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Wesley Yang

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Wesley Yang

Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ Author


Born
in St. Louis, Mo, The United States
Website

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Member Since
January 2008


Wesley Yang has published criticism, essays, and nonfiction features in the New York Times Magazine, ±á²¹°ù±è±ð°ù’s, the New York Times Book Review, New York Magazine, Esquire, Tablet, and n+1. His work has appeared in Best American Essays, Best American Magazine Writing, Best Creative Nonfiction, and Best American Nonrequired Reading. He lives in Montreal.

Wesley Yang hasn't written any blog posts yet.

Average rating: 3.43 · 1,107 ratings · 209 reviews · 6 distinct works â€� Similar authors
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Wesley’s Recent Updates

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Just Dance by Sarah Mlynowski
Just Dance (Whatever After #15)
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Bad Romance by Wesley Yang
Bad Romance (n+1 ebooks Book 2)
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The Tools & Techniques of Charitable Planning by Stephan R. Leimberg
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Best American Magazine Writing 2012 by Sid Holt
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The Face of Seung-Hui Cho (Kindle Single) by Wesley Yang
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Quotes by Wesley Yang  (?)
Quotes are added by the Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ community and are not verified by Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ.

“My interest has always been in the place where sex and race are both obscenely conspicuous and yet consciously suppressed, largely because of the liminal place that the Asian man occupies in the midst of it: an “honorary whiteâ€� person who will always be denied the full perquisites of whiteness; an entitled man who will never quite be regarded or treated as a man; a nominal minority whose claim to be a “person of colorâ€� deserving of the special regard reserved for victims is taken seriously by no one. In an age characterised by the politics of resentment, the Asian man knows something of the resentment of the embattled white man besieged on all sides by grievances and demands for reparation, and something of the resentments of the rising social justice warrior, who feels with every fibre of their being that all that stands in the way of the attainment of their thwarted ambitions is nothing so much as a white man. Tasting of the frustrations of both, he is denied the entitlements of either.”
Wesley Yang, The Souls of Yellow Folk: Essays

“[…] as the bearer of an Asian face in America, you paid some incremental penalty, never absolute, but always omnipresent, that meant that you were by default unlovable and unloved; that you were presumptively a nobody, a mute and servile figure, distinguishable above all by your total incapacity to threaten anyone; that you were many laudable things that the world might respect and reward, but that you were fundamentally powerless to affect anyone in a way that would make you either loved or feared.

What was the epistemological status of such an extravagant assertion? Could it possibly be true? Could it survive empirical scrutiny? It was a dogmatic statement at once unprovable and unfalsifiable. It was a paranoid statement about the way others regarded you that couldn’t possibly be true in any literal sense. It had no real truth value, except that under certain conditions, one felt it with every fibre of one’s being to be true.”
Wesley Yang, The Souls of Yellow Folk: Essays

“He was ugly on the outside, and once you got past that you found the true ugliness on the inside. And then below that ugliness you found a vulnerable person who desperately needed to be seen and touched and known as a human phenomenon. And above all, you wanted nothing to do with that, because once you touched the source of his loneliness, there would be no end to it, and even if you took it upon yourself to appease this unappeasable need, he would eventually decide to revenge himself against a world that held him at bay, and there would be no better target for this revenge than you, precisely because you were the person who'd dared to draw the nearest.”
Wesley Yang, The Souls of Yellow Folk

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