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Elaborating on camp as a cultural strategy for contesting accounts of Asian American history that overly rely on terms of abjection, Chris Eng reassesses narratives that construe the Japanese American incarceration as an experience of hitting the bottom, a violation akin to sodomy. This talk re-reads Lonny Kaneko’s canonical short story “The Shoyu Kid” (1976) through the bottom. Whereas the story has commonly been interpreted as showing how internment inspires projects of remasculinization that entail acts of homophobic violence, Eng offers a reparative reading of the story’s sticky tropes of brownness and anality as offering an encoded secret about the desirability of organizing around the charge of suspect loyalty. Modeling camp as a reading practice, Eng contemplates the possibility for rerouting queer abjection toward a building a coalitional politics for reparations after internment.