This article situates the reception of Joy Kogawa\u27s Obasan within a comparative North American context, tracing the divergence and convergence of US and Canadian racial discourses in the canonization of Obasan in Asian American and Canadian literary studies. Through a consideration of how the novel both affirms the oppositional politics of Asian American literary studies and the fragmented nationalism of Canadian literary studies, this article argues that the politics of reception, appropriation and recognition that underwrite the text\u27s cross-border canonization are prefigured by the text\u27s own engagement with passing and recognition. While Obasan\u27s blurring of Japanese Canadian and First Nations experiences can be read as a cr...
Joy Kogawa’s Obasan (1981) and Oscar Nakasato’s Nihonjin (2011) are two novels that narrate the live...
[[conferencetype]]國際[[conferencedate]]20130404~20130407[[iscallforpapers]]Y[[conferencelocation]]大阪,...
In Place/Of Solidarity argues the exigence of developing Asian Canadian critical praxes that align a...
Joy Kogawa's Obasan has enjoyed a status unprecedented for a book written by a non-white Canadian. T...
This essay examines the discrimination that natives and Japanese Canadians have suffered at the hand...
This article surveys the newly emergent field of Asian Canadian studies, following Iyko Day in sugge...
Joy Kogawa is a well known Japanese-Canadian poet and novelist. Her award-winning autobiographical n...
Initiated with the first communal collaboration, Inalienable Rice: A Chinese and Japanese Canadian A...
[[abstract]]This paper aims to reconsider the other's silence in Joy Kogawa's Obasan, which represen...
International audience'Obasan' (1981) recalls how stigmatizing labels served to justify the evacuati...
The Japanese American community has been deeply marked by the internment experience as a result of t...
The aim of Joy Kogawa's Obasan is political as well as aesthetic -- Kogawa wishes to articulate the ...
Up until this point, 2006, Asian Canadian criticism has sought legitimacy within a national framewor...
This essay focuses on the role of visual codes to construct cultural identities within a national fr...
ii This thesis takes as its subject the uncanny intersection of the history of Japanese Canadian int...
Joy Kogawa’s Obasan (1981) and Oscar Nakasato’s Nihonjin (2011) are two novels that narrate the live...
[[conferencetype]]國際[[conferencedate]]20130404~20130407[[iscallforpapers]]Y[[conferencelocation]]大阪,...
In Place/Of Solidarity argues the exigence of developing Asian Canadian critical praxes that align a...
Joy Kogawa's Obasan has enjoyed a status unprecedented for a book written by a non-white Canadian. T...
This essay examines the discrimination that natives and Japanese Canadians have suffered at the hand...
This article surveys the newly emergent field of Asian Canadian studies, following Iyko Day in sugge...
Joy Kogawa is a well known Japanese-Canadian poet and novelist. Her award-winning autobiographical n...
Initiated with the first communal collaboration, Inalienable Rice: A Chinese and Japanese Canadian A...
[[abstract]]This paper aims to reconsider the other's silence in Joy Kogawa's Obasan, which represen...
International audience'Obasan' (1981) recalls how stigmatizing labels served to justify the evacuati...
The Japanese American community has been deeply marked by the internment experience as a result of t...
The aim of Joy Kogawa's Obasan is political as well as aesthetic -- Kogawa wishes to articulate the ...
Up until this point, 2006, Asian Canadian criticism has sought legitimacy within a national framewor...
This essay focuses on the role of visual codes to construct cultural identities within a national fr...
ii This thesis takes as its subject the uncanny intersection of the history of Japanese Canadian int...
Joy Kogawa’s Obasan (1981) and Oscar Nakasato’s Nihonjin (2011) are two novels that narrate the live...
[[conferencetype]]國際[[conferencedate]]20130404~20130407[[iscallforpapers]]Y[[conferencelocation]]大阪,...
In Place/Of Solidarity argues the exigence of developing Asian Canadian critical praxes that align a...