Friday, January 09, 2009
Not Just Black and White
Not Just Black and White: As a teenager, Dr. Anne Cheng held in awe the novel Invisible Man. She considered its words “nothing short of beautiful.”
But as an adult, she realized the novel resonated with her for other reasons too. Author Ralph Ellison’s themes of racial marginalization and exclusion reflected her upbringing in a White-Black world that ignored Asians like her.
“The book’s nuances spoke to something inside me,” says Cheng, a Princeton University professor of English and a core faculty member of its Center for African American Studies. She explores race and psychoanalytic theory in 20th-century American literature, especially Asian American and African- American literature.
A native of Taipei, Taiwan, Cheng immigrated with her family to the United States in the 1970s at age 12. Her obstetrician father settled them in Savannah, Ga., where he’d found work. Aside from family, Cheng’s daily life revolved around Whites and Blacks, groups that dominated Savannah.