y separately published work icon Journal of Intercultural Studies periodical issue   peer reviewed assertion
Alternative title: Worlds at Home: On Cosmopolitan Futures
Issue Details: First known date: 2019... vol. 40 no. 5 2019 of Journal of Intercultural Studies est. 1980- Journal of Intercultural Studies
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2019 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Exoticism or Visceral Cosmopolitanism : Difference and Desire in Chinese Australian Women's Writing, Wenche Ommundsen , single work criticism

'In Visceral Cosmopolitanism, Mica Nava posits a positive and, by her own admission, utopian alternative to postcolonial readings of the sexualisation of difference: a cosmopolitanism located with the antiracist ‘micro-narratives and encounters of the emotional, gendered and domestic everyday’ (2007: 14). Olivia Khoo, in The Chinese Exotic, defines a new, diasporic Chineseness which ‘conceives of women and femininity, not as the oppressed, but as forming part of the new visibility of Asia’ (2007: 12). My reading of recent fiction by Chinese Australian women writers proposes to test these theories against more established models for understanding East/West intimate encounters such as exoticism, Orientalism and Occidentalism, speculating that they may offer a more nuanced understanding of both the complexity and the normalisation of difference in the affective cultures of the twenty-first century.' (Publication abstract)

(p. 595-607)
X