REPOZYTORIUM UNIWERSYTETU
W BIAŁYMSTOKU
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dc.contributor.authorVysotska, Natalia-
dc.date.accessioned2026-01-27T10:42:10Z-
dc.date.available2026-01-27T10:42:10Z-
dc.date.issued2025-
dc.identifier.citationCrossroads. A Journal of English Studies 51 (4/2025), pp. 87-102pl
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11320/19667-
dc.description.abstractThe concept of hospitality at the global level has long been inseparable from the phenomenon of migration as a permanent feature of human history. Academics within different fields of study have used hospitality as a metaphor “to describe the often inhospitable, and even hostile, treatment by the state of migrants, refugees and asylum seekers” (Lynch and al. 15). Jacques Derrida’s portmanteau term ‘hostipitality’ emphasizes that hospitality always entails its opposite (hostility), since acts of hospitality toward some often exclude others. In the dramatic narrative of Chinese experience in the US, both the initial relative hospitality of the 1850s and the swift shift to violent racial politics culminating in the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act were rooted in the vicissitudes of global capitalism and America’s expansionist aspirations. This paper explores how these moments of the official (un)welcome are represented in Chinese American drama, aiming to re-memory (and, hence, negotiate) the traumatic past through its stage re-enactment. The discussion focuses on three plays: Genny Lim’s Paper Angels (1980), David Henry Hwang’s FOB (1980), and Lloyd Suh’s The Far Country (2022). Lim’s play relies for its effect upon the unique socio-cultural fact—the poems inscribed by Chinese detainees on the walls of the West Coast immigration center on Angel Island; Hwang scrutinizes the uneasy relational dynamics between second-generation and more recent immigrants; Suh complements the dramatization of the ordeal of passing through strict immigration control with a transcontinental perspective. Each in its own way, the plays seem to bear out Lisa Lowe’s dictum that the emergence of Asian American culture as an alternative cultural site results from the state’s distancing Asian Americans from the terrain of national culture.pl
dc.language.isoenpl
dc.publisherThe University of Białystok, The Faculty of Philologypl
dc.rightsCreative Commons Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike 4.0 International License-
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/-
dc.subject“hostipitality”pl
dc.subjectimmigrationpl
dc.subjectAngel Islandpl
dc.subject“paper sons”pl
dc.subjectChinese American dramapl
dc.subjectstage re-enactmentpl
dc.titleUS Hostipitality through the Lens of Chinese American Dramapl
dc.typeArticlepl
dc.rights.holderCreative Commons Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)pl
dc.identifier.doi10.15290/CR.2025.51.4.07-
dc.description.Emailliteratavysotska@gmail.compl
dc.description.BiographicalnoteNatalia Vysotska received her Doctoral degree in American literature from the Institute of Literature, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine (1998). Current position – Full Professor of European and American literature, Theory and History of World Literature Department at the Kyiv National Linguistics University (Ukraine). Research interests encompass African American literature; multi/transculturalism and ethnic literatures in the United States and Great Britain; theatre and drama in the USA. Major publications include the monographs “Set All Hearts in the State to What Tune Pleased His Ear”: Shakespearean Discourse in Contemporary American Drama” (Kyiv, 2025); Unity of the Plural. American Literature of Late 20th – Early 21st cc. in the Context of Cultural Pluralism (Kyiv, 2010), At the Crossroads of Civilizations: African American Drama as a Multicultural Phenomenon (Kyiv, 1997), as well as numerous articles, conference papers, and course books for students on British and American literature. International publications in Poland, Romania, Germany, Greece, Great Britain, France, Spain, and the USA addressing various issues of British and American fiction and drama. Guest lecturer at the University of Milan, University of California in Sacramento, University of North Carolina, Minsk State Linguistics University, University of Siedlce (Poland). Member of the European Association of American Studies (EAAS), European Collegium for African American Research (CAAR). Alumna of Fulbright Program (1995) and Kennan Institute Resident Scholars Program (2002), fellow of Salzburg Seminar American Studies Symposia (2002, 2009, 2022). Editor-in-chief of Contemporary Literary Studies annual published by the Kyiv National Linguistics University since 2002. She also edited anthologies of European literature of the Middle Ages (Vinnytsia, 2003) and of 16th-17th-century European drama (Kyiv, 2005).pl
dc.description.AffiliationKyiv National Linguistics University, Ukrainepl
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dc.description.referencesLim, Genny. “Paper Angels.” Unbroken Thread: An Anthology of Plays by Asian American Women, edited by Roberta Uno, U of Massachusetts P, 1993, pp. 18–52.pl
dc.description.referencesLim, Shirley Geok-lin, and Amy Ling. “Introduction.” Reading the Literatures of Asian Americans, edited by Shirley Geok-lin Lim and Amy Ling, Temple UP, 1992, pp. 3–9.pl
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dc.description.referencesMark Lai, Him, Genny Lim, and Judy Yung, editors. Island: Poetry and History of Chinese Immigrants on Angel Island, 1910–1940. U of Washington P, 2014.pl
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dc.description.referencesSuh, Lloyd. The Far Country. TRW Plays, 2024.pl
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dc.identifier.eissn2300-6250-
dc.description.issue51 (4/2025)pl
dc.description.firstpage87pl
dc.description.lastpage102pl
dc.identifier.citation2Crossroads. A Journal of English Studiespl
dc.identifier.orcid0000-0002-2841-311X-
Występuje w kolekcji(ach):Crossroads. A Journal of English Studies, 2025, Issue 51

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