This powerful study reconceptualizes ideas of ethnic literature while investigating the construction of ethnic heroines, shifting the focus away from cultural politics and considering instead narrative or poetic qualities which involve surprising relationships between Anglo-American women's writing and fiction produced by Asian American and African American women authors.
This powerful study reconceptualizes ideas of ethnic literature while investigating the construction of ethnic heroines, shifting the focus away from cultural politics and considering instead narrative or poetic qualities which involve surprising relationships between Anglo-American women's writing and fiction produced by Asian American and African American women authors.
Reshmi J. Hebbar has taught literary and cultural studies at several Atlanta colleges, including Spelman College and The Georgia Institute of Technology.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1. Someday My Prince Will Come: Ambivalent Romance and Ethnicity in the Fiction of the Eaton Sisters 2. The Fairest of Them All: Ethnicity Heroines and the Objectifying Lens 3. Cinderella's Understudies: Marginality Ethnicity and the Negotiated Spaces of Heroine Desire 4. Little Princesses: A New Generation of Ethnic Adolescent Heroines. Epilogue.
Introduction 1. Someday My Prince Will Come: Ambivalent Romance and Ethnicity in the Fiction of the Eaton Sisters 2. The Fairest of Them All: Ethnicity Heroines and the Objectifying Lens 3. Cinderella's Understudies: Marginality Ethnicity and the Negotiated Spaces of Heroine Desire 4. Little Princesses: A New Generation of Ethnic Adolescent Heroines. Epilogue.
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