Quynh H. Vo – författare
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2 produkter
2 produkter
Making of Little Saigon
Narratives of Nostalgia, (Dis)enchantments, and Aspirations
Häftad, Engelska, 2024
274 kr
Skickas inom 10-15 vardagar
A collective memoir of community reimagining, The Making of Little Saigon orchestrates the voices of activists, writers, artists, entrepreneurs, and scholars who have inhabited and nurtured Little Saigon, Orange County, California, into a beloved sanctuary—a sumptuous enclave of Vietnamese refugees and immigrants in the US. This constellation of narratives chronicles collective memories of settlement, nostalgia, (dis)enchantments, and aspirations as the community has evolved over time. From oceanic crossings to forging a new home, every story interweaves and reverberates with a history of pain and beauty, disunity and solidarity, failure, and resilience as the community careens forward into an uncertain future.
Transnational Kinship
Vietnamese American Memory and Aesthetics in the Era of Neoliberal Peace
Häftad, Engelska, 2027
490 kr
Kommande
In Transnational Kinship, Quynh H. Vo offers a groundbreaking examination of how Vietnamese diasporic subjects navigate memory, displacement, and belonging in the aftermath of war. Moving beyond the traditional boundaries of textual criticism, Vo charts a unique methodological path by seamlessly integrating rigorous literary analysis with extensive ethnographic fieldwork. This innovative approach breathes lived, material experience into the study of literature, allowing the voices of the diaspora to converse directly with the texts that represent them.Through the critical lens of "transnational kinship," Vo investigates the complex web of emotional and economic reciprocation that binds the Vietnamese diaspora to a reimagined homeland. By examining the asynchronous temporalities of migration and the lingering ruins of colonial mobility, she reveals how intergenerational trauma—a collective "memory of pain"—continues to shape present realities. Vo astutely critiques the systems of the modern era, exploring how neoliberal representations dictate the relational economies of survival. Crucially, she highlights the gendered dimensions of this survival through "motherly aesthetics" and a distinct poetics of displacement, interrogating the burdens placed upon those who strive to become "beautiful refugees" under the conditions of a so-called "neoliberal peace."Bridging the humanities and social sciences, Transnational Kinship redefines the landscape of Asian American literary studies. It is an essential, pathbreaking read for scholars of Vietnamese American literature, refugee studies, and transnational anthropology, providing a vital new framework for understanding the aesthetics of relationality in a globalized world.