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Jade Snow Wong s two autobiographies Fifth Chinese Daughter (1950) and No Chinese Stranger (1975) have been highly criticized for their seemingly integrationist rhetoric. Born in the 1920s, Wong started a career of writer and potter in order to create a better understanding between China and America and to find recognition as a Chinese American woman in both worlds. However, the contradictions and conflicts that result from the encounter of both cultures in her two books foreground instead that behind Wong s apparent assimilationism hides a more subversive and undermining discourse. Taking Lisa Lowe s definition of cultural hybridity as a starting point, this study revisits Wong s works through the lens of the competing and conflicting values inherent to Jade Snow s self-definition as a Chinese American woman. Furthermore, by opposing Wong s ceramics to her autobiographies, this study seeks to give yet another perspective on Wong s cultural hybridity. Whereas words highlight the tensions between Chinese and American values, her earthenwares emphasize the harmonious combination of both traditions.
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Roxane Mérot, Ph.D Student at the University of Lausanne, Switzerland, is specialized in Chinese American Literature. She is currently working on her Ph.D thesis devoted to the trope of foot-binding in Chinese American women's writings. Her research interest includes as well diaspora studies, feminist studies, world literature and women writings.