Departing from Jacques Derrida's appropriations of cinders as a trope of
war atrocity aftermath, this book examines writings that deal with war
trauma memories in Asian-American communities. Seeing war experiences
and their associative diasporas and affects as the core and axis, it
considers the multifarious poetics and politics of minority trauma
writings, and posits a possible interpretive framework for contemporary
Asian-American writings, including those written by Julie Otsuka, Joseph
Craig Danner, Monique Truong, Nguyen Viet Thanh, Janice Lowe
Shinebourne, and Andre Lamontagne. As these writings contain works
regarding Japanese-American, Indo-Chinese Guyanese, Chinese Quebeçois,
Vietnamese exiles/refugees, and Vietnam-American experiences, this book
presents a broad cross-cultural view on migration and minority issues
triggered by wars and precarious conditions, as the diversified
experiences examined here epitomize an intricate historical intimacy
across four continents: Asia, the Americas, Africa and Europe.