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Original scientific paper

For Cosmetic Change: Yongsoo Park's Boy Genius

Brian Willems ; Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences in Split


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Abstract

In Yongsoo Park's 2002 novel Boy Genius, both meaning and change are located on the surface. Full of absurd imagery, the novel turns the horrors of assimilation into a challenge to the racism of color-blindness and depth. If, as Christopher Pinney argues, the stable identities of the "depth" are the product of colonial regimes, then the surface can become a "site of the refusal" of such oppressive certainties. Through what Stephen Best and Sharon Marcus call "surface reading," the "experiential force of the image's visuality" (Rosalind Galt), which can also be found in Park's novel, is foregrounded. What Park's novel adds to the discussion is that if oppressive regimes are enacted on the surface of the body, then it is on the surface of the body that a counter-attack can be launched. In other words, the coordinates of assimilation are turned into a means to smuggle in the possibility for difference and change.

Keywords

Yongsoo Park; surface reading; Korean-American literature; racism; cosmetic change

Hrčak ID:

278148

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/278148

Publication date:

27.5.2022.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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