Xenotropism and the Awakening of Literary Expatriatism through Writing Memoirs

Bound: An Explorative Auto-Reflexive Case Study

Author(s): Christine Velde

Pp: 50-64 (15)

DOI: 10.2174/9781681082837116010008

* (Excluding Mailing and Handling)

Abstract

Chapter 4 begins with a synopsis of Bound, and then details the research design and process. The three areas of the research were to: define xenotropism and explain its features and complications, undertake an analysis of three prominent writers in China’s history and interrogate the relationship between the memoir genre and xenotropism and their links to mental health. A qualitative research design was adopted which employed several techniques: historical research, journaling, interviews and photography. The 11 expatriates were sourced through a search of literary associations and the adoption of the “snowball sampling” technique. A variety of literary techniques were used to design and create the memoir Bound, and the use of Chinese poetry is also justified. Chapter 4 includes a reflection on the research and writing process. It concludes that xenotropism through expatriation, is a transformative process which facilitates artistic and personal development and represents a viable path for the writing of memoir.


Keywords: Autobiography, Awakening, Biography, Bound, China, Chinese poetry, Epiphanal, Ethnography, Expatriate, Foreign, Ghost voice, Interviews, Journalling, Literary Techniques, Memory, Narrative research, Qualitative research, Shadow, Shanghai, Spirituality, Transnational, Xenotropism.

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