Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Conclusions


Here it is! The end of the blog. For some reason it became progressively harder to write a focused, articulate entry, so some of them are a little bit looser & more random than others, but I hope my readers still find those entertaining and informative! All in all, it definitely took longer than a paper probably would have (heads-up for future Chinese Pop Culture students ;) ).

Now I must offer some concluding thoughts on the border-crossing phenomenon as it exists between the United States and China and the unique biculturalism that results. Where to start (/end)?

...OMG Leehom!

OK, OK. So as I was Youtubing Lust, Caution, the following uncomfortable interview popped up (Leehom's part starts at 1:10, right after Ang Lee):



It seems that the interviewer, most likely a Chinese American himself, is trying to be supportive of Leehom and his accent in the film, which some people had been saying was too American. Leehom is happy at the mention of his song "Cockney Girl" and nods at first, then seems to realize something ("No, wait..."), becomes visibly upset and serious, and after a lil bit of thought, speaks up: "Actually, it's not an American accent, OK."

He elaborates on China's many accents to show his knowledge, pointing out that there are different American accents as well, though not with the same huge variety that China has. After this mini-speech, he tries to smile about "Cockney Girl" again but is all tense.

At the idea of a "chinked-out" movie, he laughs a little, but you can tell that this is very personal to him; he immediately begins to define Lust, Caution as "chinked-out": "very international, but at the same time, it's so Chinese, it's a whole story about Chinese history...the nerves that it hits on are poignant to Chinese audiences around the world."

And I'm just like, OMG! These couple minutes are so totally complex and full of emotions and questions of identity.

So I haven't seen Lust, Caution yet. But I can say that if this movie were to move me, I doubt that it would be because it takes place in some time during the history of my mother country. And what about non-Chinese audiences? Can't they be moved just as much as or more than members of Chinese audiences? Aren't they also part of what makes the movie international? At his recent press conference with Usher, Leehom said that he hopes that more and more people around the world will see what great things are happening in Chinese music, reiterating his "chinked-out" mission statement from 2004.

And yeah, I don't understand sometimes. His China promotion campaign. I do get the sense that he is doing his best to balance the two but generally gives his Chinese side the priority; it's the side from which he draws most of his pride, at least publicly / through his musical identity (as a person working in Chinese-language music living in Taiwan). This interview in particular hits a nerve with him, as he defensively asserts his Chinese identity (over his American one) while also insisting on an international identity. Without a doubt, if the interviewer were a Chinese person (i.e. not Chinese American), he would not have been able to say what he did. Poor interviewer dood! Goodness. But it was an opportunity for Leehom to stand up for himself and his hard work and what he believes.

I can feel his frustration, the desire to clear up misconceptions on the issue of his Chinese-ness. I will also often get very sensitive and serious in these contexts. People will say something seemingly harmless, and I will become sad and angry for some deep reason that most likely goes back to my childhood and not being able to speak Chinese. So Homie, I feelin' yoo.

But usually in defense I will say/imply that I am American, or Chinese American, rather than say, "I'm Chinese, too. I'm a huaren." Which I guess is just one of the differences in how each of us--as we'd say in university classes--negotiates our identities. Everybody finds a different balance. And linguistic identity is a very important part of this.

Leehom, who definitely already had some srs linguistic talent, must have diligently put 300% into achieving the precise accent that Ang Lee wanted for the film, and then was hurt to hear so many people saying that he still sounded American, would sound perpetually American. It's probably something that has always caused him pain, the fact that he will still not be accepted as fully Chinese, by Chinese people, a fact that he's also hoping to change through his life's work. Why would he want to be accepted as 100% Chinese? It's another complicated thing.

Will Pan, Van Ness, and Coco seem to be more laid-back about it at this point, but they are different personalities and have had different circumstances. Jin is still proudly proclaiming his ABC-ness, which naturally manifests itself differently on either side of the globe: in the US, he's all, "I'm Chinese, and what?" whereas in China, he's all (in Cantonese), "First name Jin, Jin is my Chinese name / Just look at the tattoo on my neck." (See lyrics to "ABC.")

Daniel Wu and Leehom seem to be somewhat like-minded when it comes to the concept of being "international" Chinese, not completely accepted anywhere but ready to settle on the side that they feel will be most fruitful for them, where they can accomplish what they want to accomplish. (Of course, I say all these things based on what I've read and simplify some, but all of these people definitely overlap in their views in different places, and it is much more multi-faceted than I am able to discuss coherently here.) Like Kaiser Kuo, who says he is perfectly happy in Beijing where most of his family lives anyway and he hardly ever misses the US, they've all accepted living out the second half of their lives in China, both for their careers and for a certain fulfilling personal quest.

