Lecture

Transpacific Biotic Exchanges: Japanese Insect and Plant Migration & Border Control

30. June 2025
18:15 Uhr
01-721, Georg Forster-Gebäude

Jeannie Shinozuka is Assistant Professor of Comparative Ethnic Studies and the Arnold and Atsuko Craft Professor at Washington State University. Her research interests center on Asian American studies and history, environmental history, and the history of medicine and science. After publishing her first book, Biotic Borders: Transpacific Plant and Insect Migration and the Rise of Anti-Asian Racism in America, 1890-1950 (University of Chicago Press, 2022), she is now working on two book projects. As a 2024-2025 Dibner History of Science and Technology Fellow at the Huntington Library, she has been researching Model Minority Intelligence: Scientific Racism, Education, and Citizenship, 1910-1965. Model Minority Intelligence is on the central role that Asian Americans have played in shaping affirmative action policies, standardized testing, and eugenic racism. Her third book project, Global Biotic Borders: Race and Asian Insect and Plant Migration in an International Context, is on recent Asian biological invasions in Australia, Europe, and Latin America, including the Asian longhorned tick (Haemaphysalis longicornis Neumann), the Asian tiger mosquito (Aedes albopictus), and Asian citrus psyllid (Diaphornina citri Kuwayama or ACP).