Browsing by Author "Kwon, Aimee"
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Item Open Access Labor, Idleness, and Colonial Modern Fiction: Reading Claude McKay, Yi Sang, and Samuel Beckett in Relation(2023) Murphy, KeeranThis dissertation addresses the entanglement of work, identity, aesthetics, and geopolitics in the writings of three modernist authors: Claude McKay (1890-1948), Yi Sang (1910-1937), and Samuel Beckett (1906-1989). It focuses in particular on these writers’ explorations of idleness in their narratives, both thematically and formally. As such, it intervenes in scholarly discussions on the importance of labor and work to modernist artists. The contexts of colonial and racial history are foregrounded for their significance to the authors’ creative explorations of idleness, and in this way the dissertation also contributes to fields of comparative literature and postcolonial literary studies.The primary works addressed are Claude McKay’s novel Banjo (1929), Yi Sang’s short fictional narrative “Wings” (1936), and Samuel Beckett’s early novel Murphy (1938), as well as his later trilogy of Molloy (1951), Malone Dies (1951), and The Unnamable (1953). The dissertation suggests that, like many twentieth-century modernist writers, McKay, Yi Sang, and Beckett took up work as an important concept for creative investigation. However, it argues that their interests in fact lie less with work itself than they do with idleness—a concept that capitalist ideology would define negatively in terms of the absence of productive labor but which these writers explore as a positive subjective state of being. As such, their writings powerfully critique the place of work in the modern world and challenge readers to question their own valuations of labor and idleness.
Item Open Access Model Illegal Alien: How Undocumented Asian Americans “Deserve” Citizenship(2019-04-15) Zhang, MuyiThis thesis explores how DACA and the model minority stereotype affect self and public perceptions of undocumented Asian American immigrants. An undocumented Asian American immigrant was interviewed in depth about their life in regards to their documentation status(es) and other forms of public media (videos, books, online articles) detailing the lives of undocumented immigrants were analyzed. Along with these sources, public reactions in the form of online, user-generated comments were recorded to gain insight into how attitudes are shaped from certain messages promoted by media. By juxtaposing both the ideas of citizenship promoted through DACA and the model minority stereotype, the many factors that affect how undocumented Asian Americans are made more presentable for citizenship in the eyes of the American public are explored. Additionally, definitions of DACA are explored based on how it interacts with and emulates the model minority stereotype. This thesis finds that undocumented Asian Americans are seen as more deserving of citizenship because of racial stereotypes and arguments in favor of economic contribution and social assimilation. This idea of proving one is deserving of citizenship through contributions no born citizen of the United States is required to prove indicates racism reiterated over and over again in American rhetoric of belonging.