For their success, being familiar yet foreign--not completely "Other"--is simultaneously a barrier (often including the area of language) and an advantage for these huaren. Their American-ness adds to their appeal and popularity and also to their ability to have a wider worldview and to do things like innovate by blending musical styles, for example. (This latter thing, I would say, goes for pretty much all eleven people.)

On the identity issue, for the other category of huaren that I'd created in the Introduction (Bruce Lee, Eileen Chang, Ang Lee), who had grown up in Greater China, it seems easier to identify as Chinese while also being American after living the second half of their lives or more in the United States. (Sidenote: Now, I have been talking about everything in terms of Chinese vs. American, though there are certainly other categories to be considered within these (gender, Hong Kongnese, Taiwanese, etc.). EVERYTHING IS SO INTERTWINED!)

Eileen Chang had no choice but to choose the US and an American life if she wanted to keep writing, and through the English language she creates another identity, as we definitely all do when we adopt second languages (whether or not they are the mother tongues of our ancestors). Yet she still remains virtually unknown in the country where she lived most of years of her life, while her writings have traveled back to Greater China, so it's interesting how border-crossing happens sometimes. Bruce Lee, too, became a legend, but around the world. Ang Lee, meanwhile, bases himself in the US and goes to Asia to make a Chinese film every few years. He will undoubtedly leave his legacy on both continents (and others). It's harder to say for my younger blogged-about huaren, who seem contained on the Asia side (minus Coco, who totally went for the crossover thing) but hey! They still got a long ways to go.

[Tangent on Yo-Yo Ma: He's so happy, he's like the Dalai Lama. I can't even talk about non-musical language with him because linguistic identity seems to be such a small factor for him. One interview says that he is fluent in English, Mandarin, and French. But I've never been able to find a video of him speaking Chinese. He was even on recent Chinese news for performing with the China Philharmonic Orchestra, and no interview to be found! He's just playing his cello.]

I would say that Bruce Lee and Yo-Yo Ma have directly expressed the most "worldly" philosophies of being in the interviews that I was able to find. There's something comfortable, ideal, and idealistic about them, how they involve having multiple homes and feeling a sense of belonging and unity in all of them. Hopefully they speak for all of mah huaren here, who have all tried to make homes in new places and each defined "Chinese American" in their own ways--what it means to be Chinese, American, Chinese American, and global.

Within my five months of living in China this year, I was able to begin to make China one of my homes--and to attend a Wang Leehom concert in Nanjing. (BTW, 16 years living in Taiwan like that dood, I can't even imagine!) In-between songs, Leehom gave a little speech about the word "home," which he said in English. He declared that music was his home, his home was in music, and right then there with us, with people sharing music. And well. That was pretty inspirational.

Border-crossing = the creation of many rich paths that connect and blend with others. It's a place for artistic expression/identity to sort itself out and to be free. In the future of globalization and dissolving borders and the progress of paths such as those of the people in Hangin' with the Huaren and more, I think there will be room for them to open up wider and to stretch farther. And that is the hippie thought with which I will end these reflections.

Opinions? YouTube links? I welcome them in comments below.


-- Allie

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Sorry sorry



Because Hangin' with the Huaren in the short period of this blogging project could not cover all of the Chinese Americans who have their careers or part of their careers in Greater China, we will list them here and one day in the near future give them the coverage that they ought to have:
Flora Chan -- Hong Kong actress from Boston
Jeff and Stanley Huang -- Taiwanese performers (L.A. Boyz, Machi) from Los Angeles
Justin Lo -- Cantopop pop singer from New York
Khalil Fong --  Hawaii-born soul singer based in Hong Kong
Joanna Wang -- Taipei-born folk singer raised in Los Angeles

Know any more? Leave a comment, and I'll add your suggestion to the list!

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Updates

Hi, everyone!

Progress on this blog had to be postponed because of some personal issues, but now it is going to begin again! Probably very slowly, as I am presently in Mainland China and am on Blogger through UI's Virtual Private Network. Video links from now on will mostly be from Youku or Tudou, but I will definitely be looking for ways to access YouTube.

