‘‘I wish you a land'': Hawai'i Short Story Cycles and aloha ′aina 1
AbstractThe artistic appropriation of place ranks among the central concerns of Asian American writing. Place in literature, a simultaneous geography of space and imagination, has the potential to represent communal formation and preservation as it highlights the identity that binds its members in a shared sense of purpose and a common sense of belonging. For first-generation writers, the portrayal of the land of the past often blends with that of the present, offering a vivid depiction of how immigrants perceive the physical and emotional journey from the geographic and temporal past to the present, as they struggle to establish themselves in the new surroundings. For second-generation Asian Americans, place often acquires another meaning, that of a definition of self in the place of birth, as they shift between visions of their parents' past location and their own cultural differences. Third-generation writers engage a wide spectrum of negotiations with the land that was a protagonists of their growing up, and that of their increasingly complex personal and community history. Consequently, a sense of place becomes one of the most significant elements the Asian American writer can manipulate to condition self-representation and the portrayal of community. Footnotes1 Rocío G. Davis is Professor of American and Postcolonial Literature at the University of Navarre and Visiting Professor of Asian American Literature, Department of English (MC 162), University of Illinois–Chicago, University Hall, Chicago, IL 60607–7120. USA. |