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Racial Asymmetries

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Regular price $107.00
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Challenging the tidy links among authorial position, narrative perspective, and fictional content, Stephen Hong Sohn argues that Asian American authors have never been limited to writing about Asia...
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  • 17 January 2014
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Challenging the tidy links among authorial position, narrative perspective, and fictional content, Stephen Hong Sohn argues that Asian American authors have never been limited to writing about Asian American characters or contexts. Racial Asymmetries specifically examines the importance of first person narration in Asian American fiction published in the postrace era, focusing on those cultural productions in which the author’s ethnoracial makeup does not directly overlap with that of the storytelling perspective.

Through rigorous analysis of novels and short fiction, such as Sesshu Foster’s Atomik Aztex, Sabina Murray’s A Carnivore’s Inquiry and Sigrid Nunez’s The Last of Her Kind, Sohn reveals how the construction of narrative perspective allows the Asian American writer a flexible aesthetic canvas upon which to engage issues of oppression and inequity, power and subjectivity, and the complicated construction of racial identity. Speaking to concerns running through postcolonial studies and American literature at large, Racial Asymmetries employs an interdisciplinary approach to reveal the unbounded nature of fictional worlds.

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Price: $107.00
Pages: 297
Publisher: NYU Press
Imprint: NYU Press
Publication Date: 17 January 2014
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781479800070
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Customs & Traditions, LITERARY CRITICISM / American / Asian American
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"StephenSohnsRacial Asymmetriesprovides rich, nuanced readings of the performance, permutations, and persistence of race in 21st-century Asian American literature. In calling attention to the interplay between diverse Asian American texts and their conditions of emergence as such,Sohns analyses appreciate the cultural politics of difference that Asian American fictional worlds continue to critically express."