超越国界的归属:没有“归乡”的日本巴西侨民回归故事

Shannon Welch
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:虽然一些流散的研究对象可能认为他们与自己的祖国有着“永恒”的联系,但新井和土田机器通过她们战后在巴西的日本移民女性的故事质疑这种假设,这些女性在20世纪70年代回到日本,发现日本不再像“家”。在这篇文章中,我将新井的短篇小说《归乡》(1974)和土田的自传体回忆录《我不能唱国歌》(2007)带入对话,批判通过排斥种族、阶级、性别和性别化的“他者”来构建占主导地位的民族和散居身份的话语过程。我特别考虑了“家”和“家庭”的概念如何被用作社区形成的模型,促进了这种排斥,我重新考虑了超越国家和散居边界的归属方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Belonging beyond Borders: Japanese Brazilian Stories of Diasporic Return without a “Homecoming”
Abstract:While some diasporic subjects may believe that they hold an “eternal” connection with their homeland, Arai Chisato and Tsuchida Machie question this presumption through their stories of postwar Japanese immigrant women in Brazil who return to Japan in the 1970s and find that it no longer feels like “home.” In this article, I bring Arai’s short story “Homecoming” (1974) and Tsuchida’s autobiographical memoir “I Cannot Sing the National Anthem” (2007) into conversation to critique the discursive processes that construct dominant national and diasporic identities through the exclusion of raced, classed, gendered, and sexualized “others.” I particularly consider how the notions of “home” and “family” used as models for community formation facilitate this exclusion, and I reconsider ways of belonging beyond national and diasporic borders.
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