Tricksters and Cosmopolitans is the first sustained exploration into the
history of cross-cultural collaborations between Asian American writers
and their non-Asian American editors and publishers. The volume focuses
on the literary production of the cosmopolitan subject, featuring the
writers Sui Sin Far, Jessica Hagedorn, Karen Tei Yamashita, Monique
Truong, and Min Jin Lee. The newly imagined cosmopolitan subject that
emerges from their works dramatically reconfigured Asian American female
subjectivity in metropolitan space with a kind of fluidity and ease
never before seen. But as Rei Magosaki shows, these narratives also
invariably expose the problematic side of this figure, which also serves
to perpetuate exploitative structures of Western imperialism and its
legacies in late capitalism.
Arguing that the actual establishment of such a critical standpoint on
imperialism and globalization required the expansive and
internationalist vision of editors who supported, cultivated, and
promoted these works, Tricksters and Cosmopolitans reveals the
negotiations between these authors and their publishers and between the
shared investment in both politics and aesthetics that influenced the
narrative structure of key works in the Asian American literary canon.