Manusya, Journal of Humanities
Publication Date
2022
Abstract
Gender is a quintessential issue in Asian American literature, since Asian Americans are seen as weak with feminine qualities, according to the Western colonial concept. This paper examines Korean American women’s power through an analysis of Hongyong, the female protagonist in Helie Lee’s Still Life with Rice, who survives Japanese colonization in Korea and the Korean War and finally starts her new life as a Korean American woman in the United States. Hongyong goes beyond the concept of patriarchy in Korea and rescues herself and her family with her intelligence, determination, power, and bravery. As an Asian woman who successfully resettles in the United States, her achievement refutes the Western colonial concept which double-feminizes Asian women and the binary concept about the West and the East. Through Hongyong, the image of Korean American women, as part of Asian American women, is transformed from weak and powerless to strong and powerful.
DOI
10.1163/26659077-25020014
First Page
1
Last Page
20
Recommended Citation
Praphan, Kittiphong
(2022)
"Articulating Korean American Women’s Power Amidst Conflicts of Colonialism and War in Helie Lee’s Still Life with Rice,"
Manusya, Journal of Humanities: Vol. 25:
No.
1, Article 10.
DOI: 10.1163/26659077-25020014
Available at:
https://digital.car.chula.ac.th/manusya/vol25/iss1/10