The Fluid and Transcultural Self: Renegotiating the East Asian Female Identity in The Clay Marble by Minfong Ho
Abstract
This paper examines how the contemporary Chinese-American author Minfong Ho (b. 1951) portrays Dara, the female protagonist of The Clay Marble (1991), in her practice of culture in Cambodian society in order to explore the Western perspective of the East Asian female identity as voiceless, submissive and hypersexual. Using the concepts of identity fluidity as proposed by the sociologist and cultural theorist Stuart Hall (2011) and his views on the decentring of the individual, the paper aims to investigate how the three concepts of the enlightenment subject, the sociological subject and the postmodern subject interact with Arianna Dagnino’s (2015) concept of transculture/ality, or intermingling of cultures, in The Clay Marble through Dara’s practice of culture in Cambodian society and how she is decentred as her identity evolves. Ho’s portrayal of Dara reveals an East Asian female who experiences identity fluidity in her thinking, attitude and behaviour while her stable, regular and fixed self in the enlightenment subject phase becomes decentred through transculture/ality at the sociological subject phase. Here, through transculture/ality, or her interaction or communication within her culture, she links herself to society and transforms as she finds her voice and manifests individual agency. By doing so, Dara enters the third phase, the postmodern subject, where her thinking, attitude and behaviour are constantly changing as are the ways in which she is defined and addressed in her Cambodian culture.
Keywords: East Asian female identity; identity fluidity; Minfong Ho; The Clay Marble; transculture/ality
Full Text:
PDFReferences
Al-Karawi, S. T. & Bahar, I. B. (2013). Negotiating liminal identities in Mohja Kahf’s The girl in the tangerine scarf. International Journal of Applied Linguistics and Literature, 2(2), 101-106.
Al-Karawi, S. T. & Bahar, I. B. (2014). Negotiating the veil and identity in Leila Aboulela’s Minaret. GEMA Online® Journal of Language Studies, 14(3), 255-268.
Almutairi, A. S., Hashim, R. S. & Mydin, R. M. (2017). Grafting eco-diasporic identity in Randa Abdel-Fattah’s selected novels. GEMA Online® Journal of Language Studies, 17(4), 179-190.
Anderson, E. & Grace, K. (2018). From schoolgirls to ‘virtuous Khmer women’: Interrogating Chbab Srey and gender in Cambodian education policy. Studies in Social Justice, 12(2), 215-
Bahar, I. B. (2019). Literature relived: 21st century literary research paradigms amidst the 4IR. Paper presented at the 2nd Annual International Conference on Language and Literature
(AICLL) (pp. 60-73). Medan, Indonesia: Islamic University of North Sumatra, July.
Bahar, I. B., Kamarudin, K., Maming, P. H. & Razak, F. A. (2019). An endless identity dilemma: The liminal Westernised Muslim Malays in The enemy in the blanket by Anthony Burgess.
International Journal of Applied Linguistics and English Literature, 8(1), 212-223.
Chang, H. (2017). The body and female identity in Eithne Strong’s Flesh: The greatest sin. 3L: Language, Linguistics and Literature® The Southeast Asian Journal of Language Studies,
(4), 157-169.
Chin, C. (2019). New SPM English Literature syllabus. Star Online. Retrieved July 11, 2019 from https://www.thestar.com.my/news/nation/2019/06/23/new-spm-english-lit-syllabus/
Christiyanto, Y. & Widyahening, E. T. (2016). A discourse analysis of speech acts in Minfong Ho’s novel entitled The clay marble. Karya Ilmiah Mahasiswa Progdi Pendidikan Bahasa Inggris,
(2), 1-15.
Chua, G. C., Bahar, I. B. & Noor, R. (2016). Honour killing as engendered violence against women in Amit Majmudar’s Partitions (2011). 3L: Language, Linguistics and Literature® The
Southeast Asian Journal of English Language Studies, 22(1), 221-233.
