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입양서사와 샌프란시스코: 아시아계 미국소설의 새로운 지형Narratives of Adoption and San Francisco: New Geography of the Asian American Novel

Other Titles
Narratives of Adoption and San Francisco: New Geography of the Asian American Novel
Authors
오승아
Issue Date
2017
Publisher
미국소설학회
Keywords
Asian American Novels; Narratives of Adoption; San Francisco; Postmodern Sensibility; flâneur; Sung J. Woo; Bich Minh Nguyen; Love Love; Pioneer Girl
Citation
미국소설, v.24, no.2, pp.75 - 108
Journal Title
미국소설
Volume
24
Number
2
Start Page
75
End Page
108
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/gachon/handle/2020.sw.gachon/6944
ISSN
1738-5784
Abstract
Recently, new Asian American novels are using the trope of adoption in unconventional ways. Sung J. Woo’s Love Love and Bich Minh Nguyen’s Pioneer Girl both employ the motif of adoption in their plot, yet unlike the representative Asian American literary works featuring adoption such as Gish Jen’s Love Wife, Chang-Rae Lee’s Gesture Life, and Jane Jeong Trenka’s The Language of Blood, they portray cases of homoracial, inter-country adoption. Instead of visiting the country of origin in Asia with questions of biological relatives and reasons for adoption, both protagonists travel domestically to San Francisco in order to explore their identity. San Francisco becomes an intriguing city of origin for both Asian American protagonists who walk the city as flâneur figures with a postmodern sensibility. Kevin Lee in Love Love observes San Francisco as a cosmopolitan city. Lee Lien in Pioneer Girl considers it a place of reinvention in the West. While the history of Kevin’s Korean American birth father belongs to the social and cultural history of 1970s San Francisco, and not to the ethnic histories of Asian America, the adoption mystery of Rose Wilder Lane beckons Lee Lien deeper into an American literary history. As San Francisco is marked as “origin” or “birthplace” on the map of Asian American itineraries, not as destination of Asian migrations, narratives of adoption offered by these novels suggest the changing mode of Asian American literature that interrogates and problematizes the ways in which Asian American identity and experiences are defined, represented, and imagined.
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