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Transitive cultures : Anglophone literature of the transpacific / Christopher B. Patterson.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: New Brunswick, New Jersey : Rutgers University Press, [2017]Copyright date: ©2017Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780813591872
  • 0813591872
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Transitive cultures.DDC classification:
  • 820.9/95 23
LOC classification:
  • PR9645.5 .P38 2017eb
Online resources:
Contents:
Introduction: pluralism, transition, and the Anglophone -- Multiracial clans in colorful Malaya: pluralism, intimacy, and transition -- So that the sparks that fly will fly in all directions: pluralism and revolution in the Philippines -- Liberal tolerance and Asian migrancy: migrancy, satire, and reciprocity -- Just an American darker than the rest: on queer brown exile -- Mutant hybrids seek the global unconscious: cynicism, chick-lit, ecstasy -- Speculative fiction and authorial transition -- Conclusion: identity, authenticity, collectivity.
Summary: "Since the early 1990s, Asian American studies scholars have often read migrant texts as diasporic, and have seen the Asian migrant as caught between a mythical homeland and an imperial host country. Transitive Cultures seeks to shift from diaspora as a framework that reinstitutes national categories, to instead consider ways of reading migrant texts across nations and diasporic groups without relying on monolithic and "authentic" racial identities. Christopher B. Patterson reframes Asian migrant texts from diasporic texts to transpacific Anglophone texts in order to archive works deemed "inauthentic" to both nationalist literatures and to American ethnic literatures. Rather than contrast the racial tolerance of the host country with the intolerance of the homeland, these migrant stories show how pluralist governmentality, since the colonial era, has relied heavily upon hyper-visible and monolithic racial identities, and has seen the multiplicity of identity, rather than single nationalist identities, as its main organizing logic. In response, these texts work to express "transitive cultures," cultures defined not by race or origin, but by the shared cultural practice of managing, re-interpreting, and transitioning among imposed racial identities"-- Provided by publisher
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"Since the early 1990s, Asian American studies scholars have often read migrant texts as diasporic, and have seen the Asian migrant as caught between a mythical homeland and an imperial host country. Transitive Cultures seeks to shift from diaspora as a framework that reinstitutes national categories, to instead consider ways of reading migrant texts across nations and diasporic groups without relying on monolithic and "authentic" racial identities. Christopher B. Patterson reframes Asian migrant texts from diasporic texts to transpacific Anglophone texts in order to archive works deemed "inauthentic" to both nationalist literatures and to American ethnic literatures. Rather than contrast the racial tolerance of the host country with the intolerance of the homeland, these migrant stories show how pluralist governmentality, since the colonial era, has relied heavily upon hyper-visible and monolithic racial identities, and has seen the multiplicity of identity, rather than single nationalist identities, as its main organizing logic. In response, these texts work to express "transitive cultures," cultures defined not by race or origin, but by the shared cultural practice of managing, re-interpreting, and transitioning among imposed racial identities"-- Provided by publisher

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction: pluralism, transition, and the Anglophone -- Multiracial clans in colorful Malaya: pluralism, intimacy, and transition -- So that the sparks that fly will fly in all directions: pluralism and revolution in the Philippines -- Liberal tolerance and Asian migrancy: migrancy, satire, and reciprocity -- Just an American darker than the rest: on queer brown exile -- Mutant hybrids seek the global unconscious: cynicism, chick-lit, ecstasy -- Speculative fiction and authorial transition -- Conclusion: identity, authenticity, collectivity.

Print version record.

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