Dagnino, A. (2015). Transcultural writers and novels in the age of global mobility. Indiana: Purdue University Press.
Dodhy, S., Kaur, H., Yahya, W. R. W. & Bahar, I. B. (2017). The role of secure base and safe haven: A means of reconstructing the broken-self in Yvonne Vera’s Under the tongue. Pertanika
Journal of Social Sciences & Humanities, 25(4), 1821-1832.
Hall, S. (2011). The question of cultural identity. In Hall, S., Held, S., Hubert, D. & Thompson, K. (Eds.). Modernity: An introduction to modern societies (pp. 595-634). Malden, MA:
Blackwell.
Ho, M. (2010). The Minfong Ho collection. Singapore: Marshall Cavendish Editions.
Jafni, N. F. S. A. & Bahar, I. B. (2014). Feminine mystique and the patriarchal world in Tillie Olsen’s I stand here ironing. Journal of Language and Communication, 1(2), 249-260.
Krishnamoorthy, R. & Krishnamurthy, B. (2016). Rebirth of self and identity: An analysis of Meena Alexander’s Manhattan music. 3L: Language, Linguistics and Literature® The Southeast
Asian Journal of Language Studies, 22(2), 81-90.
LinDa, S. (2016). Gendered modernity in Cambodia: The rise of women in the music industry. Khmer Scholar. Retrieved December 12, 2018 from http://khmerscholar.com/gendered-
modernity-in-cambodia-the-rise-of-women-in-the-music-industry/
“Minfong Ho”. (n.d.). The authors guild. Retrieved November 22, 2017 from http://minfong.ag-sites.net//bio.htm
Moosavinia, S. R. & Yousefi, T. B. (2018). New norms of gender and emergence of identity crisis in Margaret Atwood’s The handmaid’s tale. 3L: Language, Linguistics and Literature® The
Southeast Asian Journal of Language Studies, 24(1), 162-174.
Nirmayanti, Y. T. (2013). Young ordinary women as strugglers, leaders and conflict survivors in Minfong Ho’s novels. Master’s thesis, Sanata Dharma University, Yogyakarta, Indonesia.
Rama, A. (2018). Bringing women to the front of Cambodia’s art scene. Khmer Times. Retrieved December 12, 2018 from https://www.khmertimeskh.com/112291/bringing-women-to-the-
front-of-cambodias-art-scene/.
Razak, F. A., Bahar, I. B. & Talif, R. (2016). Emerging patterns of bangsa Malaysia in Anthony Burgess’ Time for a tiger. International Journal of Applied Linguistics and English Literature,
(1), 265-271.
Salih, E.G., Kaur, H., Bahar, I. B. & Hassan, M. F. (2018). Rape talks louder than guns: feminising men via wartime rape in Judith Thompson’s Palace of the end. Pertanika Journal of Social
Sciences & Humanities, 26(1), 285-298.
Sheeley, A. M. (2012). Learning for Cambodian women: Exploration through narrative identity and imagination. PhD thesis, The University of San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
Thavry, T. (2017). A proper woman: The story of one woman’s struggle to live her dreams. Middletown DE: Thavry Thon.
Wiggins, J. L. (2006). Minfong Ho: Politics in prose. Journal of Children’s Literature, 32(2), 52-59.
Yusof, N. M., Hashim, R. S. & Mydin, R. M. (2012). Remembering home: Palestine from a distance. 3L: Language, Linguistics and Literature® The Southeast Asian Journal of Language
Studies, 18(2), 95-103.
Zabihzadeh, S., Hashim, R. S. & Chua, G. C. (2015). Domestic violence against women in Atiq Rahimi’s The patience stone. GEMA Online® Journal of Language Studies, 15(3), 51-66.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17576/3L-2020-2602-09
Refbacks
- There are currently no refbacks.
eISSN : 2550-2247
ISSN : 0128-5157