Asian American Literature in the International Context: Readings on Fiction, Poetry and PerformanceIn their different and yet complementary perspectives, all of the essays in this collection reiterate the universal lesson of pluralism. They are divided into sections that deal with biraciality and biculturality, interethnic negotiations, poetic creations, narrative experiments, and (re)constructing self. The wide variety of approaches reflects the contributors' training in different cultures and across cultures. The book showcases refreshing new perspectives in reading that combine the views of literary scholars from three different continents. This collection creates a space for discussion and commentary, of heightened appreciation and increased creativity, a forum that turns the discipline of Asian American Studies into a truly intercultural debate. |
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Page 71
... narrator's mother even brings " whiskey " to be poured into the grave . When the family comes home from the burial , they do not " burn a pile of leaves and newspapers at the curb " because the family is " modern " ( 189 ) . The narrator ...
... narrator's mother even brings " whiskey " to be poured into the grave . When the family comes home from the burial , they do not " burn a pile of leaves and newspapers at the curb " because the family is " modern " ( 189 ) . The narrator ...
Page 77
... narrator asks if it rains in the next world ( 240 ) . Asked by the narrator why the bottom half of the body has fewer layers than the top , DuLili responds by saying , " It means that two days a week Big Ma must wander about with her ...
... narrator asks if it rains in the next world ( 240 ) . Asked by the narrator why the bottom half of the body has fewer layers than the top , DuLili responds by saying , " It means that two days a week Big Ma must wander about with her ...
Page 178
... narrator tries to placate it with the same excuse : " Sometimes , the voice sounds different , not hers . It is a ... narrator , and this narrator can be a mere enunciator or also a protagonist sharing the you's fictional existence in ...
... narrator tries to placate it with the same excuse : " Sometimes , the voice sounds different , not hers . It is a ... narrator , and this narrator can be a mere enunciator or also a protagonist sharing the you's fictional existence in ...
Contents
Asian American Literature in the International Context | 9 |
Celebrating Ourselves in the Other | 37 |
Trauma Narrative and | 81 |
Copyright | |
6 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
African American Ameri Asian American literature Asian American poetry assimilation autobiography autoperformance barbarians barbarians are coming becomes character child Chin Chin's China Chinatown Chinese American contemporary context critical Dan Kwong daughter DICTEE discourse Divakaruni dream Eaton essay ethnic experience father Feroza fiction Frank Chin frontier funeral gender genre ghost hybrid Hyun identity immigrants interview ISBN Japanese Jasmine John Yau Korean American Kwong language Lee's Li-Young Lee Ling literary lives lyric Maibelle's Marilyn Chin Maxine Hong Kingston memory metaphor migrants Mona Monkey King mother Mukherjee myth Naomi narrative narrator novel Obasan past perspective Phoenix poem poet poetic postcolonial postmodern protagonist race racial reader ritual sense sexual Sidhwa social story Tabios Tama tell tion traditional trauma United voice West Western Winnifred Winnifred Eaton Woman Warrior women Wong words writing Yau's York