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Best Book Publishers UK | Austin Macauley Publishers

By: Jid Lee

In Search of My America

Pages: 274 Ratings: 5.0
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In Search of My America is one of the few Korean American women's autobiographies published in the United States. Being a woman of color trying to rise in an academia dominated by the white male, I had to play an all-American negating her ethnic background. Being a non-native speaker teaching English to native speakers, I had to play a consummate professional in denial of her accent. Being an Asian woman whose sexuality has been historically objectified and has been equated to that of a Madame Butterfly, I had to play a fiercely independent woman without an ounce of a submissive attitude. In In Search of My America, I describe the intimate details of the mask I had to wear to cope with cultural and racial stereotypes. 

 

In Search of My America is about a spectrum of issues, including my naïve American dream and rude awakening, my process of Americanization, my loneliness as an expatriate, my endeavors to reconcile the conflicting demands of human sexuality and intellect, and my attempt to build bridges between different worlds. I weave a giant piece of embroidery with all these components and set them against a series of tales created from Korean myths, bilingual metaphors, folklore, and legends. 

 

Jid Lee is the author of To Kill a Tiger: A Memoir of Korea, winner of a ForeWord Book of the Year Award and an Indie Book Award in 2011. To Kill a Tiger has been and is being taught as a primary textbook at several universities and colleges in America. Lee graduated from Korea University with a BA in English in 1979, received her Master’s in English from SUNY Albany in 1982 and her PhD in English from the University of Kansas in 1994. She is an associate professor of English at Middle Tennessee State University.
Customer Reviews
5.0
3 reviews
3 reviews
  • Ken Atchity, author of The Messiah Matrix

    In Search of My America is a book that will impact generations to come. It is comparable to Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man in style, Chang-Rae Lee's Native Speaker in issues, and Maxine Hong Kingston's The Woman Warrior in narrative complexity. Lee's unique style truly amplifies her unique perspective of the United States as an Asian American immigrant woman.

  • AnaLouise Keating, author of Women Reading Women Writing

    In Search of My America is not only timely but also prophetic. It offers much-needed perspectives on immigration, democracy, and race relations in academia, a revelatory subject rarely discussed. Drawing on her own experiences as an adult immigrant from Korea, Lee interweaves revisionist mythmaking with personal storytelling and cultural critique, enacting what Gloria Anzaldúa names autohistoria-teoría-an innovative form of theory-making developed, in part, by risking the personal. As she masks and unmasks herself, Jid Lee masks and unmasks the United States as well, offering brilliant insights into this country's psyche, including what Anzaldúa might call our "Shadow Beast."

  • Monic Ductan, author of Daughters of Muscadine

    Jid Lee examines the multiple selves she has to create to become a successful Korean American and ultimately an American. As layers and layers of the author's self are revealed, the reader is treated to an honest, courageous memoir. She describes the micro-aggressions she has to cope with because of her race and gender, and forces us to confront what she calls the "banality of racism." What is so revelatory about this book is that she exposes the demoralizing impact of racist love as well as racist hate. Lee offers a new, multidimensional definition of racism and an insightful look into what it takes to become an American.

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