Monday, September 2, 2019
Asian Diaspora Essay -- English Literature
Asian Diaspora    Asian diaspora, or the personal and cultural implications of leaving  one's homeland, is a central and reaccuring theme for Asian American  writers. Diaspora is Greek for "the scattering of seeds"  (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diaspora), and its ancient denotation  has taken figurative meaning today as a feeling of seperation and  detachment. In both Fae Myenne Ng's Bone and Chitra Banerjee  Divakaruni's Leaving Yuba City, a thematic thread of "scattered  parts", outsiderness, and otherness link the characters in each, as  well as the two seperate works, together. This diaspora affects each  generation of immigrants in a slighly different, but no less  signficant, way. As an aspect of diasora, W.E.B. DuBois's notion of  "double consciousness" in The Souls of Black Folk, takes the shape of  a personal duality for the characters in Bone and Leaving Yuba City.   Their lives looking through DuBois's "veil" creates personal struggle  in the character's relationship with America, maintaining two unique  cultural identities simultaneously.     The characters in Ng's novel Bone work to conceive a third identity,  one that maintains old traditions while being "Americanized." This  stuggle is not exclusive to the first generation Chinese immigrants,  Leon and Mah, but has profoundly impacted their American raised  children, Leila, Nina, and Ona. However, the consequences of this  conflict is different between the generations. Leon cannot settle  into one place but is "suddenly here, suddenly gone" (54). Leon's  stray jobs are often on a ship, and Leila concludes that the draw of  the "hollow and still center of the ocean" for him is "completion"  (150). The cause of Leon's absense, or vacancy of personal wholeness,  is his Chinese self trying to chan...              ...haracters in Leaving Yuba City and Bone are connected through  common seperation from their homeland, or dual selves seen in all  generations. This common diaspora creates a unique and painful family  dynamic for the Leong family; their incompleteness binds them  together. For Sushma in "Leaving Yuba City", she does not feel  seperation from homeland, but lives denying a fundamental part of  herself, which is much like a homeland. Their is an incongruance or  seperation between the person others can see, and the person she  really is. Sushma personifies DuBois's "veil." An extremist view of  diaspora is "The Maimed Dancing Men", having ghost limbs, and being  physically incomplete. Ng and Divakaruni portray the same desperate  and painful feelings that come with a seperation from both your  homeland, and self, showing these two are inseperable and fundamental  to one's wholeness.                       
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