditions in a time and a place to implicate
the Enlightenment project of modern liberal humanism, now mobilizing
the gift of freedom as a system for reordering the world. As I demonstrate
in what follows, the gift of freedom helps us to map those other forms and
forces that include mutable measures of a human person and his or her
self-possession; greater or lesser calculations of partial sovereignty and
ambiguous rights; and certainly the manufacture of sentiments and struc-
tures of feeling within and between empire’s subjects as part of imperial
statecraft, including gratefulness for the gift, and forgiveness for those
trespasses that are the sometimes unfortunate ‘‘error’’ in its giving. Thus,
even as declarations of reciprocity obscure the violence of liberalism’s
powers (for example, the letter from a minor government functionary at
the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migra-
tion to Madalenna Lai that praises her due diligence in honoring her debt
in the spirit of the gift, through which being free also denotes forms of
right living), they also aim to a≈rm the desire for freedom and the course
of its development, under liberalism’s empire. Each chapter considers
some part of this refugee’s passages—or, more precisely, the uncanny story
of those passages as a movement from subjection to subjectivity, and the
poisonous promise of this movement. In doing so, as Fiona Ngô puts so
26 INTRODUCTION
time, alerting us to the confluence of colonial schema with liberalist inno-
vation in those disciplining intents and powers that target the new friend
in wartime and the refugee in the aftermath, to induct him or her to the
truth of freedom. In doing so, this chapter considers multiple analytical
concerns, first through the temporalizing concept of transition as liberal-
ism’s di√erence from brutish coloniality, and second through the trau-
matic diagnostic of the refugee condition as di√erence from crude racial-
ization. In elaborating further on these passages from war to refuge, I turn
to Timothy Linh Bui’s Green Dragon, a refugee camp melodrama set at a
Marine Corps base in Southern California, and in particular to the two
incidents of violence it portrays—the first being the aerial bombing that
begins the film, and the second being the midnight removal of a willfully
anachronistic refugee from the camp. In reconciling us to these incidents,
the story about a benevolent hospitality that this film tells collocates the
operations of power and violence that usher the refugee from anomalous
time and space into a universal, modern consciousness—or, as the film-
makers insist, ‘‘from purgatory to a newfound freedom.’’∫∂
It should be clear by now that one of this book’s imperatives is to
challenge the wish for a founding presence, as well as a guarantee of
recovery. As Foucault would put it, I am less interested in an analytics of
truth than in an ontology of ourselves. In this regard, it is the willing of
subjectivity and sovereignty (such as that which occurs in the refugee
camp) that is precisely the seduction of the gift of freedom, premised on a
transparent subject of universal consciousness and, in all its insidious
implications, self-possession. We might even say that this willing of sub-
jectivity is the surprising form through which decades-old imperial ambi-
tion returns, as the overdue achievement of President Johnson’s wartime
counsel—which we might read as an imperative in retrospect—that ‘‘the
ultimate victory will depend on the hearts and minds of the people who
actually live out there.’’∫∑ This premise should serve as a caution against the
resurgence—even or especially in this instance, in which I query the par-
ticular resonance of this refugee figure as well as her losses and gains—of a
compulsive interiorization, a wish for a metaphysics of voice or a kind of
nature, whether attached to a condition (being a refugee) or other pres-
ence (a self ).∫∏
To be sure, the refugee figures I consider in this study might awaken just
such a wish or a will, inasmuch as these might otherwise appear inscrutable
or inassimilable to a political project critical of empire. Certainly, the figure
28 INTRODUCTION
the humanist critique, I trace the arc of the subjectivization of the girl in
the photograph through the rhetorical formation of her as an autono-
mous subject across a series of flashpoints—her longing for beauty and
chosen love, which also inform her capacity for forgiveness. In doing so,
my second chapter wrestles with multiple concerns, through which rela-
tions of seeing in particular animate the force of liberal war. Both bomb
and picture interpolate a feeling observer who, shuddering before the
scene of the precarious other and desirous of diminishing her misery and
misfortune, may himself or herself su√er harm in doing so. To put another
way, the vexing issues presented by the girl in the photograph as a conse-
quence of imperial violence allegorize precisely the ‘‘problem’’ of liberal
empire—both as a model for subjectivization through war, through the
gift of freedom, and as an analytic of it.
