Racial Castration: Managing Masculinity in Asian America

Front Cover
Duke University Press, Mar 20, 2001 - Literary Criticism - 290 pages
Racial Castration, the first book to bring together the fields of Asian American studies and psychoanalytic theory, explores the role of sexuality in racial formation and the place of race in sexual identity. David L. Eng examines images—literary, visual, and filmic—that configure past as well as contemporary perceptions of Asian American men as emasculated, homosexualized, or queer.
Eng juxtaposes theortical discussions of Freud, Lacan, and Fanon with critical readings of works by Frank Chin, Maxine Hong Kingston, Lonny Kaneko, David Henry Hwang, Louie Chu, David Wong Louie, Ang Lee, and R. Zamora Linmark. While situating these literary and cultural productions in relation to both psychoanalytic theory and historical events of particular significance for Asian Americans, Eng presents a sustained analysis of dreamwork and photography, the mirror stage and the primal scene, and fetishism and hysteria. In the process, he offers startlingly new interpretations of Asian American masculinity in its connections to immigration exclusion, the building of the transcontinental railroad, the wartime internment of Japanese Americans, multiculturalism, and the model minority myth. After demonstrating the many ways in which Asian American males are haunted and constrained by enduring domestic norms of sexuality and race, Eng analyzes the relationship between Asian American male subjectivity and the larger transnational Asian diaspora. Challenging more conventional understandings of diaspora as organized by race, he instead reconceptualizes it in terms of sexuality and queerness.
 

Contents

Ive Been ReWorking on the Railroad Photography and National History in China Men and Donald Duk
35
Primal Scenes Queer Childhood in The Shoyu Kid
104
Heterosexuality in the Face of Whiteness Divided Belief in M Butterfly
137
Male HysteriaReal and Imaginedin Eat a Bowl of Tea and Pangs of Love
167
Out Here and Over There Queerness and Diaspora in Asian American Studies
204
NOTES
229
BIBLIOGRAPHY
267
INDEX
283

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 11 - ... omnipotence of thoughts," a belief in the thaumaturgic force of words, and a technique for dealing with the external world — "magic...

About the author (2001)

David L. Eng is Assistant Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University and coeditor of Q & A: Queer in Asian America, winner of a 1998 Lambda Literary Award.