Life in China has been eventful and enriching; maybe this is cliché, but I am really learning a lot about Chinese people and about myself here. And, everything that we discussed in Chinese Pop Culture class I am able to experience and apply firsthand. It makes me feel knowledgeable, in touch with Chinese people, and not a total n00b.

Lots of surprises!

AND LOTS OF DANIEL WU AND LEEHOM WANG SIGHTINGS
WHICH MAKE ME REALLY HAPPY

More soon!

Salaam peace outtt <3


-- Allie

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Wilber Pan



QUICK FACTS

  • born in West Virginia
  • moved to Taiwan when he was 7
  • went to Taipei International School and then California State Polytechnic University to study mass communications
  • entered a singing contest in 2000 and got attention from Andy Lau's manager
  • began his career as a a Taiwan Channel V host and actor
  • has of 2009 made a total of 10 albums, the latest being 007 (2009)
  • did the voice of Po in the Mandarin version of Kung Fu Panda!
  • latest dramas are Endless Love (2010) and Pandamen by Jay Chou
  • known as Pan Weibo by his Chinese fans
--------------------------------------------------

When he was young, Wilber Pan wanted to be a basketball player. His parents had run a grocery store while they were living in the U.S., then moved back to Taiwan in 1987, where Will started studying bopomofo and Chinese while attending Taipei International School. There, he began to participate in school plays and found that he really enjoyed performing.


Back in the States for college, Will tried out some singing contests but didn't really have any success. One of them, however, was hosted by Sony BMG in Los Angeles, and while he didn't place in the finals, that was where Andy Lau's manager discovered him.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Leehom Wang



QUICK FACTS

  • born in Rochester, NY
  • parents immigrated to NY from Taiwan
  • attended Williams College and Berklee School of Music
  • received a recording contract after entering a talent contest in Taiwan while visiting his grandma in 1995
  • has since made 13 albums + one Japanese album
  • was one of the torchbearers for the Beijing Olymic Games and performed at the closing ceremony
  • began his acting career in a Hong Kong action movie and has since worked with Ang Lee and Jackie Chan
  • latest projects are his directorial debut Love in Disguise and a new album, The Eighteen Martial Arts
------------------------------------------

Leehom is everywhere in Greater China!





Visiting China since 2001, I'd always wondered why this one person was on every bottle of Wahaha mineral water. I just couldn't understand who would want to be Wahaha's human mascot and assumed that he was either a Taiwanese drama heartthrob or a popstar.

It turns out that Wahaha, the hugest Chinese water & beverages company of all time, was looking for a new young singer's face to represent them, and at the time, Leehom already had a solid fanbase in Taiwan and was looking to expand his audience to Mainland China.

Monday, April 19, 2010

Kaiser Kuo



QUICK FACTS
  • born in New York
  • graduate of U.C. Berkeley and University of Arizona
  • was a part of the band Tang Dynasty from 1988-1999
  • currently in the band Spring and Autumn and AC/DC tribute band, The Dirty Deeds
  • has written for the Red Herring and has a column in the The Beijinger
  • was director of digital strategy for Oglivy China
  • is now Baidu's director of international communications
  • lives in Beijing with his wife Fanfan and two kids
----------------------------------------

Hotties.

Kaiser Kuo (Guo Yiguang) was born in 1966 in New York to immigrant parents and grew up listening to the Who, Led Zeppelin, Peter Gabriel, Sabbath, Iron Maiden, and others that would totally influence his life as a musician and writer.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Coco Lee



QUICK FACTS
  • born in Hong Kong
  • family lived in San Fransisco for a while
  • while visiting Hong Kong with her sisters at the age of 17, she sang a Whitney Houston song at a talent contest hosted by Hong Kong channel TVB and received an offer
  • has since released too many albums to count, including Coco Lee (1996) and Exposed (2005) (English)
  • sang the Mandarin versions of "Colors of the Wind" and "Reflection" and did the Mandarin dub for Disney's Mulan (1998)
  • has done duets with Jacky Cheung, Van Ness Wu, and non-Chinese singers including Kelly Price and Julio Iglesias
  • was friends with Michael Jackson
  • performed at the 73rd Academy Awards
  • sang a song for the Beijing Olympics, "Forever Friends"
  • is a YouthAIDS Ambasssador in Thailand
  • married to president of trading group Li & Fung, Canadian Bruce Philip Rockowitz
  • recently projects include a song for the Shanghai Expo and the second leg of her East2West World Tour
-------------------------

Coco Lee has had a remarkable number of firsts as an Asian pop singer in the international music scene. A whole ten years after her crossover debut, she has been listed by E! Entertainment as one of the world's 25 sexiest divas ahead of Fergie, Madonna, and J. Lo.