Furthermore, the imperial archive that had once fixed this photograph
as forensic evidence of the horror of this war is transmuted when the girl
in the photograph recompenses our gaze with her grace. The scene of
communion between victim and perpetrator—the girl in the photograph
grieves at a monument to the warrior dead, beside a seven-year prisoner of
war—further conceives of the war as a shared, traumatic ordeal. Here a
profound, a√ective investment in a humanist covenant, in which empathy,
compassion, and grace negotiate the painful distance between self and
other, informs the bind wherein liberal discourse, in rehabilitating the
victim, also redeems her violator. In the juxtaposition of these scenes (the
photograph, her pardon), I hope to shed light on a significant trope of the
gift of freedom, to theorize the place of feeling subjectivity in the order of
liberal empire as a reason for pursuing war—to want to give of itself, its
surplus—and the rationale for pardoning its crimes.
In the final chapter, I return to liberal war making and the normalizing
of race war on behalf of freedom as life necessity in the present moment.
In an age of empire ascendant, the United States pursues what could be
considered supersovereign powers, contravening international and do-
mestic law in the name of exception—which here coincides with the gift of
freedom. Untimely comparisons between the wars in Afghanistan and
Iraq with the wars in Southeast Asia of the previous century become
enveloped in the continuous history of liberalism’s empire as an empire of
humanity, and the Vietnamese refugee is recruited to testify to the gift of
freedom and to recompense the debt through its extension to others. This
is purported to be a loving gesture, inasmuch as it proclaims gratefulness
30 INTRODUCTION
war, not simply as a cornerstone to the U.S. self-image of enlightenment
and altruism but also as a refugee feeling for state sovereignty.Ω≠ Yet the
commemoration’s disquieting palimpsest (of war, through refuge) echoed
most for me in a vivid encounter with the gift’s principle of danger and
shadow of death as concomitant with its promise of life. Under the bright
lights of a barrack converted for the event into an impromptu display
room for historical artifacts, glamour photographs, and abstract paint-
ings, a young white man in a buzz cut fingered a photograph of Viet-
namese dead tucked into a pile of other loose materials before pushing it
across the table in my direction, with a smile. (He enthused, ‘‘Viet Cong,
man!’’) Struck dumb with horror, I could not know if he pushed the
photograph toward me to say, ‘‘We saved you, and you are now one of us,’’
‘‘We saved you, but you owe us,’’ or ‘‘We saved you, but you can still be
undone,’’ as each promise seemed to flex the particular power of a liberal
politics of life, as the complex history of modern racial governmentality.
Rather than understand this uncanny chance encounter with a brash
marine as distinct or apart from the celebratory tenor of the larger event,
which located the camp as a home, I propose that it is in fact the event’s
menacing backstory. The questions that struck me then are still the same:
What sequence of subjection and subjectivity brought ‘‘us’’ here, not just
to ‘‘America,’’ but to this particular story of restoration and renewal? How
do we grasp the violence of value (to again borrow a phrase from Cacho),
or the imposition of indebtedness?Ω∞ And how do we parse the partial
sovereignty and ambiguous endowment that underscores the gift of free-
dom with the threat that freedom can also be revoked from those to whom
it had to be given?
This ‘‘minor’’ event set the scene and the tone for this book, which could
be described as a collection of other jarring, unsettling encounters with
both the tactile and intangible powers of U.S. dominion. To understand
this event, as well as the other events it references (the commemoration,
the exodus, the war), at which the history of modern racial governmen-
tality haunted me so, this book brings together other figures, other stories,
that fold empire into debt—a grandmother sells her house to enter a
parade to thank her benefactors, a film director stages a frightening mid-
night removal as a rescue, a scarred woman o√ers her forgiveness on
global television, a patriot acts to bestow the gift of war he has been given
on others. Caught up in the narrative possibilities of the gift of freedom,
the scenes collected in this book may tell us something terrible about the
32 INTRODUCTION
NOTES
Preface
1. Obama, ‘‘Remarks by the President in Address to the Nation on the End of
Combat Operations in Iraq.’’
2. Butler, Frames of War.
3. Karen DeYoung and Greg Ja√e, ‘‘U.S. ‘Secret War’ Expands Globally as
Special Operations Forces Take Larger Role,’’ Washington Post, June 4, 2010.
