Project

The Chinese Eurasian: East-West Interracialism at the Turn of the Twentieth Century

Program

Frederick Burkhardt Residential Fellowships for Recently Tenured Scholars

Department

Foreign Languages and Literatures

Location

For residence at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study during academic year 2007-2008

Abstract

My project is a comparative study of Chinese and Chinese American representations of Chinese-Western interracialism (interracial marriage and biracial identity) at the turn of the 20th century. As imperialism and migration drew China and the West closer, intellectuals on both sides of the Pacific took up this controversial subject, using the Eurasian as a metaphor to condense the cultural anxieties and desires produced by East-West encounters. Through analysis of racial theory, literature, and visual texts, I examine how divergent understandings of race, culture, and gender informed constructions of the Eurasian among Chinese and Chinese American authors. I aim to extend our cross-cultural understanding of biracialism, and to bridge the divide between Asian and Asian American Studies.