Searching for Mr. Chin: Constructions of Nation and the Chinese in West Indian LiteraturePosted in Asian Diaspora, Books, Caribbean/Latin America, Literary/Artistic Criticism, Media Archive, Monographs on 2010-06-24 19:33Z by Steven |
Searching for Mr. Chin: Constructions of Nation and the Chinese in West Indian Literature
Temple University Press
May 2010
192 pages
5.5×8.25
Cloth EAN: 978-1-43990-130-4; ISBN: 1-4399-0130-9
Electronic Book: EAN: 978-1-43990-132-8
Anne-Marie Lee-Loy, Assistant Professor of English
Ryerson University, Toronto, Canada
West Indian literary representations of local Chinese populations illuminate concepts of national belonging
What do twentieth-century fictional images of the Chinese reveal about the construction of nationhood in the former West Indian colonies? In her groundbreaking interdisciplinary work, Searching for Mr. Chin, Anne-Marie Lee-Loy seeks to map and understand a cultural process of identity formation: “Chineseness” in the West Indies. Reading behind the stereotypical image of the Chinese in the West Indies, she compares fictional representations of Chinese characters in Jamaica, Trinidad, and Guyana to reveal the social and racial hierarchies present in literature by popular authors such as V.S. Naipaul and Samuel Selvon, as well as lesser known writers and hard to access literary texts.
Using historical, discursive, and theoretical frameworks for her literary analysis, Lee-Loy shows how the unstable and ambiguous “belonging” afforded to this “middleman minority” speaks to the ways in which narrative boundaries of the nation are established. In addition to looking at how Chinese have been viewed as “others,” Lee-Loy examines self-representations of “Chineseness” and how they complicate national narratives of belonging.