Baccarat Hong Kong, June 2009

While she spent her younger years in Hong Kong, at age ten, she and her two older sisters relocated to the US with their mother, who was going to med school in California.
Young Coco totally loved listening to Whitney Houston and Mariah Carey. It was after high school that she returned to Hong Kong and entered the talent contest through which she was discovered.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Ang Lee



QUICK FACTS
  • born in Taiwan
  • lives in New York
  • graduated from the National Taiwan University of Arts, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and New York University
  • nominated for Best Director at the Academy Awards for Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon (2000)
  • received Academy Award for Best Director for Brokeback Mountain (2005) along with seven other nominations
  • has also won awards at the Berlin Film Festival, Venice Film Festival, Cannes Film Festival, British Academy Film Awards, among others
  • latest films are Lust, Caution (2007), Taking Woodstock (2009), and Life of Pi (2012)
---------------------------------------



Ang Lee was born in 1954 to parents who had come to Taiwan after the Communist victory in the Mainland. His father wanted him to become a professor, but Ang failed the the University Entrance Examination and later studied at an arts university in Taiwan. In 1979 he went to the US to study theatre at UIUC and did his MFA at NYU.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Eileen Chang



QUICK FACTS
  • born in Shanghai
  • wrote for the United States Information Agency in the early 50s
  • relocated permanently to the US when she was 35
  • was a writer-in-residence at University of Southern California, Radcliffe College, and UC Berkeley
  • has had many of her novels made into films, including Lust, Caution directed by Ang Lee (2007)
  • is one of Greater China's most popular and influential writers into today
-------------------------------------------



Eileen Chang was born to upper-class parents in Shanghai in the year 1920. Her father had affairs, got hooked on opium, and was very violent, and they divorced when Eileen was ten. So her childhood was very tumultuous and sad. She was able to have an English education beginning at a young age and attended a Christian high school in the city. She was already writing prolifically as an undergraduate in literature at the University of Hong Kong, where she studied until Japan took over.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Daniel Wu



QUICK FACTS
  • born in Berkeley, California
  • parents immigrated from Shanghai and met in the US
  • has been a student of kungfu since age 5
  • studied architecture at University of Ohio
  • upon friends'/sisters' suggestion began modeling, thus beginning his career in Asia
  • first movie role was in an HK gay romance Bishonen alongside Stephen Fung and Shu Qi in 1998
  • has since starred in more than 40 movies
  • is signed onto Jackie Chan's company
  • has been nominated for the Golden Horse and Hong Kong Film Awards
  • won best new director at Hong Kong Film Awards for his mockumentary The Heavenly Kings
  • has homes in Shanghai, Hong Kong, and Beijing
  • married to VJ and model Lisa Selesner
--------------------------------------------------

"Shanghai is my hometown."

"When I'm in the United States, they do not think of me as an American. In Hong Kong, Hong Kong people do not feel that I am Chinese. So I would always tell myself, I am a citizen of the world"


-- Daniel Wu, Shanghai Times interview



Young Daniel Wu trained in kungfu as his Shanghainese parents reminded him to never forget that he was Chinese. After graduating from college, he went backpacking in Asia to feel connected to his roots. Then he became a model in Hong Kong:


Note: This is actually a 2009 Men's Vogue cover and not from his early modeling days.

And now, he lives in China making his career as an actor, a director, and--more recently--as a producer.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

MC Jin



QUICK FACTS
  • born in Miami
  • became famous for rap battling on Black Entertainment Television's Freestyle Fridays
  • has made mixtapes and 4 albums, including his debut The Rest is History (2004) and ABC (3007)
  • acted in the movie 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003)
  • has done songs with Kanye West, Wyclef Jean, and Leehom Wang
  • featured in the documentary 1040 (2010) along with Van Ness Wu
  • will play Bruce Lee's BFF in Bruce Lee, My Brother (2010)
  • currently living in Hong Kong
-------------------------------------------

Jin grew up in a neighborhood of Miami with a large African-American population and early on began to have an interest in hip-hop and rap. His parents were alarmed and ashamed that their son was like a black kid.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Yo-Yo Ma



