Flusserstudies.net

HOME / Person / Ruth Y. Hsu

Ruth Y. Hsu

Ruth Y. Hsu writes on and teaches narratives to do with race, ethnicity, class, transnationalism, and diaspora. Hired as an Asian American specialist in the English department at the flagship campus of the University of Hawai’i, Hsu has taught numerous classes in Asian American liter- ature and theory, and US ethnic literatures. Recent publications include an essay on the global influence of Netflix and Orange Is The New Black and Sense8; an essay on Yamashita’s reimagining of Jean-Jacques Rousseau in her novel, Brazil-Maru. Hsu is co-editor of a Modern Language Association volume in the series, Approaches to Teaching World Literature. This volume is titled, Approaches to Teaching the Works of Karen Tei Yamashita (2020). Hsu has lived in Singapore, Hong Kong, and Los Angeles.

Articles of Ruth Y. Hsu

Flusser’s Vampyroteuthis Infernalis: Homo Sapiens’ Posthuman Future?

Hsu’s contribution focuses on Flusser’s mock treatise and report on reputedly one of the most elusive animals in the ocean, the vampire squid. Vampyroteuthis Infernalis is interpreted as a literary text, specifically regarding the narration’s polyphony – ironic, satirical, elegiac, awe-struck; the vampire squid in this narrative is cast in the role of a gothic monster that glides, darts, slips into darkened recesses and away from the hunter-marine biologist, naturalist, or the philosopher demanding to know what it knows. In Flusser’s ironic telling, the creature possesses many fascinating qualities, and, like Humboldt, we want to capture and study this alien being. Yet, the narrator evinces both desire and aversion towards this creature that is so strange as to be unassimilable in our Imaginary, except as a monster. Flusser’s text turns on its head the consumptive and assimilative impulses undergirding all colonial adventures. Vampyroteuthis Infernalis, like the vampire squid, evades conventional taxonomy; arguably, Flusser’s text is a landmark in the emerging field of animal studies. Next, Hsu enlists the help of Martin Buber and Donna Haraway in examining Flusser’s ontological questions brought forth by the narrator’s confrontation with the irredeemable squid/other. The presentation concludes with a (mock) conversation among Buber, Haraway, and a vampire squid.

Vampyroteuthis (PDF 239.97 KB)

Error message

Notice: Undefined variable: crumbs in flusser_breadcrumb() (line 82 of /var/opt/www/usi_multisite/docs/sites/all/themes/flusser/template.php).
TOP