Conversations with Maxine Hong Kingston - Literary Conversations Series - Paul Skenazy - Books - University Press of Mississippi - 9781578060597 - July 30, 1998
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Conversations with Maxine Hong Kingston - Literary Conversations Series

Paul Skenazy

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Conversations with Maxine Hong Kingston - Literary Conversations Series

In this collection of interviews Maxine Hong Kingston talks about her life, her writing, and her objectives. As she answers her critics and readers, she both clarifies the differences and exults in the difficulties of distinguishing between the remembered and the re-created.


Publisher Marketing: In this collection of interviews, Kingston talks about her life, her writing, and her objectives. From the first, her books have hovered along the hazy line between fiction and nonfiction, memoir and imagination. As she answers her critics and readers, she both clarifies the differences and exults in the difficulties of distinguishing between the remembered and the re-created. She explains how she worked to bridge her parents' Chinese dialect with American slang, how she learned to explore her inheritance and find new relevance in her mother's "talk-stories, " and how she developed the complex juxtapositions of myths and memoir that fill her books. Publisher Marketing: In 1976 Maxine Hong Kingston burst into American literature with the publication of "The Woman Warrior: Memoirs of a Girlhood Among Ghosts." Since then her subsequent works--"China Men" (1980) and "Tripmaster Monkey: His Fake Book" (1989)--have startled readers with their complex projections of Asian-American life as a bi-cultural and bilingual adventure filled with contemporary confusions and ancient legends, inherited values, and new loyalties. Kingston has written of her family upbringing in Stockton, California, of the stories her mother told her as advice and warning, of her father's illegal arrival in the United States, of the exploits of grandfathers who worked on the rails in California, of San Francisco street life in the 1960s, and of traditional Chinese legends. Whatever her subject, she claims America for herself and other Asian Americans whose histories are an essential part of the larger American tapestry. In this collection of interviews Kingston talks about her life, her writing, and her objectives. From the first, her books have hovered along the hazy line between fiction and nonfiction, memoir and imagination. As she answers her critics and readers, she both clarifies the differences and exults in the difficulties of distinguishing between the remembered and the re-created. She explains how she worked to bridge her parents' Chinese dialect with American slang, how she learned to explore her inheritance and find new relevance in her mother's "talk stories," and how she developed the complex juxtapositions of myths and memoir that fill her books. Always savvy, often provocative, constantly amused and amusing, Kingston provides a vivid commentary on her writing and offers insight into a body of her work. Review Citations:

Library Journal 09/01/1998 (EAN 9781578060597, Paperback)

Contributor Bio:  Skenazy, Paul Paul Skenazy is a professor of American literature and provost at Kresge College, University of California, Santa Cruz. Tera Martin is completing her doctorate in American literature at University of California, Santa Cruz. Contributor Bio:  Kingston, Maxine Hong Maxine Hong Kingston, Senior Lecturer for Creative Writing at the University of California, Berkeley, delivered the 2000 William E. Massey Lectures at Harvard, on which this book is based. For her memoirs and fiction, The Woman Warrior, China Men, Tripmaster Monkey, and Hawaii One Summer, Kingston has earned numerous awards, among them the National Book Award, the National Book Critics Circle Award for Nonfiction, the Pen West Award for Fiction, an American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters Literature Award, and a National Humanities Medal from the National Endowment for the Humanities, as well as the rare title of "Living Treasure of Hawai'i." In addition, The Fifth Book of Peace will be published in the Spring of 2003.

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released July 30, 1998
ISBN13 9781578060597
Publishers University Press of Mississippi
Genre Cultural Region > Chinese - Cultural Region > Western U.s. - Cultural Region > West Coast - Ethnic Orientation > Asian Studies - Geographic Orientation > California
Pages 277
Dimensions 152 × 229 × 21 mm   ·   485 g
Language English  
Editor Martin, Tera
Editor Skenazy, Paul

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