What do we have in canon? : Chinese Canadian anthologies and the posit(ion)ing of an ethno-national literary canon and its contexts

Chinese Canadian anthologies are sites for negotiating community boundaries, positing coalitions, deconstructing social and literary institutions, and asserting legitimacy. They pose the question, What do we have in canon?, by interrogating the representation of Chinese Canadian writers in the ex...

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Main Author: Lew, Janey
Language:English
Published: 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/17692
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-176922018-01-05T17:39:03Z What do we have in canon? : Chinese Canadian anthologies and the posit(ion)ing of an ethno-national literary canon and its contexts Lew, Janey Chinese Canadian anthologies are sites for negotiating community boundaries, positing coalitions, deconstructing social and literary institutions, and asserting legitimacy. They pose the question, What do we have in canon?, by interrogating the representation of Chinese Canadian writers in the existing canon and by offering an alternative canon for consideration. I propose the term "ethno-national literature" to account for the ethno-racial and national distinctiveness of the literary category "Chinese Canadian." While recent scholarly work has been directed toward conceptualizing "Asian Canadian" and "Asian North American" as disciplinary areas of study within English, it does not address the issue that specific ethno-racial groups continue to identify themselves in categories such as "Chinese Canadian" or "Japanese Canadian." This thesis considers the theoretical potential of Chinese Canadian anthologies as texts which articulate rhetorical community. I examine five anthologies of Chinese Canadian literature, Inalienable Rice (a collaboration between Chinese and Japanese Canadian artist-activists, 1979), Many-Mouthed Birds (1991), Jin Guo (1992), Swallowing Clouds (1999) and Strike the Wok (2003), in comparison with three Oxford anthologies of Canadian literature to consider how Chinese Canadian anthologies act as culturally-resistant, canon-forming texts. Arts, Faculty of English, Department of Graduate 2010-01-07T20:48:18Z 2010-01-07T20:48:18Z 2006 2006-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/17692 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.
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language English
sources NDLTD
description Chinese Canadian anthologies are sites for negotiating community boundaries, positing coalitions, deconstructing social and literary institutions, and asserting legitimacy. They pose the question, What do we have in canon?, by interrogating the representation of Chinese Canadian writers in the existing canon and by offering an alternative canon for consideration. I propose the term "ethno-national literature" to account for the ethno-racial and national distinctiveness of the literary category "Chinese Canadian." While recent scholarly work has been directed toward conceptualizing "Asian Canadian" and "Asian North American" as disciplinary areas of study within English, it does not address the issue that specific ethno-racial groups continue to identify themselves in categories such as "Chinese Canadian" or "Japanese Canadian." This thesis considers the theoretical potential of Chinese Canadian anthologies as texts which articulate rhetorical community. I examine five anthologies of Chinese Canadian literature, Inalienable Rice (a collaboration between Chinese and Japanese Canadian artist-activists, 1979), Many-Mouthed Birds (1991), Jin Guo (1992), Swallowing Clouds (1999) and Strike the Wok (2003), in comparison with three Oxford anthologies of Canadian literature to consider how Chinese Canadian anthologies act as culturally-resistant, canon-forming texts. === Arts, Faculty of === English, Department of === Graduate
author Lew, Janey
spellingShingle Lew, Janey
What do we have in canon? : Chinese Canadian anthologies and the posit(ion)ing of an ethno-national literary canon and its contexts
author_facet Lew, Janey
author_sort Lew, Janey
title What do we have in canon? : Chinese Canadian anthologies and the posit(ion)ing of an ethno-national literary canon and its contexts
title_short What do we have in canon? : Chinese Canadian anthologies and the posit(ion)ing of an ethno-national literary canon and its contexts
title_full What do we have in canon? : Chinese Canadian anthologies and the posit(ion)ing of an ethno-national literary canon and its contexts
title_fullStr What do we have in canon? : Chinese Canadian anthologies and the posit(ion)ing of an ethno-national literary canon and its contexts
title_full_unstemmed What do we have in canon? : Chinese Canadian anthologies and the posit(ion)ing of an ethno-national literary canon and its contexts
title_sort what do we have in canon? : chinese canadian anthologies and the posit(ion)ing of an ethno-national literary canon and its contexts
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/17692
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