Maxine Hong, Kingston's "Chinese Man", meets students who believe that Romeo and Juliet are totally different from accepted students. These students believe this is not a tragic love story but a horror story. What they see in real life (war, death, murder, etc) will influence how they perceive what they encounter. Those students may view "colored", but everything you see in Romeo and Juliet is there. They did not think about anything. They transcended universally accepted drama reading and found everything under the surface of romance and poetry.
Maxine Hong Kingston (born 1940) Maxine Ting Hong was born in Stockton, California and was born as an immigrant Chinese immigrant raised in the United States, leaving a successful career in China. Her novel is handled almost entirely by her tradition as a Central American woman, including efforts to balance her parents' cultural values with American customs and expectations. It also deals widely with the challenges faced by all Americans living in the United States.
As Dr. Simmons' video lecture shows, the experience of Chinese and Chinese in the United States is alienated. In the "Chinese Man" of Maxine Hong Kingston, Dr. Simmons pointed out that Character about Kingston's own immigrant grandfather risked his life, braved the mountain many times and built a transcontinental railroad I made it possible. For inhumanization, it was thought by some people that it was shattered by Caucasian Americans and only humans. However, Kingston did not allow China itself, or the Chinese himself, in depreciation of certain individuals and alienation studies based on their stereotypes. "For example, Kingston has explored women in Asia in China, especially women's families," unnamed women "who were violated in China where women were depreciating. She has never existed the same