Interracial Encounters: Reciprocal Representations in African and Asian American Literatures, 1896-1937

JH Lee - Interracial Encounters, 2011 - degruyter.com
JH Lee
Interracial Encounters, 2011degruyter.com
Why do black characters appear so frequently in Asian American literary works and Asian
characters appear in African American literary works in the early twentieth century?
Interracial Encounters attempts to answer this rather straightforward literary question,
arguing that scenes depicting Black-Asian interactions, relationships, and conflicts capture
the constitution of African American and Asian American identities as each group struggled
to negotiate the racially exclusionary nature of American identity.In this nuanced study, Julia …
Why do black characters appear so frequently in Asian American literary works and Asian characters appear in African American literary works in the early twentieth century? Interracial Encounters attempts to answer this rather straightforward literary question, arguing that scenes depicting Black-Asian interactions, relationships, and conflicts capture the constitution of African American and Asian American identities as each group struggled to negotiate the racially exclusionary nature of American identity.
In this nuanced study, Julia H. Lee argues that the diversity and ambiguity that characterize these textual moments radically undermine the popular notion that the history of Afro-Asian relations can be reduced to a monolithic, media-friendly narrative, whether of cooperation or antagonism. Drawing on works by Charles Chesnutt, Wu Tingfang, Edith and Winnifred Eaton, Nella Larsen, WEB Du Bois, and Younghill Kang, Interracial Encounters foregrounds how these reciprocal representations emerged from the nation’s pervasive pairing of the figure of the “Negro” and the “Asiatic” in oppositional, overlapping, or analogous relationships within a wide variety of popular, scientific, legal, and cultural discourses. Historicizing these interracial encounters within a national and global context highlights how multiple racial groups shaped the narrative of race and national identity in the early twentieth century, as well as how early twentieth century American literature emerged from that multiracial political context.
De Gruyter