Asian American Literary Criticism
Choosing an Author or Literary Work
The following websites provide lists of Asian American writers and their works. They will be helpful if you have not yet decided on an author or work to research. The Voices From the Gaps site (below) is also a great place to begin looking for works of criticism as it provides bibliographies about authors and their works.
Chicago Public Library's Selected List of Asian-American Writers
Lists names, ethnic backgrounds, and selected works of Asian American novelists, playwrights, poets, and short story writers.
Voices From the Gaps
Biographical information on, works by, and bibliographies of criticism on a number of Asian American authors. Scroll down the page to find links to lists of Asian American authors and follow the links to explore author pages. This site is a collaborative project of the American Studies Department and English Department at the University of Minnesota. This list of Asian American Writers may also be of interest.
Uni High Library has many novels written by Asian American authors, but only the following have been the subject of enough literary criticism for your research:
| Monkey Bridge by Lan Cao | Fiction C1698m |
| The Woman Warrior by Maxine Hong Kingston | B.K5514 K1 |
| China Boy by Lee Gus | Fiction L5123c1994 |
| Shizuko's Daughter by Kyoko Mori | Fiction M824s1994 |
| The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan | Fiction T154jo1995 |
| The Hundred Secret Senses by Amy Tan | Fiction T154hu1995 |
| The Kitchen God's Wife by Amy Tan | Fiction T154k |
Searching for Criticism
Books
Use the online catalog to find books about your novel. First, determine the subject heading for your author by typing the author's name (last name, first name) into the search box and choosing Subject Headings. Next, do an Advanced Search: Type the author's subject heading in the first field and choose Search by Subject Words; in the next field type the title of your novel and choose “these words as a phrase” and Search by Any Words. This will pull up entire books of criticism on your novel and books containing at least one critical essay on your novel.
Journal articles
If you search these databases from home, you will be prompted to supply your NetID and password.
The MLA (Modern Language Association) Bibliography indexes literary criticism from 1963 to the present. Note that it is not a full-text resource. Once you find a promising citation, click on the link that will take you to a search in the online catalog or to full text that might be available through another database. You can also try a search for the journal title in the Online Research Resources page.
JSTOR searches full-text for backfile articles and reviews in over 130 multi-disciplinary journals. See Project Muse (below) for more recent articles.
Project Muse searches full-text in over 150 journals supplied by 10 university presses. Click on the search button to start your search. Muse works well for more recent periodical issues, while JSTOR (see above) reproduces older volumes.
Try Google Scholar, which searches “open-to-the-free-web” peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, abstracts, and articles from academic publishers, professional societies, preprint repositories, universities and other scholarly organizations.
Finally, consider the general periodical databases that are linked to from the Library's home page. Your best bets are WilsonSelectPlus, Ebsco's Academic Search Elite, and Infotrac's Expanded Academic ASAP.
Reference sources
If you search these resources from home, you will be prompted to supply your NetID and password.
Magill OnLiterature is a definitive online source for editorially reviewed critical analyses. It also includes brief plot summaries of the most studied works in the history of literature.
Literature Resource Center identifies biographies, bibliographies, and critical analyses of authors from every age and literary discipline. Coverage of more than 120,000 novelists, poets, essayists, journalists, and other writers, with in-depth coverage of 2,500 of the most-studied authors. This database only allows 4 simultaneous users.
The English Library on the third floor of the Main Library has a great variety of reference sources that can help you complete this project. Check their website of online reference sources for additional possibilities.
Finally...
Create your annotated bibliography using the Advanced MLA format on NoodleBib. Or, do it yourself, consulting our MLA style guide.
