Public Books - Amy R. Wong
"Eng and Han—a literature professor and a psychotherapist, respectively—demonstrate how to understand the entanglements of history, culture, and psychoanalysis for Asian Americans. . . . This is an unusual social justice project, for it imagines a collective politics that is grounded in the intimate—and highly individualized—work of therapeutic repair."
Journal of Critical Race Inquiry - Christopher Bennett
"Accessibly written and powerfully argued, Racial Melancholia, Racial Dissociation is an excellent resource for any scholar thinking about race and psychoanalysis and, specifically, who are thinking critically about the use of psychoanalytic paradigms like mourning, loss, melancholia, infantile development, reparation, or transitional objects in relation to questions of the lived experiences of racial oppression."
Choice - J. deGuzman
"Intentionally answering the call for interdisciplinary scholarship, this innovative work will be valuable for clinicians as well as scholars of race. Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty and professionals."
The New Yorker - Hua Hsu
"One of the most striking aspects of Eng and Han’s book is the relative ease with which it toggles back and forth between psychoanalytic case studies of people in various stages of suffering and characters in novels who were created to embody themes of beauty and triumph, suffering and fracture. . . . There’s a power in being able to recognize our struggles as the result of paradoxes we live within rather than seeing them as purely private failings. It’s a step toward imagining lives that we might be the authors of, with endings that we write ourselves."
Journal of Asian American Studies - Corinne Mitsuye Sugino
Eng and Han’s work provides a critical vocabulary for articulating the slippery and insidious ways multicultural violence operates in the contemporary era.... Eng and Han contribute an invaluable perspective on Asian Americans’ racial and psychic processes that will be of interest to scholars across disciplines....
From the Publisher
"Eng and Han's work provides a critical vocabulary for articulating the slippery and insidious ways multicultural violence operates in the contemporary era.... Eng and Han contribute an invaluable perspective on Asian Americans' racial and psychic processes that will be of interest to scholars across disciplines...."--Corinne Mitsuye Sugino "Journal of Asian American Studies" (6/1/2021 12:00:00 AM)
"Eng and Han--a literature professor and a psychotherapist, respectively--demonstrate how to understand the entanglements of history, culture, and psychoanalysis for Asian Americans. . . . This is an unusual social justice project, for it imagines a collective politics that is grounded in the intimate--and highly individualized--work of therapeutic repair."--Amy R. Wong "Public Books" (6/9/2020 12:00:00 AM)
"Accessibly written and powerfully argued, Racial Melancholia, Racial Dissociation is an excellent resource for any scholar thinking about race and psychoanalysis and, specifically, who are thinking critically about the use of psychoanalytic paradigms like mourning, loss, melancholia, infantile development, reparation, or transitional objects in relation to questions of the lived experiences of racial oppression."--Christopher Bennett "Journal of Critical Race Inquiry" (1/1/2020 12:00:00 AM)
"Intentionally answering the call for interdisciplinary scholarship, this innovative work will be valuable for clinicians as well as scholars of race. Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty and professionals."--J. deGuzman "Choice" (8/1/2019 12:00:00 AM)
"One of the most striking aspects of Eng and Han's book is the relative ease with which it toggles back and forth between psychoanalytic case studies of people in various stages of suffering and characters in novels who were created to embody themes of beauty and triumph, suffering and fracture. . . . There's a power in being able to recognize our struggles as the result of paradoxes we live within rather than seeing them as purely private failings. It's a step toward imagining lives that we might be the authors of, with endings that we write ourselves."--Hua Hsu "The New Yorker" (7/17/2019 12:00:00 AM)