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From Chinatown to Gunga Din Highway: Notes on Frank Chin's Writing Strategy
Author(s) -
Juan E. San
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
ethnic studies review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2576-2915
pISSN - 1555-1881
DOI - 10.1525/esr.2001.24.1.1
Subject(s) - chin , polity , chinatown , politics , ethnic group , aesthetics , diaspora , sociology , history , defamiliarization , nationalism , gender studies , law , political science , anthropology , art , archaeology , medicine , anatomy
Exploring Frank Chin9s work, particularly in his latest novel Gunga Din Highway, the essay endeavors to re-situate ethnic writing in the historical specificity of its inscription in the United States as a racial polity. This cognitive remapping of the literary field as reconfigured by multiculturalist liberalism may be accomplished by examining Chin9s cultural politics. Chin9s mode of strategic writing interrogates the modelminority myth and the premises of cultural nationalism. While it rejects the pluralist resolution of the traditional conflicts in the Chinese diaspora, Chin9s satiric impulse proposes a defamiliarization of Asian American “common sense” adequate to provoke a revaluation of the presumed conjunction of ethnicities, cultures, and nationalities in the current counter-terrorist milieu.

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