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Assimilating Asians: Gendered Strategies of Authorship in Asian America (New Americanists)
 
 
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Assimilating Asians: Gendered Strategies of Authorship in Asian America (New Americanists) [Hardcover]

Patricia P. Chu (Author)

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Book Description

March 8, 2000 082232430X 978-0822324300
One of the central tasks of Asian American literature, argues Patricia P. Chu, has been to construct Asian American identities in the face of existing, and often contradictory, ideas about what it means to be an American. Chu examines the model of the Anglo-American bildungsroman and shows how Asian American writers have adapted it to express their troubled and unstable position in the United States. By aligning themselves with U.S. democratic ideals while also questioning the historical realities of exclusion, internment, and discrimination, Asian American authors, contends Chu, do two kinds of ideological work: they claim Americanness for Asian Americans, and they create accounts of Asian ethnicity that deploy their specific cultures and histories to challenge established notions of Americanness.
Chu further demonstrates that Asian American male and female writers engage different strategies in the struggle to adapt, reflecting their particular, gender-based relationships to immigration, work, and cultural representation. While offering fresh perspectives on the well-known writings—both fiction and memoir—of Maxine Hong Kingston, Amy Tan, Bharati Mukherjee, Frank Chin, and David Mura, Assimilating Asians also provides new insight into the work of less recognized but nevertheless important writers like Carlos Bulosan, Edith Eaton, Younghill Kang, Milton Murayama, and John Okada. As she explores this expansive range of texts—published over the course of the last century by authors of Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Filipino, and Indian origin or descent—Chu is able to illuminate her argument by linking it to key historical and cultural events.
Assimilating Asians makes an important contribution to the fields of Asian American, American, and women’s studies. Scholars of Asian American literature and culture, as well as of ethnicity and assimilation, will find particular interest and value in this book.


Editorial Reviews

Review

“Bringing fresh perspectives to much-discussed work, Assimilating Asians is a fine book.”—Elaine Kim, University of California, Berkeley


“Chu brings social theory and literary analysis together with smart and elegant readings. Hers is one of the first works of Asian American literary criticism to foreground the gendered aspects of narratives of assimilation.”—Priscilla Wald, author of Constituting Americans: Cultural Anxiety and Narrative Form

About the Author

Patricia P. Chu is Associate Professor of English at George Washington University.


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First Sentence:
The fictional narrator of Younghill Kang's 1937 novel, East Goes West: The Making of an Oriental Yankee and the autobiographical narrator of Daniel Okimoto's 1971 memoir, An American in Disguise, share several definitive traits: a desire to construct themselves as Americans, an awareness of their status as outsiders due to their race, and an interest in white women as representatives of their ideal of America. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
immigrant romance, racial shadow, empty scrolls, female bildungsroman, wavering image, beset manhood, domestic woman, heroic tradition, success myths, domestic novel
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Asian American, Chinese American, United States, Japanese American, Pau Lin, Pau Tzu, Frank Chin, Spring Fragrance, Lady Sun, Three Kingdoms, Tripmaster Monkey, Wan Lin Fo, Bharati Mukherjee, Wou Sankwei, Carlos Bulosan, Maxine Hong Kingston, Younghill Kang, Amy Tan, Edith Maude Eaton, Jane Eyre, Gold Mountain, North American, Chinese Eurasian, David Mura, John Okada
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