![]() Each chapter is titled after one of the nine classical muses, the daughters of Zeus who each ruled over a different category of art or science. The women are martyrs, saints, sinners, and goddesses who rebel against their societies, with different results. In each chapter, Cha explores the lives of women under systems of colonial rule and other forms of oppressive governance. Cha explores the concepts of colonialism, martyrdom, the experiences of women, and art. Referring to Cha’s life first as a Korean child living in China, then as an émigré in the United States learning English and French in Catholic school, the title is symbolic of Cha’s wish to escape from the history of trauma, war, and exile that defines her mother’s and her own life and create a new language which is not merely a repetition, but rather something new that is reflective of a more authentic social reality. The book’s title, Dictee, means “dictation” in French, and this word becomes infused with irony as the book progresses. ![]()
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