Colonial Mentality and Asian-American Experience
Lysley Tenorio
is a Filipino-American short story writer who is a Whiting Award winner along
with many other prominent awards. Monstress is one of his stories in the
collection that was published in 2012, which generally portrays the Filipino-American
cultural clash that most Asians experience while striving to achieve the Asian
American dream.
Tenorio utilized his main
characters, the monstress, Reva Gogo, who works as an actress, and her
boyfriend, Checkers Rosario, who works as a director to view the
Filipino-American experience from two different standpoints with a hint of a
post-colonial tone. The story begins with the obsession with Hollywood movies that
swept the Philippines in the 1960s, that there were even English-only movie theaters
that began to spread all over Manila, pointing out the American hegemony over
the cultural and social life in the Philippines, specifically in the way it shapes
people’s opinions towards their national media that only “imported Hollywood
romance was what Manila moviegoers were paying to see” (Tenorio
6). With all this public fascination with American silver screen alongside
the substandard filming equipment and deteriorated economic conditions, the Filipino
film industry had a tough time struggling to keep up with the flow, and Reva and Checkers were amid of this chaos. Trying to revive
their missing dream of being famous and successful, they accepted the offer of
Gaz Gazman, an American director, to splice their movies with his, which was a
decision they regretted afterwards. The American guest appears to be a pushy foreigner
who impose himself on them in a forceful manner, from the minor act of him
wiping his feet on their doormat as though they had already welcomed him,
although they hadn’t; even the way he dressed seems so fake and pretentious,
the stereotypical safari hat and colorful shorts and shirt. The inferiority of
the Filipino side shows again when Checkers says to Gaz that “There is
corruption and dishonesty in the movie business here in Manila. It’s not like
in Hollywood” (Tenorio 8), showing a great deal of a colonial mentality that
believes in the colonizer’s superiority in all aspects, even the moral ones.
As the story progresses, we
see how the feelings of immigrants are diverse and changing through the
reactions of Reva and Checkers, who were on opposite sides, Reva completely
refused to assimilate at first and was angry and resentful of everything she
sees, while Checkers was impressed and immediately assimilated to the new
environment with a sense of nostalgia for the homeland and fantasies of what
would have been their situation if their homeland had allowed them to Achieve
their dreams, “if we’d had something like this to work with, life back home
would still be good” (Tenorio 13). Ambivalence is strongly present in the
relationship between Checkers and Gazman; from a colonized mindset, Checkers doesn’t
hesitate to take Gazman’s opportunity with joyous and disbelief, yet he
disdains and even belittles the American director’s script at the end saying “all
that corny talk. All that overacting the American is making you do” (Tenorio
21). As if he is stating that he still has his proud, independent, separate
identity from his colonizer that he will never let go of for the sake of
assimilating with his enemy’s way of doing everything even if it seems to be a
trivial matter. Tenorio could have furthered more in the ways in which Asians struggle
to fit in or settle down among a diverse society that doesn’t fully support multiculturism.
I have the same opinion that this story could have been much more better and vivid. The ending seems to lack alot of details and explanations.
ReplyDeleteIt was actually his debut collection of stories, maybe that's why it lacks the sense of professionalism. Surely, I'm going to read more stories written by him before giving a final judgement.
DeleteIt was really shocking that Reva is the one who totally adjusted to the American society and became successful there. Maybe it's a hint that it doesn't matter how hard you cling to your own cultural values, as long as you're surrounded with a stronger culture, you will give up at last and submit to the new values.
ReplyDeleteIn a sense yes, it was somehow surprising, but the writer did some kind of foreshadowing in this quote said by Reva when she was introduced to her American fellow actors " a list of my roles and movies formed in my head, and they made me feel meager, shameful". I didn't really pay much attention to this quote until I read the story for the second time.
DeleteIn my opinion, the sci-fi elements were unnecessary here, more cultural and societal issues could have been discussed instead.
ReplyDeleteI totally agree with you; it was kind of distracting.
DeleteIt is really interesting to read such a story that relates to our current situation as a third world country; you can relate to it on so many different ways.
ReplyDeleteThis is so true! I think many of use would never turn down an opportunity like Checkers and Riva's.
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