Maxine Hong Kingston

“The history of the intermingling of human cultures is a history of trade—in objects like the narwhal’s tusk, in ideas, and in great narratives.†—Barry Lopez, Arctic Dreams The Woman Warrior (1976), Maxine Hong Kingston’s first book, made her famous. Her arrival coincided with, and helpe...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Crow, Charles L.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: ScholarWorks 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/wws/146
https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/context/wws/article/1145/viewcontent/162_maxine_hong_kingston.pdf
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Summary:“The history of the intermingling of human cultures is a history of trade—in objects like the narwhal’s tusk, in ideas, and in great narratives.†—Barry Lopez, Arctic Dreams The Woman Warrior (1976), Maxine Hong Kingston’s first book, made her famous. Her arrival coincided with, and helped to fuel, an awareness of literature by women and ethnic minorities, and a change in the literature studied in high-school and college classrooms. Today Kingston is one of the most frequently taught of living American authors. Her works are studied in courses in English, women’s studies, Asian studies, ethnic studies, postmodern literature, postcolonial literature, “magic realism,†history, and autobiography. Discussion of Kingston has in fact changed our understanding of several of these categories.