Gorgeous Healing: Liminality in Memoir and Ocean Vuong's "On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous" (thesis)
View/ Open
Author
Ricks, James Minh
Subject
Washington and Lee University -- Honors in English
On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous (Vuong, Ocean)
On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous (Vuong, Ocean)
Family histories
Autobiographies
Psychic trauma in literature
Liminality in literature
Metadata
Show full item recordDescription
James Minh Ricks is a member of the Class of 2021 of Washington and Lee University. Thesis; [FULL-TEXT FREELY AVAILABLE ONLINE] Vuong's book is both a textbook and a roadmap to this project. In the text, Vuong's protagonist, Little Dog, similarly strives to understand how to live and love in a world that has been historically violent toward him and his family. A queer, Vietnamese man growing up in Connecticut, his experiences give language to the phenomenon of historical trauma, to the ways in which traumas persist over time and generations, and how that history becomes part of an intersectional experience that is being a person of color -- a child of refugees -- in the United States. Moreover, the book is itself an exercise in not only describing those experiences, but in growing and healing from them. In its structure and style, Vuong not only invokes an academic language to define these experiences, but in the act of writing the text itself provides a model, a roadmap, for others seeking to do the same. Memoir segments, informed by interviews with my grandmother and experiences from my own life, practice and inform both these aspects of Vuong's text. They mutually inform the conclusions -- academic and personal -- throughout this project. These coalesce in a conception of empowerment that is borne of occupying an intersectional identity like mine -- or Little Dog's, which is in turn informed by the theoretical language of theorists Gloria E. Anzaldua and Homi K. Bhabha. [From Introduction]