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Oyceter ([personal profile] oyceter) wrote2009-03-08 01:16 am

Shah, Sonia, ed. - Dragon Ladies: Asian American Feminists Breathe Fire

This is a collection of essays by Asian-American feminists about Asian-American feminists (with the "American" indicating the US, although there is one that focuses on Canadian healthcare). From my recollection, the range seems fairly large—there were quite a few essays on lower-class women and I think the essays spanned a good range of ages, although I could be remembering wrong. I was especially pleased to see good representation of South and Southeast Asian women. I think there could have been more by and about queer women and differently-abled women, though I really loved the round-table with three punk queer Asian women.

I had read about half of this maybe half a year ago; I reread most of it and dashed through the rest to cope with some RL race-related unfunness. I find I don't read these kinds of collections of fairly personal essays by WOC very often, but when I do, they are so inspiring and so life-saving. Maybe that's why I can't read them often... I have to save them up so I have something to turn to when it feels like everything is working against me. I'm not going to be particularly academic in this write up because my reaction is so emotional. This book inspires me and makes me want to do more and to do better, to keep working at things, to try to give back some of the support that I've found within.

One piece that particularly stood out for me was "Bringing Up Baby: Raising a 'Third World' Daughter in the 'First World'" by the mother-daughter team of Shamita Das Dasgupta and Sayantani Das Dasgupta and how jealous I was that Sayantani Das Dasgupta had her mother when she was growing up, how she had a personal role model for radical politics. I hate envying other people's positions, because I'm sure they have problems I do not, and because I am and will always be grateful to my parents for giving me Taiwan. But my family and almost everyone I grew up with were not particularly radical (or liberal even), and I wish I had had something outside of ink and paper, someone human and alive and breathing and talking to go to when I was growing up.

Other themes that struck me were all the mentions of grassroots organization and community outreach; several groups described in the book are grassroots organizations started by women of color to fight sexual violence in communities of color or lower-class women of color mobilizing to fight racism and classism and sexism. It reminds me of how Andrea Smith starts from Native women in Conquest and works out from there, and how by doing so she finds solutions that help those women and help many other communities as well. But I was thinking of activism and fighting oppression and how important it is to start from the ground up, especially because of how oppression works from top down. I am also not sure I am making sense here; I'm still working through what I can do and how I can do it.

One of the pieces was annoying, with the American woman author talking about a group of women in another country, and it just felt so condescending and "I am the outsider talking about these foreign people." I am pretty sure it was Deila D. Aguilar's "Western Feminism and Asian Women," but I am not entirely sure because I do not have my copy of the book next to me.

That said, overall I very much liked how international the book was, how so many of the pieces recognized that many of us might have been born in the US, but we still have families in other countries, still have stakes there that we cannot give up. I also liked how the book not only pointed out racism in the US, but also global structures that support racism, such as the piece on Canadian healthcare and how much of the cost of national healthcare has been offloaded onto immigrant Filipina nurses.

I found this book so personally necessary and so comforting that I have no idea how useful this write up will be to anyone who's not me. Still, recommended!

[identity profile] hysteriachan.livejournal.com 2009-03-08 01:05 pm (UTC)(link)
I found this book so personally necessary and so comforting that I have no idea how useful this write up will be to anyone who's not me. Still, recommended!

Well, you certainly made me want to read it. ^_^ (Alas, this book breaks the pleasant trend I've had recently of looking up your book recs in my library system and actually finding them, but it's on my to-read list now.)

[identity profile] jennifergearing.livejournal.com 2009-03-09 01:11 am (UTC)(link)
I found this book so personally necessary and so comforting that I have no idea how useful this write up will be to anyone who's not me. Still, recommended!

Perhaps not an academic write up, but a great recommendation, mostly because I see my own reactions to these sorts of collections (I bought Growing Up Asian in Australia (http://www.penguin.com.au/lookinside/spotlight.cfm?SBN=9781863951913) recently, which is just at the right time, for me) in yours, and yeah, I save them up as well because they're so few and far between.

It's certainly added to my list of books to find. :)

[identity profile] jennifergearing.livejournal.com 2009-03-16 06:59 am (UTC)(link)
I'm about halfway through it at the moment. There's some awesome in there; there are just parts that make my heart want to explode. Only part so far I have issues with is the piece from the white woman who adopted a Filipino boy and has to get in the idea that if she hadn't 'saved' him he'd be all poverty and child labour and then I skipped to the next piece before my brain hurt. Aside from that it's full of funny and sad and oh my god that's from my life and there's actually quite a good mix of gender/sexuality/nationalities.
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[identity profile] coffeeandink.livejournal.com 2009-03-09 01:02 pm (UTC)(link)
I really liked the article on the Indian women's movement against domestic violence in rural villages that grew out of women applying to domestic violence that same strategies they'd applied to British colonization. Vandana Singh mentioned the same movement in her recent Aqueduct interview -- I am blanking on the name.

I also really liked the article on Filipina nurses in the US, UK, Canada, and Saudi Arabia. It really brought home the globalization of racism and the interdependent effects of race and class oppression.

I was a little surprised, I think, at the number of articles discussing Canada and the UK, especially Canada -- I think I have bought into Canada's view of itself as better on racial issues than the US, so I was surprised to see that many of the same policies and discriminations have been adopted. The bit about nurses and medicine was especially surprising to me because I'd thought that so many of the US issues came out of its fucked health care system, but it looks like socialized medicine is *also* built on race, class, and gender oppression. Same backbone, different face.

eta: Sorry, didn't address your post at all. So, obviously, I do not have the kind of personal connection to the book you did! But I found a lot of value in it, too. And I also liked the personal essays, which brought home a lot of the points in the more academic or theoretical essays.