QUICK FACTS

  • born in Paris
  • moved to New York when he was 5
  • graduated from Juilliard School of Music and Harvard
  • has honorary doctorates in music at both Harvard and Princeton
  • has made over 80 albums and won 17 Grammy Awards, including a Latin Grammy, along with many prestigious music awards including the National Medal of the Arts
  • has played on movie soundtracks including that of Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon (2000) and Memoirs of a Geisha (2005)
  • performed on the site of the WTC in 2001 and at the Olympics in Salt Lake City in 2002
  • has performed for Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy (1962), and Obama (2009)
  • created the Silk Road Project in 1998 to put into cultural exchange musicians from various countries
  • USDS CultureConnect Ambassador since 2002
  • UN Ambassador of Peace since 2006
  • on the President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities since 2009
----------------------------



Yo-Yo Ma was surrounded by music from a young age: his father was a music professor and his mother a mezzo-soprano singer. They had both immigrated from Mainland China and met in France, living there through WWII and later settling in New York City in 1961.

Ma was homeschooled by his parents. As a toddler he wasn't feelin' the violin and promised his parents to stick with the cello at about age six, and by the age of eight had already played at the White House for President JFK and debuted in Carnegie Hall along with his sister (on piano).

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Van Ness Wu



QUICK FACTS
  • born in Santa Monica, California
  • starred in Meteor Garden (2001) and was a member of F4
  • dramas include Peach Girl (2002) and Autumn Concerto (2009)
  • has made 6 albums including V.Dubb (2007), and the latest, Reflections (2010)
  • did a collaborative album with Korean star Kangta, Scandal (2006)
  • has been an entrepreneur with clothing, shoes, a record company, and a nightclub
  • is also a producer and director
  • featured in the documentary 1040 (2010) about Christianity in Asia
----------------------------------------------------




Van Ness grew up in Los Angeles. He had a job as a telemarketer before he decided to go to Taipei "with a pocket full of dreams" and was chosen to be in the original mega-hit drama Meteor Garden, playing Mei Zuo, one of the boys of the "Flower Four" or F4. And so his acting-singing career began. F4 turned into a super boyband that had hundreds of millions of girls totally in love across East Asia.




Now, he is a solo artist who dedicates his life to God.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Bruce Lee



QUICK FACTS
  • born in San Francisco
  • went to Seattle Central Community College and University of Washington
  • founded his own martial arts schools
  • established his own form of martial arts and philosophy called Jun Fan Jeet Kune Do
  • trained students such as Joe Lewis and Chuck Norris
  • did 32 movies, including Fists of Fury and Way of the Dragon (1972)
  • could throw grains of rice into the air and catch them using chopsticks
  • is totally world-famous and a pop culture icon
  • in Time Magazine's "100 Most Important People of the Century"
----------------------------------------------

baby Bruce with his parents

Bruce Lee was born in 1940 in San Francisco. His parents moved back to Hong Kong when he was a baby and were stuck there during the Japanese occupation. They sent Bruce back to the United States when he was 18 to escape the dangerous environment of HK in the 40s and 50s (he was getting into a lot of street fights) and to go for his higher education.
"All types of knowledge ultimately mean self-knowledge."
-- Bruce Lee, Pierre Berton interview (1971)

Friday, April 2, 2010

Introduction

Chinese Americans Creating Identity

While studying in Tianjin, pre-food-poisoning episode, I’d begun to occasionally stop by the little breakfast stands before class in the morning. People would be making jianbing right outside the main gate of the school, and it always smelled so tasty. Yet I’d previously resisted in fear of ingesting some malicious bacteria and having to drink Pepto Bismol for a week.


The day I gave up my street food ban, a woman and her husband had waved at me and asked if I wanted something to eat. She’d just scooped a fried egg off of her pan and put it inside a green onions pancake, with cucumber slivers and pickled radish. I eagerly said, "YES, PLEASE!" in Chinese. She asked if I was huayi, or ethnic Chinese.

"Ah, ni shi meijihuaren!" You are Chinese American!

Yes! I said. Yes. She'd guessed that I'd come to study Chinese.

"Women dou shi zhongguoren," she declared. We are all Chinese people.

They smiled and said to enjoy the breakfast, and I smiled back, SO HAPPY!

After many weeks of navigating life in Tianjin, trying to be brave but still confusing people with my hesitant, not-very-fluent Chinese, it was a relief not to be asked where I was from.

A week later I came across the couple again at the gate. They waved and gave me some food in a plastic bag and asked if I wanted soy milk. When I shook my head, they started speaking more slowly than before and asked if I knew what "soy milk" was, saying "soy milk" a few times, then offered me cow’s milk and tried to explain to me what cow’s milk was. I was so flustered and just said "no thank you" through everything, finally paid, thanked them, and ran away.

