The Non-National Subject: Ambivalent "Americans" in Contemporary Narratives By Women Writers in the US

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dissertation

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University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

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This study argues that the notion of Americanness is constructed nationally within the U.S. geographic space, as well as transnationally outside that space. The transnational perception of the U.S. nation-space and Americanness makes possible ambivalent positionings which I call non-national and through its lens I examine migrant narratives by Arab-American, Chicana, Indian-American, Pakistani-American, and Cuban-American women writers. I explain in my study that the non-national subject does not merely occupy a liminal space between home-country and host-country but rather reconfigures the implications of the "foreign" and the "domestic"; "home" and "abroad" within that interstitial space. I also argue that the non-national is a specific moment that complicates and contests singular national identifications. In that sense, my study problematizes essential concepts that are eminent to the formation of the nation: national consciousness, national time, national space, and national belonging in specific texts by Diana Abu Jaber (The Language of Baklava, 2005), Laila Halaby (West of The Jordan, 2003); Pauline Kaldas (The Time Between Places: Stories that Weave in and out of Egypt and America, 2010), Alia Yunis (The Night Counter, 2009); Bapsi Sidhwa (An American Brat, 2006); Cherríe Moraga (The Last Generation, 1993); Jhumpa Lahiri (The Namesake, 2003) and Cristina Garcia (The Agüero Sisters, 1997). In each chapter I compare an Arab-American text to a Pakistani-American, Chicana, Indian-American, or Cuban-American text to examine the implications of the non-national in these texts. I work my analysis of the non-national through two theoretical frameworks that are interrelated: the transnational approach in American Studies, and Arab-American Studies. Thus the significance of my project is twofold. First, I aim to expand, complicate, and open new questions about the meanings and use of the term "non-national" within new Americanists' studies. Second, I am calling attention to Arab-American literature by putting it in conversation with other literatures by minorities in the U.S.

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