04379nam 2200493 450 991079418440332120220930162519.01-4744-6934-510.1515/9781474469340(CKB)4100000010673611(MiAaPQ)EBC6141843(DE-B1597)616944(DE-B1597)9781474469340(EXLCZ)99410000001067361120200621d2005 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierAsian american literary studies /edited by Guiyou HuangEdinburgh :Edinburgh University Press,2005.1 online resource (269 pages)Introducing ethnic studies0-7486-2012-5 Frontmatter --Contents --Acknowledgments --Series Editor’s Foreword --Introduction: Global and Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Asian American Literary Studies --Section I: Perspectives on Literature and History --Chapter 1 Asian American Literary History: War, Memory, and Representation --Chapter 2 The Self in the Text versus the Self as Text: Asian American Autobiographical Strategies --Chapter 3 Asian Americans Imagining Burma: Chang-rae Lee’s A Gesture Life and Wendy Law-Yone’s Irrawaddy Tango --Section II: Perspectives on Gender Roles and Representation --Chapter 4 Globalization, Masculinity, and the Changing Stakes of Hollywood Cinema for Asian American Studies --Chapter 5 Gender Negotiations and the Asian American Literary Imagination --Chapter 6 Long a Mystery and Forever a Memory: God vs. Goddess in the Ethnic Novel --Chapter 7 Realigning and Reassigning Cultural Values: Occidentalist Stereotyping and Representations of the Multiethnic Family in Asian American Women Writers --Section III: Perspectives on Language and Culture --Chapter 8 “I Love My India”: Indian American Students Performing Identity and Creating Culture on Stage --Chapter 9 Speaking Outside of the Standard: Local Literature of Hawai’i --Chapter 10 Staging Heterogeneity: Contemporary Asian American Drama --Notes on the Editor and Contributors --IndexGBS_insertPreviewButtonPopup('ISBN:9780748620135);This volume presents global perspectives on Asian American literature by accomplished scholars from Germany, Japan, Singapore, Spain, and the US. It covers a diverse range of interdisciplinary topics in contemporary Asian American Studies across a wide spectrum of ethnic groups: Burmese, Chinese, Filipino, Indian, Japanese, Korean, Malaysian, Pakistani, Sri Lankan, and Vietnamese.Section I probes themes such as the vital role that war plays in the production of Asian American literary works, and the agency of the self in the life writings of Asian American autobiographers. Section II examines the confines of binary oppositions of gender, as well as issues of pan-ethnicity and gender relations. Section III explores the role that performance, film, and language play in the definition of self-identity and in ethnic empowerment. Five intrinsically connected themes run through all sections: gender roles; stereotyping; identity politics; intersections of literature, history, family, and the self; and the impact of wars on Asian American culture and literature. The chapters illuminate each other by discussing ideas and issues that are the enlargements of other, related themes and topics.Key FeaturesGlobal perspectives on the literary textsInterdisciplinary approach to the subjectContributors' expertiseUp-to-date coverage"Introducing ethnic studies.American literatureAsian American authorsHistory and criticismAmerican literatureHistory and criticism20th centuryWar in literatureAmerican literatureAsian American authorsHistory and criticism.American literatureHistory and criticismWar in literature.810.9895Huang Guiyou1961-authttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut596827Huang Guiyou1961-MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910794184403321Asian american literary studies3709957UNINA