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Do Bodies Without Organs Feel Shame? An Affective Approach of Identity Crisis in Gene Luen Yang’s American Born Chinese

Journal: International Journal of English, Literature and Social Science (Vol.9, No. 6)

Publication Date:

Authors : ;

Page : 306-315

Keywords : Asian American; Body without Organs; shame; identity; affect theory;

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Abstract

Since the beginning of Chinese American literature in the United States, the identity issue of the Chinese American community has received much attention from Chinese American writers. Gene Luen Yang's graphic novel American Born Chinese tells the story of the protagonist Jin Wang who experiences his identity crisis due to the ethnicity as a Chinese American. Following the protagonist's frustrating attempt of getting accepted into the white American society, constructing an affective model of shame, and through the philosophical perspective of “body without organs” of Deleuze and Guattari, it is to be argued that the genesis and resolution of Jin's identity crisis is actually, as the intensity of affect changes, a process of de-territorialization and entering the state of “body without organs”, which also depicts the authentic living conditions of people of color who are kept dissociated and marginalized from the white American society.

Last modified: 2024-12-30 13:43:24