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Conversations with Gish Jen is the first collection of interviews
with the renowned contemporary American author Gish Jen (b. 1955),
whose acclaimed fiction and nonfiction have fascinated American
readers for more than thirty years. The conversations in this book
offer first-hand information not only about Jen's authorial
intentions, but also about her life as a daughter of Chinese
immigrants. Spanning more than two decades, beginning in 1991 and
ending with a new, unpublished interview from 2017, these
interviews provide readers a sense of Jen's development as a
novelist and cultural critic. Jen's insights into the merits and
drawbacks of Eastern and Western cultures, including American
individualism and exceptionalism and Asian interdependent mindset
and living principles, provide us with keys to understanding the
identity struggles of the author herself as well as her fictional
characters. The comparative approach Jen adopts in her comments on
such topics as education, politics, business, religion, and
concepts of creativity and success provokes readers to reflect on
their relationships with themselves, with the society in which they
live, and with the rest of the world. At the heart of these
conversations is Jen's sense of humor, which makes the book a
joyful read for both scholars and casual fans of her work.
Conversations with Gish Jen is the first collection of interviews
with the renowned contemporary American author Gish Jen (b. 1955),
whose acclaimed fiction and nonfiction have fascinated American
readers for more than thirty years. The conversations in this book
offer first-hand information not only about Jen's authorial
intentions, but also about her life as a daughter of Chinese
immigrants. Spanning more than two decades, beginning in 1991 and
ending with a new, unpublished interview from 2017, these
interviews provide readers a sense of Jen's development as a
novelist and cultural critic. Jen's insights into the merits and
drawbacks of Eastern and Western cultures, including American
individualism and exceptionalism and Asian interdependent mindset
and living principles, provide us with keys to understanding the
identity struggles of the author herself as well as her fictional
characters. The comparative approach Jen adopts in her comments on
such topics as education, politics, business, religion, and
concepts of creativity and success provokes readers to reflect on
their relationships with themselves, with the society in which they
live, and with the rest of the world. At the heart of these
conversations is Jen's sense of humor, which makes the book a
joyful read for both scholars and casual fans of her work.
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