
In the past four decades the field of Asian American literary and cultural studies has grown enormously, expanding its areas of inquiry beyond the reflections on national identity and citizenship to encompass such issues as transnational and diasporic identities and communities; the workings of imperialism; the intersectionality of race, gender, and sexuality; and social justice/human rights in a global context. This project is the largest and most comprehensive collection of scholarship on Asian American literature and culture to date. With original essays on everything from Asian American literary classics to experimental theater, from K-pop to online gaming, the Oxford Encyclopedia of Asian American Literature and Culture guides both established scholars and readers new to this field through the extensive landscape of Asian American writing and cultural production.One hundred essays on varied historical periods, geographical locales, and artistic modes offer an extensive examination of racial representation and activism, interdisciplinary and comparative approaches to literary work, ethnic communities, space and place, transnational and transpacific flows, and genres such as speculative fiction, the detective novel, and melodrama. Along with literary works from the late-19th century to the 21st century, the Oxford Encyclopedia of Asian American Literature and Culture covers a wide-ranging selection of Asian American theatre, dance, music, visual arts, film, television, and media. With its illuminating and profound commentary on Asian American writing and artistic practice, the volumes survey the historical foundations of this rich field, showing the exciting and profound new directions that currently drive the study of Asian American literary and cultural traditions.
This three-volume set investigates the evolution and current state of Asian American literary and cultural studies, addressing how the field has expanded from national identity concerns to global, transnational, and intersectional inquiries. Editor Josephine Lee, a prominent scholar in the field, curates a collection of one hundred original essays that synthesize decades of academic research. The work provides a structured framework for understanding how Asian American artistic production—ranging from 19th-century literature to contemporary digital media—functions within broader social, political, and historical contexts.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this collection as a foundational reference for both established researchers and students entering the field of Asian American studies. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the breadth of the interdisciplinary approach as key strengths for institutional libraries and serious scholars.
Page Count:
2125
Publication Date:
2020-03-13
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190699620
ISBN-13:
9780190699628
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