From C.Y. Lee to Shawn Wong: The transnational family and its implicit rules
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2021
Abstract
Employing the distinction between explicit and implicit rules as formulated by psychoanalytic theorist and philosopher Slavoj Žižek, this article examines the way in which challenges toward an initial rule-based fantasy take place within transnational families. In particular, the article employs an implicit, unwritten rules framework to assess the effect of transpacific migration on the institution of family within the Chinese American diaspora as represented in post-World War II fiction by Asian Pacific authors C.Y. Lee and Shawn Wong. Suggesting five implicit rules underpinning Chinese American families, the article examines Lee’s The Flower Drum Song to highlight early challenges to these rules before finding in Wong’s Homebase an unflinching adherence to an implicit rule concerning reverence for ancestors. Wong has the advantage of writing in the wake of the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act and of being in a position to trace more and more challenges to the initial fantasy following later waves of transpacific migration. His novel American Knees is then shown to epitomize the implicit rules being stretched almost to breaking point as, for instance, the criteria for spouse selection becomes no longer Chinese or partially Chinese or even Asian or partially Asian but Americanization. © 2021, University of Malaya. All rights reserved.
Keywords
The family, Implicit rules, Transpacific, Chineseness, Slavoj Zizek
Divisions
arts
Publication Title
SARE: Southeast Asian Review of English
Volume
58
Issue
2
Publisher
Department of English, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Malaya