For further discussion of these special operations forces, see the May 2011
pbs /Frontline special ‘‘Kill/Capture,’’ and the o≈cial summary by Gretchen
Gavett, ‘‘What Is the Secretive U.S. ‘Kill/Capture’ Campaign?’’ (http://www.pbs
.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/kill-capture/what-is-kill-capture/).
4. The concept of the ‘‘zone of indistinction’’ is examined at length in Agam-
ben, Homo Sacer. We might also observe that in the Obama administration,
such ‘‘secret wars’’ and aggressive policing actions—including deportations of
undocumented people—are rapidly increasing, not decreasing, from numbers
posted by the previous Bush administration.
5. Said, Orientalism, xxi.
6. As Obama declared in his August 31, 2010, speech, ‘‘Throughout our
history, America has been willing to bear the burden of promoting liberty and
human dignity overseas, understanding its links to our own liberty and se-
curity’’ (‘‘Remarks by the President in Address to the Nation on the End of
Combat Operations in Iraq’’).
7. United Nations High Commission on Refugees, ‘‘unhcr Global Report
2010’’ (http://www.unhcr.org/gr10/index.html#/home). Today’s refugees in-
clude 4.7 million people fleeing wars—namely, the wars now being waged by
the United States—and almost 5 million Palestinians.
Introduction
1. I enclose ‘‘America’’ in quotes in order to signal, first, that this shorthand
for the United States elides the contiguous Americas, including Central and
South Americas, and, second, that I hereafter mean ‘‘America’’ as the epistemo-
logical and ideological terrain for such erasure and U.S. exceptionalism.
2. San Chu Lim, ‘‘Vietnamese Woman Thanks America with Parade Float,’’
Asianweek, January 16, 2002, 13.
3. Dan Whitcomb, ‘‘U.S. Woman Sells Home for Parade Float,’’ Reuters,
December 28, 2001 (http://uk.news.yahoo.com/011228/80/cmofs.html).
4. Daisy Nguyen, ‘‘Vietnamese Refugee Sells Home to Buy Rose Parade Float
as Thank-You Gift to Nation,’’ Associated Press, December 29, 2001.
5. Quoted in Boyd, The Papers of Thomas Je√erson, Vol. 1, 237–38.
6. Chomsky regularly denounced the ‘‘good impulses’’ of liberal empire
during the course of the war in Southeast Asia, observing in an interview:
‘‘When precisely did the United States try to help the South Vietnamese choose
their own form of government and social order? As soon as such questions are
posed, the absurdity becomes evident. From the moment that the American-
backed French e√ort to destroy the major nationalist movement in Vietnam
collapsed, the United States was consciously and knowingly opposed to the
organized political forces within South Vietnam, and resorted to increasing
violence when these political forces could not be crushed. . . . The liberal press
cannot question the basic doctrine that the United States is benevolent, even
though often misguided in its innocence, that it labors to permit free choice,
even though at times some mistakes are committed in the exuberance of its
programs of international goodwill’’ (Chomsky and Foucault, The Chomsky-
Foucault Debate, 112–13).
7. For an extensive examination of the liberal way of war, see Dillon and
Reid, The Liberal Way of War. As a contemporary example of the denunciation
of the gift of freedom in its multiple permutations, Vijay Prashad observes that
humanitarian intervention is ‘‘the window dressing that imperialism needs to
counter our wider ideas and aspirations for democracy’’ (‘‘Conversations Up-
town’’). Other speakers at this fundraising panel for Critical Resistance and
the Brecht Forum included Angela Davis, Ruth Wilson Gilmore, and Laura
Flanders.
8. Stoler and Bond, ‘‘Refractions o√ Empire,’’ 95.
9. Williams, Marxism and Literature.
10. For studies of some of these forms and logics of liberal empire, see
Ahmed, ‘‘The Politics of Bad Feeling’’; Povinelli, The Empire of Love; Stoler,
‘‘Imperial Debris;’’ Stoler and Bond, ‘‘Refractions o√ Empire.’’
11. See Chow, The Age of the World Target.
12. Katherine Nguyen, ‘‘Vietnamese Celebrate Their First Roses Parade Float:
Tears and Cheers Greet the Tribute to Immigrant Heritage, Eight Years in the
Making,’’ Orange County Register, January 2, 2002.
13. Amy Kaplan writes: ‘‘The denial and disavowal of empire has long served
as the ideological cornerstone of U.S. imperialism and a key component of
American exceptionalism’’ (‘‘Violent Belongings and the Question of Empire
Today,’’ 3).