Consensual hallucinations : cyberspace, narrative, and poetics in Asian North American literature

This thesis examines the effects and applications of Web 2.0 in contemporary Asian diasporic literature. Since the early days of cyberpunk, cyberspace has long been considered an object of science fiction to be depicted through futuristic tropes. With the advent of Web 2.0, however, cyberspace has b...

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Main Author: Chan, Sunny
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/42549
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.-425492013-06-05T04:20:37ZConsensual hallucinations : cyberspace, narrative, and poetics in Asian North American literatureChan, SunnyThis thesis examines the effects and applications of Web 2.0 in contemporary Asian diasporic literature. Since the early days of cyberpunk, cyberspace has long been considered an object of science fiction to be depicted through futuristic tropes. With the advent of Web 2.0, however, cyberspace has become integrated into our everyday lives and virtual subjectivity is now as much a part of daily experience as racial subjectivity. Previous scholarship on cyberspace in literature has focused largely on the past generation of cyberpunk, and although it acknowledges that imagined Asian subjects are intimately tied to understandings of cyberspace, it has not yet turned its attention to the growing number of texts that treat cyberspace as a quotidian reality. I argue that the recognition that cyberspace is no longer science fiction but is instead a realistic part of ordinary life allows several Asian North American writers to use cyberspace to comment on racialisation. This study is split into two main parts, which explore cyberspace's relationship with narrative and with poetics in non-canonical Asian North American literature. In the first part, a chapter on the Internet's effect on narrative, I analyse the short stories of Wena Poon's Lions in Winter and a graphic novel by Jen Wang, Koko Be Good. I read the ways in which cyberspace as a literary concept affects these authors' approaches to racial issues of class and representation. In the next chapter on poetics, I examine Rita Wong's forage and its use of what Fred Wah has defined as alienethnic poetics. I then attempt to read Sachiko Murakami's online experimental poetry site, Project Rebuild, through the non-traditional application of alienethnic poetics and propose a new methodology for reading the virtuality of the Internet. This thesis contributes to the existing body of critical work on cyber literature by suggesting new directions for the mobilization of cyberspace as a literary mode.University of British Columbia2012-06-27T15:12:26Z2012-06-27T15:12:26Z20122012-06-272012-11Electronic Thesis or Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/2429/42549eng
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description This thesis examines the effects and applications of Web 2.0 in contemporary Asian diasporic literature. Since the early days of cyberpunk, cyberspace has long been considered an object of science fiction to be depicted through futuristic tropes. With the advent of Web 2.0, however, cyberspace has become integrated into our everyday lives and virtual subjectivity is now as much a part of daily experience as racial subjectivity. Previous scholarship on cyberspace in literature has focused largely on the past generation of cyberpunk, and although it acknowledges that imagined Asian subjects are intimately tied to understandings of cyberspace, it has not yet turned its attention to the growing number of texts that treat cyberspace as a quotidian reality. I argue that the recognition that cyberspace is no longer science fiction but is instead a realistic part of ordinary life allows several Asian North American writers to use cyberspace to comment on racialisation. This study is split into two main parts, which explore cyberspace's relationship with narrative and with poetics in non-canonical Asian North American literature. In the first part, a chapter on the Internet's effect on narrative, I analyse the short stories of Wena Poon's Lions in Winter and a graphic novel by Jen Wang, Koko Be Good. I read the ways in which cyberspace as a literary concept affects these authors' approaches to racial issues of class and representation. In the next chapter on poetics, I examine Rita Wong's forage and its use of what Fred Wah has defined as alienethnic poetics. I then attempt to read Sachiko Murakami's online experimental poetry site, Project Rebuild, through the non-traditional application of alienethnic poetics and propose a new methodology for reading the virtuality of the Internet. This thesis contributes to the existing body of critical work on cyber literature by suggesting new directions for the mobilization of cyberspace as a literary mode.
author Chan, Sunny
spellingShingle Chan, Sunny
Consensual hallucinations : cyberspace, narrative, and poetics in Asian North American literature
author_facet Chan, Sunny
author_sort Chan, Sunny
title Consensual hallucinations : cyberspace, narrative, and poetics in Asian North American literature
title_short Consensual hallucinations : cyberspace, narrative, and poetics in Asian North American literature
title_full Consensual hallucinations : cyberspace, narrative, and poetics in Asian North American literature
title_fullStr Consensual hallucinations : cyberspace, narrative, and poetics in Asian North American literature
title_full_unstemmed Consensual hallucinations : cyberspace, narrative, and poetics in Asian North American literature
title_sort consensual hallucinations : cyberspace, narrative, and poetics in asian north american literature
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/42549
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