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"So there it is" : an exploration of cultural hybridity in contemporary Asian American poetry / Brigitte Wallinger-Schorn.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Wallinger-Schorn, Brigitte.
Series:
Cross/cultures ; 143.
Cross/cultures ; 143
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
American poetry--Asian American authors.
American poetry.
Multiculturalism--United States.
Multiculturalism.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (321 p.)
Edition:
1st ed.
Place of Publication:
New York : Rodopi, 2011.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
In interpreting contemporary Asian American poetry, it is important to understand the cultural hybridity of Asian America identity, located at the interstices of the fixed identifications ‘American’, ‘Asian American’, and ‘Asian’. This rootedness in more than one culture exposes the inapplicability of binary concepts (foreigner/national, et cetera). Hybridity, opposing essentialism and ‘the original’, favors multivocality and ambivalence. The exploration of Asian American cultural hybridity is linked both to material realities and poetic manifestations. Asian American hybrid subjectivity is explored through in-depth interpretations of works from well-established contemporary poets such as Kimiko Hahn, Marilyn Chin, Li-Young Lee, and Arthur Sze, as well as that of many new talents and hitherto neglected writers. This study examines how language and power interrelate, with translation and linguistic fusion being two approaches adopted by hybrid authors in their creation of alternative discourse. Culturally hybrid subjectivity is independent of and at the same time interconnected with more than one culture, thus enabling innovative political and identitarian positions to be articulated. Also examined are such traditional poetic forms as the zuihitsu, the sonnet, and the ghazal, which continue to be used, though in modernized and often subversive guise. The formal liminal space is revealed as a source of newness and invention deconstructing eurocentric hierarchy and national myth in American society and expanding or undercutting binary constructs of racial, national, and ethnic identities. A further question pursued is whether there are particular aesthetic modes and concepts that unite contemporary Asian American poetry when the allegiances of the practitioners are so disparate (ultimate geocultural provenience, poetic schools, regions in the USA, generations, sexual orientation, et cetera). Wide-ranging interviews with Kimiko Hahn and Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni on identity and roots, language and power, feminism, and the American poetry scene provide illuminating personal yet representative answers to this and other questions.
Contents:
Preliminary Material
Introduction
Cultural Hybridity
Linguistic Hybridity
Narrative Hybridity
Formal Hybridity
Conclusion
Works Cited
Interviews
Index.
Notes:
Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
1-280-49708-4
9786613592316
94-012-0701-1
OCLC:
785782281
Publisher Number:
10.1163/9789401207010 DOI

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