"Hours of Morbid Entertainment": Self-Irony and Replayed Clichés in Hsu-Ming Teo's Fiction'

Authors

  • Tamara Wagner Nanyang Technical University, Singapore.

Keywords:

Asian Australian fiction, Diaspora, Diasporic writing, Irony, Multiculturalism, critique of, Southeast Asia, representation in literature, Teo, Hsu-Ming

Abstract

This article examines the representation of Southeast Asia and Southeast Asian immigrants in popular Australian fiction. In a close analysis of Hsu-Ming Teo’s first novel Love and Vertigo (2000), it draws attention both to the potential and the problems of self-irony in what have chiefly been read as autobiographically inspired texts. Parodic elements may constructively rupture common readerly expectations of an “Asian past” and hence demand a larger rethinking of prevailing conceptuali-sations of diaspora and diasporic writing. Yet the use of parody has also got its limitations and is symptomatically often edited out in the texts’ reception.

Author Biography

Tamara Wagner, Nanyang Technical University, Singapore.

School of Humanities & Social Sciences

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Published

2012-08-15