Breakfast was lukewarm that time, and overly salty.

That was totally the day that I got food poisoning.

And admittedly became emo. And wanted to punch the Wang Leehom Coca-Cola ad on that one guy’s giant ice cream bar cooler on campus. Stoopid Leehom! Stoopid wanna-be Chinese try-hard! I’m going home to THE UNITED STATES, and you suck for even wanting to stay here for ten freakin’ years!

Ughh. Gross.

Later I got some Chinese medicine, slept, calmed down, and mentally apologized to Leehom.

And I thought about it some more. Why do ABCs like Leehom go to Greater China to make a living? It’s an interesting question.

One reason is that there really are unparalleled opportunities in East Asia for Asian people who want to go into the music and entertainment industries. While the focus of this blog is on Chinese Americans who reach renown in Greater China, there are also many Chinese Canadians (Henry Lau of Super Junior M, for example) (not to mention quite a few Japanese and Korean Americans/Canadians, in their respective mother countries) who cross the globe and enter one of the various auditions and contests held by one of the Chinese record companies and TV stations.

The likelihood that they’re picked up by one of these talent searchers is pretty considerable, especially in contrast with their prospects in Hollywood and American pop music where Asian representation is growing but still extremely small, unlike that of other American minorities such as African-Americans and Latinos, who are also of course much larger populations in the United States. [Check out the post on Coco Lee and the discussion of her “incomplete crossover” as well as the post on MC Jin and his reasons for starting a new career based in Hong Kong.]

Another major factor is the self-search. Just like how NY-born-and-raised J. Lo did her way cool going-back-to-my-Puerto-Rican-roots thing, these ABCs want to find their connection with the language, culture, and home of their parents, grandparents, great-grandparents, and so forth. Interestingly, though not actually important, all of the ABCs covered here—Kaiser Kuo, Daniel Wu, MC Jin, Van Ness, Leehom, and Will Pan—happen to be second-generation Americans, i.e. the children of immigrants to the Land of Opportunity.

So then there is the other side of "Chinese American": people born and raised in Greater China who at some point go to the United States, as my own parents did. Many of the huaqiao or overseas Chinese covered in this blog are of a different generation from the younger ABCs; they came to the U.S. for opportunities, whether partially in exile / out of the political turmoil at home (Eileen Chang, Bruce Lee) or for the purpose of higher education (Bruce Lee, Ang Lee).  

*Coco Lee is special in that her family spent just a few years in the U.S. before moving back to Hong Kong, enough for Coco to attend middle and high school in California. Meanwhile, Yo-Yo Ma’s parents had gone to France for their higher education and ended up later in the U.S., where the whole family would stay and  where Yo-Yo would base himself and raise his own family. Whatever the circumstances, these people have all at some point experienced life in America and are straight-up Chinese Americans.

*There are also several covered in the blog who actually have recognition and substantial presence not just in Greater China but in both countries (and beyond)—Yo-Yo Ma as a prodigious classical musician, Ang Lee as a maker of both Chinese and American films, Bruce Lee as a kungfu star who began by establishing his fame in the U.S., and Coco Lee through her crossover efforts during the American pop era. Chinese people are especially proud of these high-profile people such as Ang Lee and Yo-Yo Ma whom they feel represent huaren and their achievements.

For all of these individuals who have realized their careers through both directions of border-crossing, there are shared challenges, and we will take a look at them in the eleven profiles of Hangin’ with the Huaren. We’ll see how each meijihuaren of fame has chosen to negotiate his or her identities as members of two (or more) countries and cultures, how their experience of living in both Greater China and the United States has shaped their approaches to and creations within their particular art forms, as well as their views of themselves, the world, and themselves within the world.

Each profile contains an overview of their background and accomplishments, with a weird special focus on their identity, relationship with the U.S./Greater China/home, and border-crossing decisions. Post tags sort them by home state/country/city and career area (movies, music, and writing).

Enjoy, and feel free to comment with your opinions, deep feelings, questions, information or links that you’d like to share, and most certainly corrections to any info that I might have incorrect!

Gracias :)


-- Allie

---------------------------------------------------------------------

P.S. Happy Asian American Heritage Month!

This blog is my final project for the class 039:032 Chinese Popular Culture taught by Prof. Jennifer Feeley.