hidden
Hình bìa
Loại tài liệu:
Article
Tác giả:
Y-Dang Troeung
Đề mục:
American literature
Nhà xuất bản:
Johns Hopkins University Press
Ngày xuất bản:
Jan-April 2015
Định dạng:
pdf
Nguồn gốc:
Ariel: A Review of International English Literature, Volume 46, Number 1-2, Jan-April 2015, pp. 239-255
Ngôn ngữ:
eng
Lượt xem:
0
Lượt tải:
0

Nội dung

Hong Kong received 223,302 Vietnamese "Boat People" beginning on May 3, 1975. The last camp in Hong Kong, Pillar Point refugee camp, was officially closed on May 31st, 2000, over 25 years after the end of the Vietnam War. The residuals of this violent past continue to haunt the collective memory of the Vietnamese in the diaspora, yet the Boat People's "Asian passage" remains an untold chapter of Hong Kong's national history. Exploring the complex relationship between global compassion fatigue, the camp state of exception, and storytelling as a refugee tactic, Vietnamese American writer Andrew Lam's "The Stories They Carried" recounts the experience of Vietnamese refugees abandoned in Hong Kong throughout the 1980s and 1990s, in extra-territorial limbo between Vietnam and the West. This paper will discuss the experience of teaching Lam's story to students in the local Hong Kong context, where refugee and asylum seeking policy continues to be a highly charged political topic. I consider the ways in which Lam's text bears pedagogical resonance across the Pacific, arguing that the teaching of this piece constitutes the remembering of a missing chapter in both the Vietnamese American narrative and the history of Hong Kong.

Tập tin đính kèm

Loại file Tên file Dung lượng Chi tiết
201501-02ARIEL239-255.pdf 353240 Kb XemTải