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Obasan | Attentive Silence: Obasan
In the following essay, King-Kok Cheung not only points out the difference between a Eurocentric and Oriental understanding of "silence" but also makes three further distinctions—protective, stoic, and attentive silences—and Kogawa's attitude toward them in Obasan.
Since the Civil Rights movement in the late 1960s, women and members of racial minorities have increasingly sworn off the silence imposed upon them by the dominant culture. Yet silence should also be given its due. Many Asian Americans, in then* attempts to dispel the stereotype of the quiet and submissive Oriental, have either repressed or denied an important component of their heritage—the use of nonverbal expression. With many young Asian Americans turning against this aspect of their culture and non-Asians even less able...
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