Inseparable: The Original Siamese Twins and Their Rendezvous with American History

(Author)
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Product Details
Price
$28.95  $26.92
Publisher
Liveright Publishing Corporation
Publish Date
Pages
416
Dimensions
6.1 X 9.3 X 1.5 inches | 1.6 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780871404473

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About the Author
Yunte Huang, a Guggenheim Fellow, has taught at Harvard and the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he is a Distinguished Professor of English. The author of the Edgar Award-winning biography Charlie Chan and Inseparable, both NBCC finalists, Huang speaks frequently about American popular culture.
Reviews
Chang and Eng waltzed, arm and arm, indivisible, across a brutally divided America. Huang's spellbinding account tells their story with a complexity, and sensitivity, with which it has never been told before.--Jill Lepore, author of The Secret History of Wonder Woman
In the follow-up to his Edgar Award-winning Charlie Chan biography, Huang uncovers ironies, paradoxes and examples of how Chang and Eng subverted what Leslie Fiedler called 'the tyranny of the normal.--Jane Ciabattari "BBC"
Excellent.... Mr. Huang compellingly makes his case that racism was a factor in these two self-made gentlemen land owners still being considered, late in life, as nothing more than a Barnumesque "freak show".... It's not difficult to find in this, as Mr. Huang most definitely does, a comment on the times in which we live.--Melanie Benjamin "Wall Street Journal"
After years of showcased servitude, the original 'Siamese twins' Chang and Eng Bunker settled down in small-town North Carolina and adopted the lives of 19th-century Southern gentry -- identifying with the white oppressor class, in other words, fathering at least 21 children between them, owning slaves and sending their sons to fight for the Confederacy. Huang is attuned to the ironies of their story in his incisive and riveting account.--New York Times, Times Critics' Top Books of 2018
Engrossing.... give[s] an unvarnished look at the degradation and disparagement the brothers had to endure.--Jennifer Szalai "New York Times"
Inseparable, Yunte Huang's exuberant and vivid account of the 'original Siamese twins, ' examines 19th century American attitudes toward race and sex that resonate today -- a time when immigrants, people of color, those with disabilities and others are denied their stories and denied their humanity.... By sharing his own experiences, [Yuang] reveals the poignant commonalities of immigrants across time and place, strangers making sense of a strange land, determined to make a better life for themselves and their children.--Vanessa Hua "San Francisco Chronicle"
Inseparable tells an astonishing story, by turns ghastly, hilarious, unnerving, and moving. Huang is a dazzling writer, bold, energetic, and intellectually alert. His gripping account of the lives of the celebrated Siamese twins Cheng and Eng not only richly illuminates the past of P.T. Barnum and Mark Twain but also probes the racial and sexual politics of the present.--Stephen Greenblatt, author of The Rise and Fall of Adam and Eve
Many of the subjects are timely today, such as the racial injustices the twins faced as Asian immigrants, often doubly worse for them due to their conjoined state.... Inseparable is an engaging look at the lives of two singular people.-- "Bookpage"
Moving, wise, and wide-ranging, Inseparable is the poignant story of what it means to live in a diverse culture that strains after uniformity. As in Charlie Chan, Yunte Huang has once again found a perfect subject -- perfectly commensurate with his sympathy for American history and the American compulsion to stereotype that which it fails to understand. And so elegantly written, it's impossible to put down.--Brenda Wineapple, author of Ecstatic Nation: Confidence, Crisis, and Compromise, 1848-1877
Excellent.... a complex literary history that mirrors the global story of meetings between east and west. Huang knows the treacherous racial terrain behind the meetings of facts and fictions in American culture [and] the place of "race" in every rendezvous with American history. Learned and playful, Inseparable draws on Huang's personal experiences and his astonishing literary and historical knowledge.--Ann Fabian "National Book Review"