Abstract
This paper examines how The Gangster of Love (1996), the second novel by Filipino American artist and writer Jessica Hagedorn, dismantles ready-made assumptions about the construction of minority and mainstream cultures. Spanning the period from the 1970s to the early 1990s, Gangster depicts the life of Rocky Rivera, a Filipina American young artist. As it portrays Rocky's family and friends, the novel examines the drastic re-articulation of the US’s self-image brought about by Filipino Americans and other groups marginalized as minorities by virtue of their ethnic, socio-cultural, and/or sexual identities. The narrative challenges dominant notions of who and what makes history, juxtaposing historical references with fictionalizations of real episodes and completely fictional incidents, and making a constant use of parody, irony, jokes and clichés. This paper studies Rocky's reworks of her multiple ethnic and socio-cultural allegiances in connection with her passion for music and popular culture, placing these reworks in the context of the Philippines’ colonial and neo-colonial background and multi-cultural US history. It also considers succinctly how Gangster's postcolonial dimensions intersect with a feminist and postmodern consciousness in a gendered strategy of socio-cultural resistance and critique.
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Vizcaya Echano, M. ‘you like to mix things up on purpose …? hoy, what are you trying to prove?’: representations of recent (hi)stories in Jessica Hagedorn's The Gangster of Love. Fem Rev 85, 70–82 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1057/palgrave.fr.9400319
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/palgrave.fr.9400319