Ruth Eleanor McKee (1903-1972) was a novelist, poet, and ghostwriter for the U.S. State Department. Her first novel, The Lord's Anointed, written in 1934, is still considered one of the best fictional treatments of the history of Hawaii.
Through close readings grounded in the socio-historical context of each work, Ty studies how authors and filmmakers meet the gaze of the dominant culture and respond to the assumptions and meanings commonly associated with Orientalized, visible bodies. Ty does not survey Asian Canadian and Asian America literature, but presents readings of selected texts that actively engage with issues of otherness, visibility, and identification. Many of them, she says, are in the process of working out how larger issues of representation, power, and history affect Asian North American subjectivity. Parts of the work have been published previously.
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