Away from China : reincorporating two Sinophone novels into Asian American literary canon

This thesis argues against the Sinocentric school of thought that perceives Sinophone literary production in the United States as “overseas Chinese literature”. I take issue with this problematic diasporic designation and its proponents, and maintain that when routes can be roots, Sinophone writing...

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Main Author: Lim, Soon Vin
Other Authors: Sim Wai Chew
Format: Thesis-Master by Research
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/136517
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1365172020-10-28T08:29:21Z Away from China : reincorporating two Sinophone novels into Asian American literary canon Lim, Soon Vin Sim Wai Chew Ting Chun Chun School of Humanities wcsim@ntu.edu.sg ; ccting@ntu.edu.sg Humanities Humanities::Literature::American This thesis argues against the Sinocentric school of thought that perceives Sinophone literary production in the United States as “overseas Chinese literature”. I take issue with this problematic diasporic designation and its proponents, and maintain that when routes can be roots, Sinophone writing – composed and published upon the (migrant) authors’ arrival in their new homeland – in North America should also be acknowledged as a constitutive part of Asian American literature. I employ Shu-mei Shih’s Sinophone theory coined in 2004 to analyze the ways in which we can read Hualing Nieh Engle’s Mulberry and Peach (桑青與桃紅) (1976) and Geling Yan’s Fu Sang (扶桑) (1996) as two Asian/Sinophone American novels. Chapter One (“When Does The Tragic Song Of Wanderer End?”) draws upon a diverse range of scholarship, including theories on diaspora; Sinophone studies; cultural criticism; and Asian American literary history, in order to justify the objectives of my research, the structure of my thesis as well as my selection of authors and texts. Chapter Two (“Saving the Sinophone”) discusses the significant notion of “Claiming America” in Yan’s Fu Sang in order to foreground how Sinophone American authors have demonstrated, in their literary production, their deep local commitments to their new homeland in the United States. Chapter Three (“Holding Onto America, Even When Writing Back To China(s)”) employs Nieh’s Mulberry and Peach to explore how a Sinophone novel that narrates predominantly about Asia can still be read and by extension, recognized as an Asian American text. Master of Arts 2019-12-23T03:19:07Z 2019-12-23T03:19:07Z 2019 Thesis-Master by Research Lim, S. V. (2019). Away from China : reincorporating two Sinophone novels into Asian American literary canon. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/136517 10.32657/10356/136517 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities
Humanities::Literature::American
spellingShingle Humanities
Humanities::Literature::American
Lim, Soon Vin
Away from China : reincorporating two Sinophone novels into Asian American literary canon
description This thesis argues against the Sinocentric school of thought that perceives Sinophone literary production in the United States as “overseas Chinese literature”. I take issue with this problematic diasporic designation and its proponents, and maintain that when routes can be roots, Sinophone writing – composed and published upon the (migrant) authors’ arrival in their new homeland – in North America should also be acknowledged as a constitutive part of Asian American literature. I employ Shu-mei Shih’s Sinophone theory coined in 2004 to analyze the ways in which we can read Hualing Nieh Engle’s Mulberry and Peach (桑青與桃紅) (1976) and Geling Yan’s Fu Sang (扶桑) (1996) as two Asian/Sinophone American novels. Chapter One (“When Does The Tragic Song Of Wanderer End?”) draws upon a diverse range of scholarship, including theories on diaspora; Sinophone studies; cultural criticism; and Asian American literary history, in order to justify the objectives of my research, the structure of my thesis as well as my selection of authors and texts. Chapter Two (“Saving the Sinophone”) discusses the significant notion of “Claiming America” in Yan’s Fu Sang in order to foreground how Sinophone American authors have demonstrated, in their literary production, their deep local commitments to their new homeland in the United States. Chapter Three (“Holding Onto America, Even When Writing Back To China(s)”) employs Nieh’s Mulberry and Peach to explore how a Sinophone novel that narrates predominantly about Asia can still be read and by extension, recognized as an Asian American text.
author2 Sim Wai Chew
author_facet Sim Wai Chew
Lim, Soon Vin
format Thesis-Master by Research
author Lim, Soon Vin
author_sort Lim, Soon Vin
title Away from China : reincorporating two Sinophone novels into Asian American literary canon
title_short Away from China : reincorporating two Sinophone novels into Asian American literary canon
title_full Away from China : reincorporating two Sinophone novels into Asian American literary canon
title_fullStr Away from China : reincorporating two Sinophone novels into Asian American literary canon
title_full_unstemmed Away from China : reincorporating two Sinophone novels into Asian American literary canon
title_sort away from china : reincorporating two sinophone novels into asian american literary canon
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2019
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/136517
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