Betrayal and Other Acts of Subversion

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Acculturation
Activism
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American Knees
American studies
Amy Tan
Anti-imperialism
Asian American literature
Asian American studies
Asian Americans
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Beyond Rangoon
Capitalism
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Chandra Talpade Mohanty
Citizenship
Colonialism
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Cultural nationalism
Culture of the United States
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Eroticism
Exclusion
Femininity
Feminism
Feminism (international relations)
Feminist theory
Gender role
Globalization
Henry Louis Gates Jr.
Ideology
Immigration
Indictment
Individualism
Infidelity
Informant
Judith Butler
Le Ly Hayslip
Lesbian
Liberal feminism
Literature
Masculinity
Melodrama
Mukherjee
Multiculturalism
Narrative
National identity
Nisei
Oppression
Pacifism
Patriarchy
Person of color
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Postmodernism
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The Erotic
The Joy Luck Club (novel)
The labor problem
The Woman Warrior
Third World
University of California
Viet Cong
When Heaven and Earth Changed Places
World War II
Writing

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691070933
  • Weight: 312g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Apr 2001
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Asian American women have long dealt with charges of betrayal within and beyond their communities. Images of their "disloyalty" pervade American culture, from the daughter who is branded a traitor to family for adopting American ways, to the war bride who immigrates in defiance of her countrymen, to a figure such as Yoko Ono, accused of breaking up the Beatles with her "seduction" of John Lennon. Leslie Bow here explores how representations of females transgressing the social order play out in literature by Asian American women. Questions of ethnic belonging, sexuality, identification, and political allegiance are among the issues raised by such writers as Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston, Bharati Mukherjee, Jade Snow Wong, Amy Tan, Sky Lee, Le Ly Hayslip, Wendy Law-Yone, Fiona Cheong, and Nellie Wong. Beginning with the notion that feminist and Asian American identity are mutually exclusive, Bow analyzes how women serve as boundary markers between ethnic or national collectives in order to reveal the male-based nature of social cohesion. In exploring the relationship between femininity and citizenship, liberal feminism and American racial discourse, and women's domestic abuse and human rights, the author suggests that Asian American women not only mediate sexuality's construction as a determiner of loyalty but also manipulate that construction as a tool of political persuasion in their writing. The language of betrayal, she argues, offers a potent rhetorical means of signaling how belonging is policed by individuals and by the state. Bow's bold analysis exposes the stakes behind maintaining ethnic, feminist, and national alliances, particularly for women who claim multiple loyalties.
Leslie Bow is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Miami, where she specializes in Asian American literature, ethnic autobiography, writing by women of color, feminist theory, and theories of race, ethnicity, and pedagogy. She has published widely in journals and in edited volumes.