alexandria/2024/notes/as-am-5/week-1.md

2.5 KiB

Week 1

Lecture 1 (9/30)

  • Ralph Ellison: novel bound up with nationhood
    • What/who are we?
    • What has been the experience of this particular group?
    • How did it become this way?
    • What stops us from attaining the ideal?
  • American writers + artists always return to question of our national collectivity -> successes / failures
  • American flag is abstraction + symbol
  • Same painting, over and over again, different meaning/symbol
  • w/ rise of democracy in US, slavery happened in parallel -> cannot talk about one without the other
  • Use example of Asian American literature as entryway toward understanding larger American / minority literature
  • Otherness: radical difference -> Asian is always "foreigner", "strange", "grotesque"
    • Asians come to US for labor shortage (railroads, etc)
    • Perceived through 19th century and further as radically different
  • Assimilation: American promise of leaving behind "tradition" -> "modern life"
    • Theoretical concept -> trickle into daily lives
  • W.E.B. DuBois -> "the problem of the color life" + "double consciousness"
    • Most useful metaphor: double consciousness
  • Double consciousness -> hybridity: rethinking from two different distinct selves -> combination / overlapping "hybrid consciousness"
  • Does the arc of history bend toward progress?
  • On style: how do stylistic decisions (by writers) shape their thematic arguments?
    • Leave things out, emphasize, etc
  • On realism, modernism, postmodernism
  • Next: read Erika Lee

Section (10/04)

Logistics

  • 2 excused absences -> no questions asked

Notes

  • Minority-ness in 5 categories
    • Assimilation
    • Hybridity
    • Double consciousness
    • Invisibility
    • Otherness

Otherness

  • What is us? -> group an individual identifies w/ and sense of belonging
  • Other -> (perceived) different / "out group"
  • Distinguishing "us" / "other" -> culture, language, behaviors, religious traits, citizenship, race, etc
  • Social constructs -> (may) change over time
  • Stereotypes, power, political policies, hegemony, etc...
  • Anti-Asian laws and policies
    • 1875 Page Act
    • 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act
    • 1907 Expatriation Act
    • 1913 First Alien Land Law
    • 1922 Cable Act (reverses Expatriation Act except for women who marry "aliens ineligible for citizenship")
    • 1924 Immigration Act
  • Keep in mind while reading Bulosan (191X, 1930-1956)
    • Attain citizenship for rights, representation, and influence
    • Accumulate wealth through real estate
    • Form families and establish a lasting presence