
Contents
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Textual Intervals and Immigrant Travels Textual Intervals and Immigrant Travels
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When (Cha’s) Word(s) Became Flesh When (Cha’s) Word(s) Became Flesh
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Matthew, Mouth, and Martyrdom Matthew, Mouth, and Martyrdom
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Women Meeting at the Well Women Meeting at the Well
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Conclusion: Back to the Beginning-s Conclusion: Back to the Beginning-s
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7 Immigrants and Intertexts: Biblical In(ter)ventions in Theresa Hak Kyung Cha’s Dictee
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Published:December 2007
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Abstract
This chapter focuses on Theresa Hak Kyung Cha’s Dictee (1995) and its use of biblical language or biblical intertexts. It argues that the novel’s multi-multiplicities—its language (heteroglossia), postmodern tendencies, and hypertextual sensibilities—are manifestations of a radical intertextuality; and that the Bible functions precisely as one irreducible intertext to accomplish Cha’s simultaneous protest against colonial, patriarchal, racial, religious, and cultural oppression. One must remember that the Bible is a main part of all these discourses, and particularly so in the United States, where biblical rhetoric has been absorbed into a nationalist one. The chapter puts forward a certain relevance that intertexts may carry for immigrants in light of Cha’s Dictee.
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