
When Asian Americans Return to Asia: Return Narratives, Transpacific Imagination, and the Post/Cold War
Author(s) -
Chih-ming Wang
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
southeast asian review of english
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.101
0ISSN - 0127-046X
DOI - 10.22452/sare.vol58no2.7
Subject(s) - narrative , cognitive reframing , geopolitics , cold war , gender studies , history , sociology , political science , politics , literature , psychology , law , art , social psychology
By focusing on Asian American return narratives as a symbolic indicator of a shift in transpacific relations, this article attempts to address two questions: first, how will a focus on return experiences engage and reframe transpacific imperial geopolitics thatcreated and sustainedAsian American literature, and second, how will a focus on the “post/Cold War”rather than on globalization as a temporal frame challenge the transpacificimagination in American studiesas a cultural and economic narrative of immigration, integration,and salvationthat purports to transcend Cold War divisions.Thearticleanalyses Maxine Hong Kingston’s I Love a Broad Margin to My Life(2011) and Chang-rae Lee’s My Year Abroad(2021)to consider how post-1990s Asian American return narratives rearticulatecontemporary geopolitics. It will conclude with a reflection on the Orientalismof Asian Americanliteraturein the treacherous imaginaryof transpacific futures.