Conjoined twins Chang and Eng Bunker have fascinated the world since the nineteenth century. In her captivating book, Chang and Eng Reconnected, Cynthia Wu traces the "Original Siamese Twins" through the terrain of American culture, showing how their...
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Conjoined twins Chang and Eng Bunker have fascinated the world since the nineteenth century. In her captivating book, Chang and Eng Reconnected, Cynthia Wu traces the "Original Siamese Twins" through the terrain of American culture, showing how their inseparability underscored tensions between individuality and collectivity in the American popular imagination. Using letters, medical documents and exhibits, literature, art, film, and family lore, Wu provides a trans-historical analysis that presents the Bunkers as both a material presence and as metaphor. She also shows ho
Contents; List of Figures; Acknowledgments; Introduction; Part I: Locating Material Traces in the Archives; 1. Labor and Ownership in the American South; 2. The Mystery of Their Union; 3. Strange Incursions into Medical Science at the Mütter Museum; Part II : Reading Literature and Visual Cultures; 4. Late-Nineteenth-Century Visions of Conflict and Consensus; 5. Asian Americans Bare/Bear the Hyphen; 6. Disciplining and Normalizing the Woman Subject in Contemporary Literature and Film; Part III : Observing and Participating; 7. Our Esteemed Ancestors; Epilogue: Alone or Together?; Notes; Index