Although many studies have been done of individual authors, at
present few works exist which compare different immigrant
literatures from the past and present. This work draws broad
conclusions about the changes in American attitudes toward
immigration and diverse cultures that are reflected in the
literature. This book examines the representation of the immigrant
experience in North American literature. Most of the chapters
discuss the portrayal of particular ethnic groups by specific
authors during a century of American and Canadian history. One
essay highlights controversies among recent writers and critics
concerning how their cultures should be portrayed, and the
introductory and concluding essays provide historical, cultural,
and literary contexts for a comparative approach to North American
immigrant literature.
The expert contributors expose the reader to a variety of
immigrant experiences in the literature of past and present,
experiences in which the characters attempt to reconcile their
ancestral heritage with that of their adopted land. Variations of
three basic stances can be found in these works: the essentialist,
rejecting the values of the dominant culture and resisting
assimilation; the assimilationist, embracing the attitudes and
behaviors of the new culture; and the hybridist, incorporating the
old and new. The book additionally explores such topics as race,
class, and gender, as well as the intergenerational conflict found
in much immigrant literature.
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