Recontextualizing Asian American Domesticity: From Madame Butterfly to My American Wife!
From the Eaton sisters' literary works at the previous turn of the century to Gish Jen's 2004 novel The Love Wife, Recontextualizing Asian American Domesticity explores the ways in which the trope of American domesticity is experimented, resisted, and reinvented in Asian American women's literature. In order to contextualize Asian American women's writing within the terrain of American cultural and literary history, this book considers how the trope of domesticity is deployed in constructing Asian American women's subjectivity, especially through the tension and dynamic between Asian and white American womanhood. Seung Ah Oh's focus is specifically placed on the female homosocial bond and conflict around the notion of Asian American domesticity, both as a gendered and a national site with the conflicting desires within and behind Asian American women's voices, endlessly shifting the notion of Asian American home and domesticity. Recontextualizing Asian American Domesticity is appropriate for all students and scholars.
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Recontextualizing Asian American Domesticity: From Madame Butterfly to My American Wife!
From the Eaton sisters' literary works at the previous turn of the century to Gish Jen's 2004 novel The Love Wife, Recontextualizing Asian American Domesticity explores the ways in which the trope of American domesticity is experimented, resisted, and reinvented in Asian American women's literature. In order to contextualize Asian American women's writing within the terrain of American cultural and literary history, this book considers how the trope of domesticity is deployed in constructing Asian American women's subjectivity, especially through the tension and dynamic between Asian and white American womanhood. Seung Ah Oh's focus is specifically placed on the female homosocial bond and conflict around the notion of Asian American domesticity, both as a gendered and a national site with the conflicting desires within and behind Asian American women's voices, endlessly shifting the notion of Asian American home and domesticity. Recontextualizing Asian American Domesticity is appropriate for all students and scholars.
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Recontextualizing Asian American Domesticity: From Madame Butterfly to My American Wife!

Recontextualizing Asian American Domesticity: From Madame Butterfly to My American Wife!

by Seung Ah Oh
Recontextualizing Asian American Domesticity: From Madame Butterfly to My American Wife!

Recontextualizing Asian American Domesticity: From Madame Butterfly to My American Wife!

by Seung Ah Oh

Hardcover

$120.00 
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Overview

From the Eaton sisters' literary works at the previous turn of the century to Gish Jen's 2004 novel The Love Wife, Recontextualizing Asian American Domesticity explores the ways in which the trope of American domesticity is experimented, resisted, and reinvented in Asian American women's literature. In order to contextualize Asian American women's writing within the terrain of American cultural and literary history, this book considers how the trope of domesticity is deployed in constructing Asian American women's subjectivity, especially through the tension and dynamic between Asian and white American womanhood. Seung Ah Oh's focus is specifically placed on the female homosocial bond and conflict around the notion of Asian American domesticity, both as a gendered and a national site with the conflicting desires within and behind Asian American women's voices, endlessly shifting the notion of Asian American home and domesticity. Recontextualizing Asian American Domesticity is appropriate for all students and scholars.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739122785
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 06/19/2008
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Seung Ah Oh is a postdoctoral fellow at the Institute of Humanities at Yonsei University.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Preface
Chapter 2 1. Beyond the Trope of Madame Butterfly: John Luther Long and the Eaton Sisters
Chapter 3 2. Brought to You by War: Tea, Comfort Woman, and Monkey Bridge
Chapter 4 3. Domestic/Immigrant Family Romance: Fifth Chinese Daughter, Jasmine, and The Love Wife
Chapter 5 4. Homequest: My Year of Meats and Blu's Hanging
Chapter 6 Coda
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