Interior Chinatown, Epigraphs, and Unrecognized Diversity

 Yu, in Interior Chinatown, begins each section with a unique epigraph, strengthening the themes throughout the book while highlighting the racism and stereotypes endured by Asian Americans. The first epigraph, quoted by Bonnie Tsui, states, “[i]f a film needed an exotic backdrop... Chinatown could be made to represent itself or any other Chinatown in the world. Even today, it stands in for the ambiguous Asian anywhere” (xv). Tsui claims that in any situation where an Asian location is in demand, that demand can be easily fulfilled with any Chinatown, playing the universal role of a generic living situation in Asia. The emphasis on any Chinatown possessing the power to represent any other Chinatown shows one of the problems Yu tries to highlight—the diversity between Asian Americans that goes unacknowledged and unrecognized. Starting Interior Chinatown with this blunt epigraph lays the foundation for Act I and the rest of the book to characterize the vast difference between what society thinks Asian culture is and Asian culture.

In Act IV, Yu includes a backstory of Ming-Chen Wu containing events where Asian Americans from different cultures are lumped under the same category, ‘Asian man’, to continue to bring awareness of the diversity unrecognized by Americans. The story of Ming-Chen Wu’s past is about a group of Asian American roommates; one of the roommates is beaten to near death because of the Pearl Harbor bombing. After the brutal assault, the roommates all realize, “Allen was Wu and Park and Kim and Nakamoto, and they were all Allen. Japan, China, Taiwan, Korea, Vietnam. Whatever... [b]ecause now they know what they are. Will always be. Asian Man” (148). It doesn’t matter where the roommates are from—where Asian Americans are from—because in society's eyes, they will always be given the title: Asian Man. Additionally, Allen’s cause of assault being the attack on Pearl Harbor, while not having any Japanese descent further highlights the categorization of all Asian cultural groups into one.

The last epigraph of Interior Chinatown relates to the first one, defining what Chinatown truly means. The quote by Philip Choy does such: “Chinatown, like the phoenix, rose from the ashes with a new façade, dreamed up by an American-born Chinese man, built by white architects, looking like a stage-set China that does not exist” (261). Because Chinatown was built from the ground up by people having never stepped foot in China, Chinatown is more of a reflection of society’s perspective of China, based on stereotypes, than what it is supposed to represent, China itself. Yu emphasizes that China and Asia are represented by stereotypical ideas rather than the culture practiced bringing awareness to the falseness of Asian stereotypes society accepts as truth.

How could anyone live in an environment, much less feel at home, where their culture is aggregated with others based on stereotypes rather than a genuine reflection of their own cultural practices?

 

Comments

  1. I found your argument to be extremely compelling about the continuous stereotyping of Asian cultures in the United States and how that affects Asian-Americans, like in the assault of Allen in the novel. I also liked how you brought attention to the epigraphs, which are an element of the novel that I really hadn't paid attention to if I'm to be honest. One that adds onto your argument is found on page 183. In this quote from Bonnie Tsui, she says "Local Chinese children were also dressed as rural peasants by day to add to the ambience. By night they changed back into their normal Western clothes." To me this quote reflects your argument of how many in the United States view Asian-Americans: as a stereotype, like a Chinese peasant from the early 1800s. They are dressed up to fit our view of Asia and to not mess with an established worldview. It's only when they are back home where they are away from society's eyes that they are viewed as normal Americans. This is much like how Willis and others can only be seen as normal when they are away from the prying eyes of the public, sequestered in the mythical interior Chinatown.

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