In this article, I explore the notion of post-migrant subjectivity via critical discussion of Sigmund Freud’s well-known but also controversial essay “Mourning and Melancholia,” and Amy Tan’s novel The Joy Luck Club. In my discussion of Freud’s essay, I attempt to investigate a concept of melancholia which in one sense is related to the process of unresolved grief and loss, but also, at the same time, connected to the gesture of performativity and creativity. This critical approach constitutes the background against which I read Amy Tan’s novel as a “post-migrant” novel. Tan’s novel tells the complex and multifaceted story of the relationship between first generation individuals, who emigrated from China, and their children who are growing up in America. The first-generation’s children, or, the post-migrant subjects, occupy an ambiguous position—torn between a desire to fully integrate and become full citizens, but also a desire to know more about their ethnic origins. The post-migrant subjects are haunted by aspects that single them out, their difference, but which also connect them most intimately to their parents, and their parents’ past. I suggest that the way in which this complex subject-position is negotiated and resolved in the novel is closely connected to a notion of melancholia as a creative or performative way of coming to terms with a secondary loss.
목차
1. Introduction 2. Narrative Problematics 3. Secondary Loss 4. Amy Tan's The Joy Luck Club 5. Conclusion Works Cited Abstract
한국중앙영어영문학회 [The Jungang English Language And Literature Association Of Korea]
설립연도
1968
분야
인문학>영어와문학
소개
본 학회는 영미어문학의 학술연구와 이에 부합하는 아래의 사업을 기획 수행하며,
또한 회원 상호간의 친목을 도모함을 목적으로 한다.
1. 학회지 발간
2. 연구 발표회, 강연회, 공동연구
3. 영미어문학 관련 도서출판
4. 영미어문학 관계 도서 및 자료의 모집 및 비치
5. 기타 본회의 목적 달성에 필요한 사업
간행물
간행물명
영어영문학연구 [The Jungang Journal of English Language and Literature]