'Theorizing in Narrative Form': Premonitions of Orientalism and Racist Love in Bing Xin's 'The Photograph'

This article makes a case for a new intersection between Chinese writer Bing Xin, Orientalist critique, and Asian American literary criticism. Bing Xin's 'The Photograph' (1934) anticipates the theoretical insights later articulated by postcolonialist and Asian American scholars. The...

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Main Author: King-Kok Cheung
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bath Spa University 2012-11-01
Series:Transnational Literature
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dspace.flinders.edu.au/xmlui/bitstream/2328/26429/1/bitstream
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spelling doaj-e29bd9a5f3fd491f8298e491e1d915e22021-02-02T02:42:13ZengBath Spa UniversityTransnational Literature1836-48452012-11-01512328/26429/1'Theorizing in Narrative Form': Premonitions of Orientalism and Racist Love in Bing Xin's 'The Photograph'King-Kok CheungThis article makes a case for a new intersection between Chinese writer Bing Xin, Orientalist critique, and Asian American literary criticism. Bing Xin's 'The Photograph' (1934) anticipates the theoretical insights later articulated by postcolonialist and Asian American scholars. The narrative interweaves three strands of Orientalism-missionary denigration of the Chinese as inferior heathens, American construction of the Asian as the silent model (minority), and Chinese complicity in the enactment of the white stereotype. It furnishes a dual critique of American Orientalism and Chinese patriarchal familism as well as contributes to ongoing debates about the viability of a culturalist upbringing for adoptees from another country. Susan Sontag's observation that photography is often made to serve possessive colonialist ends is inverted by the eponymous photograph, through which the Chinese author shows that it is possible to use the master's tool to deconstruct the master's predatory vision. This transnational tale crosses the boundaries of Chinese, Chinese American, and postcolonialist studies; critiques both American imperialist assumptions and Chinese traditional values; and offers caveats against culturalist approaches to transracial adoption.http://dspace.flinders.edu.au/xmlui/bitstream/2328/26429/1/bitstreamBing Xin'The Photograph'Chinese short storiesOrientalisminter-racial adoption
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author King-Kok Cheung
spellingShingle King-Kok Cheung
'Theorizing in Narrative Form': Premonitions of Orientalism and Racist Love in Bing Xin's 'The Photograph'
Transnational Literature
Bing Xin
'The Photograph'
Chinese short stories
Orientalism
inter-racial adoption
author_facet King-Kok Cheung
author_sort King-Kok Cheung
title 'Theorizing in Narrative Form': Premonitions of Orientalism and Racist Love in Bing Xin's 'The Photograph'
title_short 'Theorizing in Narrative Form': Premonitions of Orientalism and Racist Love in Bing Xin's 'The Photograph'
title_full 'Theorizing in Narrative Form': Premonitions of Orientalism and Racist Love in Bing Xin's 'The Photograph'
title_fullStr 'Theorizing in Narrative Form': Premonitions of Orientalism and Racist Love in Bing Xin's 'The Photograph'
title_full_unstemmed 'Theorizing in Narrative Form': Premonitions of Orientalism and Racist Love in Bing Xin's 'The Photograph'
title_sort 'theorizing in narrative form': premonitions of orientalism and racist love in bing xin's 'the photograph'
publisher Bath Spa University
series Transnational Literature
issn 1836-4845
publishDate 2012-11-01
description This article makes a case for a new intersection between Chinese writer Bing Xin, Orientalist critique, and Asian American literary criticism. Bing Xin's 'The Photograph' (1934) anticipates the theoretical insights later articulated by postcolonialist and Asian American scholars. The narrative interweaves three strands of Orientalism-missionary denigration of the Chinese as inferior heathens, American construction of the Asian as the silent model (minority), and Chinese complicity in the enactment of the white stereotype. It furnishes a dual critique of American Orientalism and Chinese patriarchal familism as well as contributes to ongoing debates about the viability of a culturalist upbringing for adoptees from another country. Susan Sontag's observation that photography is often made to serve possessive colonialist ends is inverted by the eponymous photograph, through which the Chinese author shows that it is possible to use the master's tool to deconstruct the master's predatory vision. This transnational tale crosses the boundaries of Chinese, Chinese American, and postcolonialist studies; critiques both American imperialist assumptions and Chinese traditional values; and offers caveats against culturalist approaches to transracial adoption.
topic Bing Xin
'The Photograph'
Chinese short stories
Orientalism
inter-racial adoption
url http://dspace.flinders.edu.au/xmlui/bitstream/2328/26429/1/bitstream
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