Narrative Space and the Figure of the Refugee in the Early Life Writing of Ocean Vuong

dc.contributor.authorHart K.
dc.contributor.correspondenceHart K.
dc.contributor.otherMahidol University
dc.date.accessioned2024-11-25T18:18:03Z
dc.date.available2024-11-25T18:18:03Z
dc.date.issued2024-01-01
dc.description.abstractThis paper will read for the representation of space in the Vietnamese American author Ocean Vuong’s narrative essay “The Weight of Our Living: On Hope, Fire Escapes, and Visible Desperation”. The paper places Vuong’s text into conversation with theorists of narrative and architectural spaces–Yi-Fu Tuan, Umberto Eco, and Mikhail Bakhtin, among others–and draws on critical refugee studies to explore the representation of spaces and places in their relationship to Vuong’s account of refugee experience and trauma. In the essay’s manipulations of narrative space, meditations on architectural space, and engagements with theories of trauma, a spatial understanding of trauma emerges and comes to bear on first wave literary trauma theory, which the essay builds on and departs from with the suggestion that architectural space functions semiotically and is a medium of language by which topics socially and psychologically repressed can be “spoken” despite social taboos and prohibitions. Working against public discourse which reduces refugees to victims of trauma (in their country of origin) and beneficiaries of social uplift (in their resettlement country), Vuong critiques the discursive framing of the refugee as needful ward and perpetual other and works toward a means of speaking about personal experience that speaks back to dominant narratives about refugees.
dc.identifier.citationEnglish Studies (2024)
dc.identifier.doi10.1080/0013838X.2024.2417490
dc.identifier.eissn17444217
dc.identifier.issn0013838X
dc.identifier.scopus2-s2.0-85209540915
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/20.500.14594/102166
dc.rights.holderSCOPUS
dc.subjectSocial Sciences
dc.subjectArts and Humanities
dc.titleNarrative Space and the Figure of the Refugee in the Early Life Writing of Ocean Vuong
dc.typeArticle
mu.datasource.scopushttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85209540915&origin=inward
oaire.citation.titleEnglish Studies
oairecerif.author.affiliationMahidol University

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