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Circle
K Cycles
KAREN
TEI YAMASHITA
When second-generation Japanese-Brazilians emigrate to Japan
to assume the manual work its citizens no longer want,
their need for cultural belonging, along with their
homesickness for the food, culture, and language they
left behind is exacerbated by Japan’s reverence for
all things "purely Japanese." This stunning
book of hybrids merges fiction, essay, and pop culture
collage to illustrate a global society that resists
heritage-by-hyphenation and opens the door onto important
issues of the new century: labor, nationalism, and cultural
assimilation.
In the short stories, we meet Miss Hamamatsu ‘96 - a
Euro-Asian beauty who covets the Miss Nikkei pageant
crown, conwoman Marie Madalena and her ad scams and
phone sex business, Zé Marias as he is embroiled in
a debacle with a sinister employment agency, and other
unique characters who are somehow enmeshed in a Brazilian
Japanese employment scam and its unsolved, deadly outcome.
Interspersed between these tales are Yamashita’s personal
essays that detail the Asian-American author’s travels
to Japan with her Brazilian husband and family- a time
spent straddling the fence between boisterous Brazilian
customs and conservative Japanese tradition.
Widely praised for her visionary societal observations,
Yamashita’s stories and essays display a pan-Asian consciousness
that spans the Pacific to tell a funny, wrenching, and
provocative story about new social and emotional
borders that are erected once a community has left its
physical geography.
Also Available:
Through the Arc
of the Rain Forest
Tropic of Orange
Brazil Maru
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