Authors
Adam Aitken
Publication date
2008/12/1
Journal
Journal of Australian Studies
Volume
32
Issue
4
Pages
445-454
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Group
Description
In the Amy Tan novel, parents become the guardian-teachers of essentialised notions of a mainland Chinese identity, while their American–born children negotiate the contradictory claims of Chineseness on the one hand and forces of assimilation in middle class America on the other. To be authentically Chinese, mothers argue, the daughters must regain a ‘Chinese face’ by returning to their filial homeland. Tan's work has been a popular success but has tended to obscure the heterogeneity and impurity of Asian-American subjectivities. This essay considers Tan's influence on narratives of mother/daughter relationships in Hsu-ming Teo's Love and Vertigo (2000), and in terms of the Vietnamese ‘mad mother’ and her globetrotting Eurasian daughter in Eva Sallis's The City of Sealions (2002). Generational conflict within the family is a common theme in these narratives, and while migration leads to the fragmenting …
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