A New Historicist Analysis of the Rewriting of Chinese American History in Donald Duk

Xiaoxue WANG

Abstract


Frank Chin creates the methods of recovering the lost history of Chinese Americans in his book Donald Duk. He constructs the male heroism through traditional Chinese culture, challenges American education of history through describing the changing process of Donald’s attitudes towards anything about China, and rewrites his version of Chinese American history by analyzing the relation between dreams and reality. Thus Chin achieves his strategy to subvert “History” with “history.” This paper intends to give a new historicist analysis of the rewriting of Chinese American history in Chinese American literature through Donald Duk by Frank Chin.

Keywords


New Historicism; Donald Duk; Rewriting; Chinese American history

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References


Brannigan, J. (1998). New historicism and culture materialism. New York: ST. Martin’s Press, INC.

Cheung, King-kok. (1993). Articulate silences: Hisaye Yamamoto, Maxine Hong Kingston, Joy Kogawa. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.

Chin, Frank, et al. (1974). Aiiieeeee!: An anthology of Asian-American writers. Washington D. C.: Howard University Press.

Chin, Frank, Jeffrey Paul, Inada, Lawson Fusao, & Wong Shawn (1991). The big aiiieeeee! An anthology of Chinese American and Japanese American literature. New York: A Meridian Book.

Chin, Frank (1991). Donald Duk. Minneapolis: Coffee House Press.

Eng, David L. (2001). Racial castration: Managing masculinity in Asian America. Durham and London: Duke University Press.

Veeser, Aram H. (1989). The new historicism. New York & London: Routledge.




DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3968/4448

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