The Politics Of Life
The Politics Of Life
Edited and with an introduction and commentaries by VELINA HASU HOUSTON
Series: Asian American History and Culture
Copyright Date: 1993
Published by: Temple University Press
Pages: 280
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt14bszdz
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Book Info
The Politics Of Life
Book Description:

This anthology of work by three Asian American women playwrights-Wakako Yamauchi, Genny Lim, and Velina Hasu Houston-features pioneering contemporary writers who have made their mark in regional and ethnic theatres throughout the United States. In her introduction, Houston observes that the Asian American woman playwright is compelled "to mine her soul" and express the angst, fear, and rage that oppression has wrought while maintaining her relationship with America as a good citizen.

The plays are rich with cultural and political substance and have a feminist concern about women's spirit, intellect, and lives. They portray Asian and Asian American women who challenge the cultural and sexual stereotypes of the Asian female. Yamauchi's two plays deal with how easily a country can dishonor its citizens. In "12-1-A," a Japanese American family is incarcerated during World War II in an Arizona camp where Yamauchi herself was interned. "The Chairman's Wife" dramatizes the life of Madame Mao Tse Tung through the lens of events at Tien An Men Square in 1989. Lim's "Bitter Cane" is about the exploitation of Chinese laborers who were recruited to work the Hawaiian sugar cane plantations. In "Asa Ga Kimashita" ("Morning Has Broken"), Houston explores a Japanese woman's interracial romance in postwar Japan and the influence of traditional patriarchy on the lives of Japanese women.

These plays will entertain and enlighten, enrage and profoundly move audiences. With honesty, imagination and courage, each grapples with the politics of life.In the seriesAsian American History and Culture, edited by Sucheng Chan, David Palumbo-Liu, Michael Omi, K. Scott Wong, and Linda Trinh Võ.

eISBN: 978-1-4399-0616-3
Subjects: Sociology
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-viii)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. ix-x)
  3. Acknowledgments
    Acknowledgments (pp. xi-xiv)
  4. Introduction
    Introduction (pp. 1-32)

    Japanese poet Kazuko Shiraishi’s poem “I Fire at the Face of the Country Where I Was Born”¹ reveals the feminine experience as a political experience—as an existence belabored by the dogs of history, the senility of history, contemporary societal perspectives about women, and the need to manage the rage often catalyzed by these burdens. The pistol of confession aimed at our beloved country—that is the reality at which the Asian American woman playwright sooner or later must arrive, because the history of oppression of people of color and women in the United States leaves her no other truly...

  5. Wakako Yamauchi
    Wakako Yamauchi (pp. 33-44)

    Born in California’s Imperial Valley in 1924 to Issei (first-generation Japanese American) parents, Wakako Yamauchi was one of four siblings, sharing her life with two sisters and a brother. Her father, Yasaku Nakamura, had come to the United States from Shimizu, Japan, where his family specialized in the making of kamaboko (a Japanese fish cake). The playwright’s mother, Hamako Machida, came from Shizuoka, Japan, where her family was engaged in the packaging of tea. Both parents are deceased.

    Yamauchi’s family sustained itself by farming but had to move every two or three years due to the Alien Land Law. As...

  6. 12–1–A
    12–1–A (pp. 45-100)
    Wakako Yamauchi

    MITCH(tiredly):Did you see the baggage some people brought? They said only as much as your arms can carry.

    KOKO(sitting on her suitcase):Some people must have arms like octopuses.

    (MITCHopens the windows.)

    KOKO(continuing):Octopi? Octopedes?

    MITCH: What?

    KOKO: That’s obscure. Rarely used.

    MITCH: What’s wrong with you, Koko?

    KOKO: It’s an archaic form of the plural of octopus.

    (Outside,HARRYmoves downstage and sits unseen by the family.)

    MITCH: Octopedes! Here we are in this goddamn place and you talking about fish! You act like nothing’s happened.

    KOKO: I’m trying to get my bearings!

    MRS....

  7. The Chairman’s Wife
    The Chairman’s Wife (pp. 101-150)
    Wakako Yamauchi

    VOICES: Tiananmen ...(overlapping)Tiananmen ... Tiananmen .. . Tiananmen ...

    (Lights fade in.CHIANG CHING, 75,sits on a chair in a prison hospital. Stark shadows of bars cross the stage. She nods over a small red book. She is in a recurring dream.)

    CHIANG CHING(muttering):Un-un-un. Tiananmen?

    (Lights throb as though in a nightmare.)

    VOICES(overlapping, distorted):Tiananmen ... Deng Xiaoping ... Tiananmen ... Deng Xiaoping ...

    CHIANG CHING: Angh? Deng? Deng Xiaoping?

    VOICES(overlapping, softly):Tiananmen ... beat-her-up ... Tiananmen ... beat-her-up ...

    CHIANG CHING: What’s going on?

    (Voices fade gradually asCHIANG CHINGawakens.)

    CHIANG...

  8. Genny Lim
    Genny Lim (pp. 151-162)

    Genny Lim was born in 1946 in San Francisco, where she grew up as the youngest of seven children. Her parents, Edward and Lin Sun Lim, are both natives of Kwantung, China. Her father resided in the Bay Area as a young boy and met Lim’s mother on a return trip to China. Lim studied theater and liberal arts at San Francisco State University as an undergraduate and went on to earn a master of arts in English with a creative writing emphasis. In addition, she was a graduate fellow in the Columbia University Broadcast Journalism Program for Minorities in...

  9. Bitter Cane
    Bitter Cane (pp. 163-204)
    Genny Lim

    Voiceover of his old mother: Listen well, young man, and understand. You are my blood, my color, the offshoot and stem of my bones. There is no place on this earth where you can walk without shadow. The rain will pelt your shoulders like stones. The burning sun shall torment your flesh. Life is difficult and short. But the gods have given us laughter and song to forget our troubles.

    You must remember, my only son, never to dishonor yourself. Do not be idle, do not wander aimlessly, without destination. Do not throw dust upon the gods’ faces. Do not...

  10. Velina Hasu Houston
    Velina Hasu Houston (pp. 205-218)

    I grew up in Junction City, Kansas, a small town that survives on agriculture and the military, next door to Fort Riley, a U.S. Army base. I lived in a community of Japanese American families and Amerasian offspring. The mothers are natives of Japan, and the fathers are American men of various racial extractions who served in World War II and met their international brides during the U.S. occupation of Japan. Junction City also has a large number of European, Korean, Vietnamese, and Thai international brides.

    My mother, Setsuko Takechi, was born in Matsuyama, Japan, and grew up in Imabari....

  11. Asa Ga Kimashita (Morning Has Broken)
    Asa Ga Kimashita (Morning Has Broken) (pp. 219-274)
    Velina Hasu Houston

    SETSUKO: A beast wrestles with my soul. It comes at night, hiding in the crash of the midnight tide, arrogant and white, powerful and persistent. Who owns this creature? Who unleashes him here, as he comes to abort our lives and devour our dreams? Yesterday, I climbed in my persimmon orchard to stare at the stars of Obon, the sea in July, and happy children. . . . I was one of them. Today, I eat locusts. (extends a locust toward the audience and smiles gently as she withdraws the offering) The stars move over to make room for the...