Biting the Hand: Memoir of Growing Up Asian in America - Asian American Experience, Cultural Identity & Immigrant Story | Perfect for Book Clubs, Diversity Discussions & Social Justice Education
Biting the Hand: Memoir of Growing Up Asian in America - Asian American Experience, Cultural Identity & Immigrant Story | Perfect for Book Clubs, Diversity Discussions & Social Justice Education

Biting the Hand: Memoir of Growing Up Asian in America - Asian American Experience, Cultural Identity & Immigrant Story | Perfect for Book Clubs, Diversity Discussions & Social Justice Education" (注:原标题是回忆录书名,因此优化时保持了文学性标题特点,同时添加了主题关键词和适用场景)

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Product Description

Julia Lee is angry. And she has questions.What does it mean to be Asian in America? What does it look like to be an ally or an accomplice? How can we shatter the structures of white supremacy that fuel racial stratification?When Julia was fifteen, her hometown went up in smoke during the 1992 Los Angeles riots. The daughter of Korean immigrant store owners in a predominantly Black neighborhood, Julia was taught to be grateful for the privilege afforded to her. However, the acquittal of four white police officers in the beating of Rodney King, following the murder of Latasha Harlins by a Korean shopkeeper, forced Julia to question her racial identity and complicity. She was neither Black nor white. So who was she?This question would follow Julia for years to come, resurfacing as she traded in her tumultuous childhood for the white upper echelon of elite academia. It was only when she began a PhD in English that she found answers―not through studying Victorian literature, as Julia had planned, but rather in the brilliant prose of writers like James Baldwin and Toni Morrison. Their works gave Julia the vocabulary and, more important, the permission to critically examine her own tortured position as an Asian American, setting off a powerful journey of racial reckoning, atonement, and self-discovery.With prose by turns scathing and heart-wrenching, Julia lays bare the complex disorientation and shame that stem from this country’s imposed racial hierarchy. And she argues that Asian Americans must work toward lasting social change alongside Black and brown communities in order to combat the scarcity culture of white supremacy through abundance and joy. In this passionate, no-holds-barred memoir, Julia interrogates her own experiences of marginality and resistance, and ultimately asks what may be the biggest question of all―what can we do?

Customer Reviews

****** - Verified Buyer

Julia is a talented writer who wrote the memoir she was destined to author. The book plods through the basic, accurate Korean American existence that many others before have written so well about, most notably Cathy Hong, but her take on parenting her own children through the Korean American experience is vastly refreshing and guttural.Her journey is not yet finished and the book feels predetermined to have forewords in future editions that will add more detail and texture to her story that I cannot wait to read.I want to share this book with every Korean American who has love/hate/love relationships with their parents, which just might be every Korean American in the world.