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Maureen Sabine. Maxine Hong Kingston's Broken Book of Life: An Intertextual Study ofThe Woman Warrior and China Men. Honolulu: U of Hawai'i P, 2004. ix + 229 pp.
In the social ferment of the Women's Movement in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s, a number of Chinese American women writers were actively engaged in recovering the psychosocial and historical experiences of women who had been marginalized or erased within masculinist discourses and institutions. One area of primary exploration was the complex relationships between mothers and daughters situated at the intersections of families, cultures, and communities in the US and China. However, for some writers like Maxine Hong Kingston, it was important to move beyond reductive binaries that separate the experiences of women from men and to recover and write men's stories back into domestic and communal spaces, starting with the history of the father. In many interviews, she has long expressed her continual disappointment in this unbalanced focus on her women's stories over her men's stories, advocating for the importance of reading these two books together. Both women and men confront multiple oppressions of sexism, classism, and racism in different and similar ways. Physical, psychosocial, and cultural forms of suffering and violence profoundly affect their lives and well-being, resonating into their extended ethnic families and communities. Like mothers, Chinese American men as fathers are crucial to an understanding of familial and community building processes in The Woman Wsrrior ana China Men. Kingston attempts to recover the fathers' stories, attending as best as she can to the emotional, social, and physical trauma in their lives.
In Maxine Hong Kingston's Broken Book of Life: An Intertextual Study oAThe Woman Warrior and China Men, Maureen Sabine takes up Kingston's challenge by doing a detailed intertextual reading of these two texts. She brings these two texts into an interactive and multilayered dialogue with each other. In her introduction, she provides the reader with her feminist and pyschoanalytic frames of reference in order to address the fluctuating shifts in the psychosocial space and time of Kingston's innovative autobiographical fictions. Sabine is sensitive to the complexity in grappling with an autobiographical form of self-representation that is "a complex synthesis of personal history, private fantasy, and compensatory fictions embedded in a larger family,...