Chinese American Literary Studies in China Today

This lecture will focus on the recent development of Chinese American literature teaching and research in China, by presenting both the data found online and the speaker’s own perspective of teaching and research of it. Prof. Yingguo Xu will first give an overview of Chinese American literature classes taught in universities, as well as Masters … Read more

Passing: A Thematic Approach to Literary Analysis

“Passing” as a thematic approach to literary analysis is a hot topic in today’s academia. In the the most general sense, it involves a person who belongs to one race, gender or group attempting to “pass” or be taken for a member of another. It also addresses, among other issues, Western literary and artistic renderings of Eastern motifs. Among the best-known popular examples are David Henry Hwang’s M. Butterfly and Ang Lee’s The Wedding Banquet. In M. Butterfly, the Chinese opera diva Song Liling passes as a female who fascinates the French diplomat Rene Gallimard and successfully deceives him. Song’s success in their affair hinges on the Western mainstream stereotype of an Asian woman as the quintessentially meek, submissive, and loving animated object that the Western (male) society is so attracted to. Given this perception of Asian woman, many professional Asian women ironically play this role in order to live up to that identity so as to fit into a mold cast for them by western thinking. They do pass as such although many are fiercely independent, strong, and tough deep down. After all, these are the characteristics a female need to succeed in a male-dominated society. In this case, to pass is to survive–Asian women must hide that warrior inner soul to advance in a hemisphere where their counterparts are still struggling to combat similar stereotypes about women. However, Asian women are faced with a double whammy, when they struggle to fend off stereotypes from both western male and female.

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