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Two million 'butterflies' searching for home: Identity and images of Korean Chinese in Ho Yon-sun's Yanbian narratives

Posted on:2016-10-29Degree:M.AType:Thesis
University:University of South CarolinaCandidate:Jin, XiangFull Text:PDF
GTID:2477390017482073Subject:Comparative Literature
Abstract/Summary:
This thesis examines the representation of Korean Chinese searching for home in relation to Korean diasporic identity. Home as a sense of identity is both personal and collective. It is also a reflection of one's psyche and emotion. For Korean Chinese, searching for a place to call home in between their host-homeland China and original homeland Korea involves many aspects of meaning, the home of an individual, of a family, and of a community. Therefore, the third cultural region Yanbian, the Korean Chinese Autonomous Prefecture of China, and Yanbian narratives become the central issue of this thesis. I first offer an analysis on the historical relations between Yanbian and Korean Chinese as well as Korean Chinese intellectuals' debate over Korean Chinese cultural identity and Korean diaspora. Then, I do a close reading of third generation Korean Chinese writer Ho Yon-sun's two novels Windflower and Who Saw a Butterfly's Nest respectively. Throughout my thesis, I argue that both the process of Korean Chinese characters' negotiation of an entry to Korea in Who Saw a Butterfly's Nest and the efforts to reconcile conflicts between Korean Chinese and native Koreans in Windflower is born from a desire of Korean Chinese to establishing a home and to position themselves in between their host and home culture.
Keywords/Search Tags:Korean chinese, Searching for home, Identity, Ho yon-sun, Yanbian narratives
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