Vietnamese are portrayed as hard-working and able to escape poverty. South
Asians are portrayed as hard-working and intelligent. Pacific Islanders and
Native Hawaiians, though lumped with Asian Americans, are seldom portrayed
as model minorities and are more closely associated with stereotypes of “island
natives.”
The persistence of the model minority stereotype also creates a racial hierarchy
by placing Asian Americans above blacks, Latinos, and “other non-whites.” It also
functions as a disciplining agent for Asian Americans to be “good” national sub-
jects if they want to retain their privileged status. Furthermore, a demarcation is
created between the “good” culture of Asian Americans and the “bad” culture of
“other non-whites”; the dominance of the white group and the reproduction of
white virtue are never called into question. The ideology of meritocracy as a
cornerstone for achievement in the American imagination is further reinforced
by the “truth” of perceived successes of Asian Americans and the “myths” of
why they are successful.
—Dawn Lee Tu
Further ReadingLee, Stacey. Unraveling the Model Minority Stereotype: Listening to Asian American
Youth. New York: Teacher’s College Press, 1996.
Osajima, Keith. “Asian Americans as the Model Minority: An Analysis of the Popular
Press Image in the 1960s and 1980s.” In Min Zhou and James Gatewood, eds. Contem-
porary Asian America: A Multidisciplinary Reader. New York: New York University
Press, 2000.
Suzuki, Bob. “Education and the Socialization of Asian Americans: A Revisionist Analysis
of the ‘Model Minority’ Thesis.” In Don T. Nakanishi and Tina Yamano Nishida, eds. The
Asian American Educational Experience: A Sourcebook for Teachers and
Students. New York: Routledge, 1995.
Wu, Frank. Yellow: Race in America beyond Black and White. New York: Basic Books,
2003.
Mother-Daughter Narrative in AsianAmerican Literature
In the work of Asian American women writers, the theme of mother-daughter
relations has been immensely popular since the publication of Maxine Hong
Kingston’s The Woman Warrior and Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club. The mother-
daughter narrative is predominantly disclosed via the American-born daughter’s
perspectives. This use of the protagonist’s viewpoints allows mainstream
Pan Asian Americans: Mother-Daughter Narrative 71
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American readers to identify with the daughter. Through this identification, this
explicit narrative formula makes the particular Asian American women’s experi-
ence accessible to its readers by using the daughter’s coming-of-age story. As
Patricia P. Chu observes, through this formula, in the process of establishing her
subjectivity, the daughter recoils from and then ultimately reconciles with her
immigrant mother, who embodies social marginality and Asianness, by discover-
ing the mother’s silenced traumatic past. By deepening her understanding of the
mother and by sharing the pains her mother experienced, the daughter is eventu-
ally healed from her own racial and/or sexual trauma inflicted by the abusive
power of American mainstream society, and starts to fully acknowledge and em-
brace herself as an Asian American woman.
In this popular narrative formula of the mother-daughter dyad, the mother’s
secret past is often conveyed to her daughter in a coded manner. The mother pre-
fers such indirect methods because of the ambivalence that exists between her
shames of the past, her desires for articulation, and her wishes to protect her
daughter from a similar painful experience. The use of this coded transmission
involves utilizing forms of folklore such as songs and stories. This approach is
widely used to avoid the direct confession of a brutal past. For instance, in Comfort
Woman by Korean American author Nora Okja Keller, protagonist Akiko, a former
Korean comfort woman, or sex slave, of the Japanese military during World War
II, uses various forms of Korean folklore to convey her messages to her biracial
daughter Beccah. Also, Akiko uses folklore to pass down her ethnic heritage to
her daughter, and thus she employs folklore as an effective means of creating
Korean/American women’s genealogy.
Therefore, from the daughter’s perspective, the rich cultural imagery expressed
in folklore tradition operates as the keys to connect her with her mother, her Asian
American community, and her ancestral origin in Asia. Furthermore, the daughter
often attempts to gain her strength and wisdom by identifying herself with a
female character of a folklore story. An example of this can be found in the novel
Monkey Bridge by Vietnamese American author Lan Cao. Here in an effort to
manipulate her college interview, young Vietnamese refugee Mai attempts to fol-
low a strategy employed by the legendary Trung sisters, who prevented Chinese
invasions in Vietnam.
Among Asian American women writers, especially in the subgenre of mother-
daughter relationships, folklore tradition is generally used for celebrating the
strength of the ties among women and for proclaiming Asian/American feminism.
Thus, these authors often revise and modify the original stories to make them more
suitable for their own story lines. Mother-daughter narratives in Asian American
literature reveal the authors’ fertile imagination that contrives variations of the
folklore of their ethnic origins.
—Yasuko Kase
72 Pan Asian Americans: Mother-Daughter Narrative
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Further ReadingCao, Lan. Monkey Bridge. New York: Penguin, 1997.
Chu, Patricia P. “To Hide Her True Self”: Sentimentality and the Search for an Intersubjective
Self in Nora Okja Keller’s Comfort Woman.” In Eleanor Ty and Donald G. Goellnicht, eds.
Asian North American Identities: Beyond the Hyphen. Bloomington: Indiana University
Press, 61–83.
Keller, Nora Okja. Comfort Woman. New York: Penguin, 1997.
Kingston, Maxine Hong. The Woman Warrior: Memoirs of a Girlhood among Ghosts.
New York: Vintage International, 1989.
Tan, Amy. The Joy Luck Club. New York: Putnam, 1989.
Orientalism and Folklore
In his influential book Orientalism (1978), Palestinian American scholar Edward
W. Said (1935–2003) describes the relations between Western culture and imperi-
alism. According to Said, Western culture and knowledge are profoundly inter-
twined with the power of political system, and thus even the aesthetic and
epistemic values are not innocent from this system. Theoretically incorporating
Michel Foucault’s notion of discourse and Antonio Gramsci’s hegemony, Said
declares that Orientalism is a Western corporate institution of domination over
the Other, the Orient. In other words, Orientalism is an enormous hegemonic sys-
tem that produces cultural expressions about the Other to legitimize Western
colonial domination. In this unsymmetrical system of representation, the Other is
denied its own subject position for self-representation by being reduced to the
mere object of Western knowledge. The Orient is studied in academia, displayed
in museums, and illustrated in various cultural expressions by the West.
By extending Said’s theoretical notion of Orientalism, which is geographically
focused on the Middle East, to the studies about the particular racial subordination
of Asian Americans in U.S. society, the scholars of Asian American studies have
been developing arguments concerning problematic representations about Asian
Americans and the exoticization of their ethnic cultures including the folklore tradi-
tion in American mainstream society. Historically associated with foreignness
because of their inscribed racial Otherness, Asian Americans have needed to
strongly claim their denied American identity. Therefore, whereas Asian American
folklore tradition can strengthen their racial and ethnic pride by offering a rich cul-
tural heritage, it has also provoked either fetishization or stigmatization by main-
stream society and thus has evoked ambivalent feelings among Asian Americans
toward their own folk cultures. For example, as King-Kok Cheung points out, during
World War II Japanese Americans were forced to abandon their ethnic heritage,
Pan Asian Americans: Orientalism and Folklore 73
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