Foreign Literature Studies ›› 2018, Vol. 40 ›› Issue (6): 22-30.

• Overseas Chinese Literature Studies • Previous Articles     Next Articles

A Way Out of the Dilemma of Being “Rootless”: Narrating histories in Contemporary British Chinese Literature

Xiao Chunduan, Pu Ruoqian   

  • Online:2018-12-25 Published:2022-05-24
  • About author:Xiao Chunduan is associate professor at the College of Foreign Studies, Jinan University (Guangzhou 510632, China). Her research interests include English literature and British Chinese literature. Email: txchd@jnu.edu.cn; Pu Ruoqian is professor at the College of Foreign Studies, Ji’nan University (Guangzhou 510632, China). Her research interests include English literature and overseas Chinese literature. Email: tprq@jnu.edu.cn
  • Supported by:
    “Narrating histories in Contemporary British Chinese Literature” (13CWW029), sponsored by Youth Project of National Social Science Foundation of China

Abstract: One salient feature of British Chinese literature has been the practice of narrating history, in which the writers weave the identity problem into the narration of “histories.” Through examining this obsession among British Chinese writers, this article argues that such writing not only unfolds the history that British Chinese writers have been mostly fascinated by, but also signals their perspectives of history and more importantly their politics of surviving in diaspora in Britain. The fact that most British Chinese are immigrants or descendants of immigrants from the former British colonies stirs up the question of multiple diaspora, which together with the reality of the sub-ethnic cultural divergence within the British Chinese community makes the issue of identification even more complex. Therefore the narration of history attaches tremendous significance to the construct of identity for the marginalized British Chinese. By narrating histories, British Chinese writers stumble yet aim to find their way out of the dilemma of being “rootless.”

Key words: British Chinese literature, narrating history, identity, ethnic politics

Journal Integrated Operation and Management Platform with Network JMPN-2.0
Journal Integrated Operation and Management Platform with Network

《Foreign Literature Studies》editorial department
Foreign Literature Studies, 152 Luoyu Road, Wuhan, Hubei Province, China. To subscribe to this journal or purchase any single issue, please contact us at wwyj@mail.ccnu.edu.cn. Phone: (86) 2767866042.
Copyright © 2021   System Management
Statistical information:total visitors Online