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Romancing Human Rights : Gender, Intimacy, and Power between Burma and the West, Hardback Book

Romancing Human Rights : Gender, Intimacy, and Power between Burma and the West Hardback

Part of the Intersections: Asian and Pacific American Transcultural Studies series

Hardback

Description

When the world thinks of Burma, it is often in relation to Nobel laureate and icon Aung San Suu Kyi.

But beyond her is another world, one that complicates the overdetermination of Burma as a pariah state and myths about the “high status” of Southeast Asian women.

Highlighting and critiquing this fraught terrain, Tamara C.

Ho’s Romancing Human Rights maps “Burmese women” as real and imagined figures across the twentieth century and into the twenty-first century.

More than a recitation of “on the ground” facts, Ho’s groundbreaking scholarship—the first monograph to examine Anglophone literature and dynamics of gender and race in relation to Burma—brings a critical lens to contemporary literature, fi lm, and politics through the use of an innovative feminist/queer methodology.

She crosses intellectual boundaries to illustrate how literary and gender analysis can contribute to discourses surrounding and informing human rights—and in the process off ers a new voice in the debates about representation, racialization, migration, and spirituality. Romancing Human Rights demonstrates how Burmese women break out of prisons, both real and discursive, by writing themselves into being.

Ho assembles an eclectic archive that includes George Orwell, Aung San Suu Kyi, critically acclaimed authors Ma Ma Lay and Wendy Law-Yone, and activist Zoya Phan.

Her close readings of literature and politicized performances by women in Burma, the Burmese diaspora, and the United States illuminate their contributions as authors, cultural mediators, and practitioner-citizens.

Using flexible, polyglot rhetorical tactics and embodied performances, these authors creatively articulate alter/native epistemologies—regionally situated knowledges and decolonizing viewpoints that interrogate and destabilize competing transnational hegemonies, such as U.S. moral imperialism and Asian militarized dictatorship. Weaving together the fi ctional and non-fi ctional, Ho’s gendered analysis makesRomancing Human Rights a unique cultural studies project that bridges postcolonial studies, area studies, and critical race/ethnic studies—a must-read for thosewith an interest in fi elds of literature, Asian and Asian American studies, history, politics, religion, and women’s and gender studies.

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