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Sticky Rice: A Politics of Intraracial Desire: Desire

Sticky Rice: A Politics of Intraracial Desire: Desire in Franklin, TN

Current price: $94.50
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Sticky Rice: A Politics of Intraracial Desire: Desire

Barnes and Noble

Sticky Rice: A Politics of Intraracial Desire: Desire in Franklin, TN

Current price: $94.50
Loading Inventory...

Size: Hardcover

Cynthia Wu’s provocative
Sticky Rice
examines representations of same-sex desires and intraracial intimacies in some of the most widely read pieces of Asian American literature. Analyzing canonical works such as John Okada’s
No-No Boy
, Monique Truong’s
The Book of Salt
, H. T. Tsiang’s
And China Has Hands
, and Lois-Ann Yamanaka’s
Blu’s Hanging
, as well as Philip Kan Gotanda’s play,
Yankee Dawg You Die,
Wu considers how male relationships in these texts blur the boundaries among the homosocial, the homoerotic, and the homosexual in ways that lie beyond our concepts of modern gay identity.
The “sticky rice” of Wu’s title is a term used in gay Asian American culture to describe Asian American men who desire other Asian American men. The bonds between men addressed in
show how the thoughts and actions founded by real-life intraracially desiring Asian-raced men can inform how we read the refusal of multiple normativities in Asian Americanist discourse. Wu lays bare the trope of male same-sex desires that grapple with how Asian America’s internal divides can be resolved in order to resist assimilation.
Cynthia Wu’s provocative
Sticky Rice
examines representations of same-sex desires and intraracial intimacies in some of the most widely read pieces of Asian American literature. Analyzing canonical works such as John Okada’s
No-No Boy
, Monique Truong’s
The Book of Salt
, H. T. Tsiang’s
And China Has Hands
, and Lois-Ann Yamanaka’s
Blu’s Hanging
, as well as Philip Kan Gotanda’s play,
Yankee Dawg You Die,
Wu considers how male relationships in these texts blur the boundaries among the homosocial, the homoerotic, and the homosexual in ways that lie beyond our concepts of modern gay identity.
The “sticky rice” of Wu’s title is a term used in gay Asian American culture to describe Asian American men who desire other Asian American men. The bonds between men addressed in
show how the thoughts and actions founded by real-life intraracially desiring Asian-raced men can inform how we read the refusal of multiple normativities in Asian Americanist discourse. Wu lays bare the trope of male same-sex desires that grapple with how Asian America’s internal divides can be resolved in order to resist assimilation.

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