Hiromi Goto's Chorus of Mushrooms : cultural difference, visibility and the Canadian tradition

Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://hdl.handle.net/10045/1273
Información del item - Informació de l'item - Item information
Título: Hiromi Goto's Chorus of Mushrooms : cultural difference, visibility and the Canadian tradition
Autor/es: Darias Beautell, Eva
Palabras clave: Goto, Hiromi | Chorus of Mushrooms | Literatura canadiense | Identidad cultural | Regionalismo | Kogawa, Joy Nozomi | Obasan
Fecha de publicación: nov-2003
Editor: Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Filología Inglesa
Cita bibliográfica: DARIAS BEAUTELL, Eva. “Hiromi Goto's Chorus of Mushrooms : cultural difference, visibility and the Canadian tradition”. Revista alicantina de estudios ingleses. No. 16 (Nov. 2003), pp. 35-53
Resumen: This essay focuses on the role of visual codes to construct cultural identities within a national framework in contemporary Canadian literature and culture, and analyses the novel Chorus of Mushrooms by Hiromi Goto (1994) as an interesting study of such strategies of identitary formation in Canada. Clearly springing from the Asian Canadian rapidly growing field of writing, the novel sets itself to break institutional expectations in a number of ways. First, it exposes the asymmetries in the conditions of production of cultural identities in Canada and denounces the power of the codes of visibility in the production of cultural difference. Second, it recognizes, appropriates and reverses the functioning of cultural stereotypes, unveiling in the process their arbitrary nature. Third, it inscribes itself right into the Canadian tradition, putting into question the awkward division between mainstream and minority literature in Canada. This is done by means of a double move consisting of writing explicitly within the field of Asian Canadian tradition, specially because of its intertextual engagement with the multiaward-winning novel Obasan, by Joy Kogawa (1983), while entering and appropriating, at the same time, the texts of Canadian regionalism, specifically prairie fiction, as well as the larger national contexts of literature.
Descripción: An earlier, much shorter and different version of it was presented as a paper under the title “‘Do You Have a Canadian Address?’: Hiromi Goto’s Chorus of Mushrooms and the Canadian Literary Tradition” at the International Conference of the Asociación Española de Estudios Canadienses, held in Salamanca last November, 28-30 (2002), and will be electronically published in its Proceedings.
Patrocinador/es: The research conducted for the writing of this essay was funded by a Faculty Research Award given by the Government of Canada in the spring 2002. This work also falls within the field of a larger three-year research project, “Revisiones del canon en Canadá y Estados Unidos: literatura, cultura y género (1975-2000)”, funded by the Consejería de Educación, Cultura y Deportes (Gobierno de Canarias; project code: PI2002/045).
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10045/1273 | http://dx.doi.org/10.14198/raei.2003.16.05
ISSN: 0214-4808
DOI: 10.14198/raei.2003.16.05
Idioma: eng
Tipo: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Aparece en las colecciones:Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses - 2003, No. 16

Archivos en este ítem:
Archivos en este ítem:
Archivo Descripción TamañoFormato 
ThumbnailRAEI_16_5.pdf186,28 kBAdobe PDFAbrir Vista previa


Todos los documentos en RUA están protegidos por derechos de autor. Algunos derechos reservados.