Global Literary Chineseness: Some Terms Around a Political Matter

  • Serena Fusco Università degli Studi di Napoli "L'Orientale"
Keywords: Chinese Literature, Diaspora, Globalization, Cultural translation, Territorialization

Abstract

The rise of China to the status economic power has brought increasing attention to various forms of contact between Chinese culture – or, better, Chinese cultures – and globality. This dimension is inevitably political: on the one hand, because it involves different degrees of overlap among culture, language, ethnicity, territory, and citizenship; on the other hand, because it evokes the (im)possibility of speaking "on behalf" of Chineseness. Some recent interventions theorize "the Sinophone" as a cultural space wherein, instead of reconfirming a monolithic conception of Chineseness, Chineseness itself is articulated as a discourse from below - a discourse attuned to the vindications of minorities, quite different from the unrestrained expansion of a hegemonic majority. Other studies propose a hybrid, plurilingual identity as alternative to a consolidated, nation-based concept of diaspora. By creating a juxtaposition of possible approaches and touching upon a case study, this paper discusses some implications emerging in the context of such double movement: on the one hand, the recognition of a global dimension for Chinese literature and culture; on the other hand, attempts to turn this recognition into a space for pluralism and democracy.

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Author Biography

Serena Fusco, Università degli Studi di Napoli "L'Orientale"
Serena Fusco is Adjunct Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Naples “L’Orientale”. She has just completed a manuscript on Chineseness as a transnational narrative of cultural identification in Chinese American literature, with an emphasis on the body and gender. Besides numerous essays in the fields of Chinese American and Asian American literature, her work and interests include literature and photography, intermediality, feminist and queer criticism, and international education. Her most recent interests include the skin as a literary trope across different historical, language, and cultural contexts. Among her publications: “ ‘These Girls Hold our Future in their Hands’: The Case of Girl Rising” (forthcoming); “ ‘Born but Once’: Photographic (Self-)Representations and the Sociocultural Investment of Singularity in Henry James’s ‘The Real Thing’ and ‘The Private Life’ ” (2013); “Community, Loyalty, Betrayal: Chuang Hua’s Crossings” (2012).

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Published
2015-11-30
How to Cite
Fusco, S. (2015). Global Literary Chineseness: Some Terms Around a Political Matter. Between, 5(10). https://doi.org/10.13125/2039-6597/1847