Interior Chinatown
Interior Chinatown
This lesson plan series centers Charles Yu's novel Interior Chinatown, and is appropriate for high school English classes like American Literature or AP Literature. The story is written in the format of a script and follows a man who is forced to play the part of "Generic Asian Man" on a cop show. The book addresses anti-Asian stereotypes in American culture and media, race, the institution of police in America, gender, and class. The unusual narrative style of the book invites discussion about how narrative can further the plot and message of a book.
This lesson plan kit includes:
Four lesson plans, each about one chapter (or "act") of Interior Chinatown
Chapter summaries
Teacher instruction outline
Glossary of Terms
Lesson Objectives:
Analyze the function of character in the book Interior Chinatown and how the characters relate to identity.
Analyze the narrative structure and its significance to plot and theme.
Identify textual evidence and create persuasive arguments.
Use textual evidence to analyze setting and its relation to theme.
Discuss the conflation of one "Asian identity" in America when there are really many distinct Asian identities and cultures.
Analyze Interior Chinatown’s narrative style and what it reveals about how society sees Asian Americans.
Analyze different events in the plot and what they reveal about the experiences of Asian Americans.
Connect events described in the plot to real-world events.
Contrast multiple plotlines.
Essential Questions:
How does characterization in Interior Chinatown reinforce or contrast with societal roles that are placed on Asian people in America?
What does characterization in Interior Chinatown portray about Asian American assimilation?
How does the narrative structure influence Yu's message?
What does this act say about intersectionality in regards to race, class, and gender?
What does Chinatown, as a setting, represent?
How does Yu use the lens of the television show to portray Asian American identity and how American society perceives that identity?
What does Yu say about anti-Asian stereotypes and what are the techniques he uses to do so?
How does the content of the book relate to real-world historical events?
What do Wu's story and his parents' stories reveal about difficulties in assimilation or moving away from Chinatown (literally or metaphorically)
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The standards covered in this lesson: AP Literature standards: 1.A, 1.C, 5.C, 4.D, 4.C, 2.A, 3.A, 3.D, 3.E, 7.A, 7.D, 1.A, 3.B, 3.E, 3.F, 7.B
Lesson plan created by Rose Clubok in partnership with OCA-Asian Pacific American Advocates