Aaron Koh - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Aaron Koh

Uploads

Papers by Aaron Koh

Research paper thumbnail of A typology of wilde's comic devices

Research paper thumbnail of Gender Trouble in Twelfth Night

Research paper thumbnail of The Conceptualizing Hybridity: Deconstructing Boundaries through the Hybrid

The contemporary cultural landscape is an amalgam of crosscultural influences, blended, patch-wor... more The contemporary cultural landscape is an amalgam of crosscultural influences, blended, patch-worked, and layered upon one another. Unbound and fluid, culture is hybrid and interstitial, moving between spaces of meaning. The notion of cultural hybridity has existed far before it was popularized in postcolonial theory as culture arising out of interactions between "colonizers" and "the colonized". However, in this time after imperialism, globalization has both expanded the reach of Western culture, as well as allowed a process by which the West constantly interacts with the East, appropriating cultures for its own means and continually shifting its own signifiers of dominant culture. This hybridity is woven into every corner of society, from trendy fusion cuisine to Caribbean rhythms in pop music to the hyphenated identities that signify ethnic Americans, illuminating the lived experience of ties to a dominant culture blending with the cultural codes of a Third World culture.

Research paper thumbnail of A typology of wilde's comic devices

Research paper thumbnail of Gender Trouble in Twelfth Night

Research paper thumbnail of The Conceptualizing Hybridity: Deconstructing Boundaries through the Hybrid

The contemporary cultural landscape is an amalgam of crosscultural influences, blended, patch-wor... more The contemporary cultural landscape is an amalgam of crosscultural influences, blended, patch-worked, and layered upon one another. Unbound and fluid, culture is hybrid and interstitial, moving between spaces of meaning. The notion of cultural hybridity has existed far before it was popularized in postcolonial theory as culture arising out of interactions between "colonizers" and "the colonized". However, in this time after imperialism, globalization has both expanded the reach of Western culture, as well as allowed a process by which the West constantly interacts with the East, appropriating cultures for its own means and continually shifting its own signifiers of dominant culture. This hybridity is woven into every corner of society, from trendy fusion cuisine to Caribbean rhythms in pop music to the hyphenated identities that signify ethnic Americans, illuminating the lived experience of ties to a dominant culture blending with the cultural codes of a Third World culture.

Log In