This book introduces Asian American literary studies by engaging the conditions, contingencies, and immediate and long-term effects of its major debates. Two rationales inform Ling's presentation of the field in this way: first is a felt need to provide recognizable contours and trajectories for the evolution of Asian American criticism as an ethnic-specific minoritarian formation in the United States; second is an imperative to historicize its practices - including polemics, controversies, and ideological ruptures - as an ongoing negotiation undertaken by Asian American critics for a more self-conscious and more adequate representation of the field's interests. These rationales are fully contextualized in the book's Introduction and Conclusion.
The main body of this study is organized non-chronologically into 8 chapters, with each designed to reflect how the field has been energized by its demographic transformation, its growing intellectual heterogeneity, its defining moments, and its cross-cutting relationship with the trends in other disciplines. What has emerged and been given prominence to in the surveys and discussions of this book then constitute the essential criticism of Asian American literary studies, a discourse almost 5 decades in the making when examined retrospectively.
Muu info
This book introduces Asian American literary studies by engaging the conditions, contingencies, and immediate and long-term effects of its major debates.
Acknowledgments |
|
ix | |
Introduction: Unnnalizing the Aitieeeee! Moment: A Historicist View of the Field |
|
1 | (10) |
|
1 Race, Gender, and Class: Overlapping Formations |
|
|
11 | (22) |
|
|
12 | (5) |
|
|
17 | (4) |
|
Essentialism and Difference |
|
|
21 | (4) |
|
|
25 | (8) |
|
2 The Necessity and Fiction of "Asian America" |
|
|
33 | (22) |
|
|
34 | (6) |
|
Beyond Pan-Asian Ethnicity |
|
|
40 | (6) |
|
Comparative Race and Ethnicity Studies |
|
|
46 | (4) |
|
Rethinking Asian American Specificity |
|
|
50 | (5) |
|
3 Intercultural and Generational Concerns |
|
|
55 | (20) |
|
|
56 | (5) |
|
|
61 | (5) |
|
Model Minority and the Paradox of Assimilation |
|
|
66 | (4) |
|
|
70 | (5) |
|
|
75 | (22) |
|
|
76 | (5) |
|
The Asia-Pacific Investment |
|
|
81 | (5) |
|
|
86 | (4) |
|
Locating the Historical Referent |
|
|
90 | (7) |
|
5 The Social Function of Literature |
|
|
97 | (20) |
|
Cognitive Uses of Language |
|
|
99 | (4) |
|
Community-Based Self-Representation |
|
|
103 | (5) |
|
|
108 | (4) |
|
|
112 | (5) |
|
|
117 | (20) |
|
|
119 | (6) |
|
|
125 | (4) |
|
Reinventing Realist Genres |
|
|
129 | (4) |
|
Poetic and Theatrical Studies |
|
|
133 | (4) |
|
7 Protocols and the Politics of Institutionalization |
|
|
137 | (20) |
|
|
137 | (5) |
|
|
142 | (5) |
|
|
147 | (3) |
|
|
150 | (7) |
|
|
157 | (20) |
|
|
157 | (4) |
|
Militarization, Critical Refugee Studies, and Ecocriticism |
|
|
161 | (6) |
|
|
167 | (5) |
|
Digital Humanities and New Media |
|
|
172 | (5) |
Conclusion: Anti-essentialist Critique and the Asian American Literary Profession |
|
177 | (8) |
Notes |
|
185 | (10) |
Bibliography |
|
195 | (30) |
Index |
|
225 | |
Jinqi Ling is Professor of English and Asian American Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles, USA. He is the author of Narrating Nationalisms: Ideology and Form in Asian American Literature and Across Meridians: History and Figuration in Karen Tei Yamashitas Transnational Novels.