Image for Masking Selves, Making Subjects

Masking Selves, Making Subjects : Japanese American Women, Identity and the Body

See all formats and editions

This is a comprehensive study, situating Japanese-American women's writing within the theoretical contexts that provide a means of articulating the complex relationships between language and the body, gender and agency, nationalism and identity.

Through an examination of post-World War II autobiographical writings, fiction and poetry, the author argues that these writers have employed the trope of masking - textually and psychologically - as a strategy to create an alternative discursive practice and to protect the self as a subject. The interdisciplinary approach offers an in-depth reading of a number of genres, including film and travel narrative.

Looking at how the west has sexualized, infantilized and feminized Japanese culture for over a century, the book examines contemporary Japanese-American women's struggle with orientalist fantasy.

The author shows how masking serves as a self-affirming discourse that dynamically interacts with mainstream culture's racial and sexual projections.

Read More
Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
0520210336 / 9780520210332
Hardback
25/11/1998
United States
320 pages, 1 b&w illustration
156 x 234 mm, 430 grams
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More