The Writer as Migrant

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Product Details
Price
$18.00
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Publish Date
Pages
112
Dimensions
5.78 X 8.68 X 0.58 inches | 0.6 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780226399881
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author
Ha Jin is the author of ten novels, four collections of short stories, and seven books of poetry. He is professor of English at Boston University.
Reviews
"Though the issues are weighty, Jin's prose is straightforward and welcoming. . . . In this poignant and provocative book, Jin takes us on this journey [to our envisioned homelands], revealing paths laid by migrant writers before him and perhaps by those who will follow."--Vanessa Hua "San Francisco Chronicle"
"Ha Jin is uniquely placed to address the responsibilities and challenges of the displaced writer. Offering both historical context and a strong personal vision of the migrant writer in America today, these essays are thought-provoking, often inspiring, and, above all, unfailingly interesting."--Claire Messud

"Jin's book is lucid and original. No author of his stature has treated this subject in such an inclusive manner. Highly Recommended."

-- "Choice"
"[Jin] writes with admirations and delicacy about writers as diverse as V.S. Naipaul and W.G. Sebald. . . . Unsurprisingly, many of the books most valuable passages concern the craft of writing."--Francine Prose "New York Times Book Review"
"The Writer as Migrant serves as an excellent primer into the migrant experience, and makes a good read for anyone who has lived 'elsewhere.'"--Deji Olukotun "World Literature Today"
"In arguing for a literature that transcends language, Ha Jin challenges us to rethink the basics. How important are the words in which a work is written? What value ought we place on its translatability? Opinionated, provocative, and poignant, The Writer as Migrant is real grist for the mill."--Gish Jen
"Ha Jin questions the author's nostalgia for home and conjures up another dwelling place in the house of literature. . . . These essays offer a thoughtful and thought-provoking defence of the author's right to define his own reasons for writing and to fashion his own home."-- "Times Higher Education"
"Through this tangle of voluntary and forced migrations, Ha Jin offers the reader a string of glittering insights. For example, that exiles, like Tennyson's Ulysses, can confuse personal longing with collective need; . . . that nostalgia is never more than individual longing; that memory, when manipulated for even the best of reasons, can become a dangerous falsehood."--Alberto Manguel "Spectator"

"[The Writer as Migrant] demands to be read slowly, and savored. You may find yourself pausing frequently to think about some especially trenchant observation and to reflect on the generosity and intelligence with which [Ha Jin] helps us understand what makes us different from, and similar to, the people with whom we co-exist on our endlessly fascinating, precious, and increasingly populated world."

--Francine Prose "Washington Post Book World"